The decision to allow Manchester City’s stoppage-time winner against Wolves on 20 October has been backed by an independent panel.
John Stones’ header was eventually awarded following a pitchside review by referee Chris Kavanagh after it had initially been disallowed for offside, with Bernardo Silva standing close to Wolves goalkeeper Jose Sa.
The Key Match Incident panel, which reviews the big decisions from every Premier League game, unanimously agreed with the VAR intervention, saying Silva was “not clearly in the line of the goalkeeper’s vision or impacting his ability to make a save”.
During the game, the Premier League Match Centre posted on X: “Stones’ goal was disallowed on-field due to Bernardo Silva being in an offside position and in the goalkeeper’s line of vision. The VAR deemed Bernardo Silva wasn’t in the line of vision and had no impact on the goalkeeper and recommended an on-field review. The referee overturned his original decision and a goal was awarded.”
That weekend’s fixtures – the eighth round of Premier League matches – saw multiple VAR reviews with penalties overturned and yellow cards upgraded to reds.
In October, referees’ chief Howard Webb said there had been an 80% reduction in the number of video assistant referee (VAR) errors this season compared to 2023-24.