
Frank
Lampard blasted the video assistant referee for failing to advise a red card
for Giovani Lo Celso during Chelsea's win over Tottenham and said the
incident raises "more question marks" about how the technology is being used
in the Premier League.
Lampard had already complained about VAR earlier this week, when Manchester
United's Harry Maguire escaped a red card after a review and Kurt Zouma's
apparent equaliser during the defeat was ruled out for a push from Cesar
Azpilicueta.
Azpilicueta was at the centre of the action again on Saturday when Lo
Celso's challenge left him with stud marks on his shin - however, VAR David
Coote advised referee Michael Oliver no punishment was necessary for the
Spurs midfielder.
The officials at Stockley Park then conceded that decision from the VAR was
incorrect before Chelsea's 2-1 win over Tottenham had even finished, blaming
'human error'. But Lampard had little sympathy with that excuse.
"Everybody knew they'd made a mistake," he said. "We obviously have the
monitor and can view it. I was waiting for the red card to be shown. Not
with real pleasure because it's just a tackle which endangers a player.
"That's what VAR was brought in for, to see things the referees on the pitch
side don't see. And it's just not good enough.
"Saying afterwards that they made a mistake isn't good enough because they
had minutes, they took a couple of minutes to try to get it right. They
probably needed one viewing of that one to get it right. So I don't know
what more to say - just another huge question mark on VAR.
"I want VAR to be good, I want it to work. It's a high-speed game, the
referees have the toughest job around and VAR is brought in to help them and
make the game better and it was so wrong today. More question marks.
"This one doesn't need the monitor. It's a clear decision. A human decision.
Stockley Park, red card. Game goes on."
Mourinho: 'I hope it's the same noise'
Meanwhile, Tottenham boss Jose Mourinho questioned why officials at Stockley
Park hadn't also apologised for errors he believes they have made against
his team this season.
"I hope the noise is the same noise of when the VAR kills us," he said. "I
hope the noise is exactly the same. I hope the noise is exactly the same
against Liverpool when [Andrew] Robertson should get a red card and didn't,
against Watford when [Etienne] Capoue should get the red card twice with
this gentleman, [referee] Michael Olivier, I hope that the noise is the same
noise.
"Why didn't they say when they made the mistake against Liverpool and
Watford? That's what I mean by the same noise."
Lampard's top-four boost
The incident didn't prevent Chelsea from going on to beat their London
rivals and strengthen their hold on fourth place and for Lampard it was a
satisfying result, given his side's struggles at home this season. This was
just their sixth Premier League win at Stamford Bridge.
"There's a slight disappointment with their goal, it makes the result look a
bit different, it gave us a nervous few minutes but the performance levels
of the team, attitude of the team, I can't ask for anymore," he said. "Maybe
another goal or so to put it to bed earlier.
"It's been a tough period for us at home, we know that. The last couple of
days have been spent finding the reasons why, because I can't keep saying
we're playing well and losing games, it doesn't work, so we had to find the
reason why.
"A lot of it for me was a mentality in both boxes, focus in every moment of
the game, and they gave me everything today."
Mourinho: It's going to be three long
months
"I would love to be on 1 July," added the Tottenham boss.
"I'd love to be in pre-season working with Harry Kane, with Moussa Sissoko,
with Sonny [Heung-min Son] but that's not possible and we have three long
months to go. But I think the boys will learn a lot from that, they will
learn about reliance, they will learn about effort, they will learn about
going on the limit. A very difficult experience for the boys but a good
experience for the future."