empireofthekop.com

Why Virgil van Dijk’s goal vs Man City was unfairly chalked off by Chris Kavanagh

Virgil van Dijk saw his equalising goal against Manchester City chalked off for offside.

The flag was raised after the Liverpool centre-back appeared to have restored parity following Erling Haaland’s first-half goal.

Andy Robertson was believed to have been standing in an offside position and impeding Gianluigi Donnarumma’s view.

Virgil van Dijk goal was overturned after Andy Robertson action

Virgil van Dijk heads the ball during Liverpool vs Man City.

(Photo by Michael Regan/Getty Images)

According to the Premier League match centre, the VAR team supporting the officiating of the Premier League encounter entirely agreed with referee Chris Kavanagh’s view.

Not only was the Scottish left-back in an offside position, but he was also believed to have made an ‘obvious action’ in front of the opposing goalkeeper.

That ‘obvious action’? Robertson had ducked to avoid Van Dijk’s headed effort on goal, whilst allegedly impeding his opponent’s view.

According to the Premier League’s own rules, a player will be penalised for:

Preventing an opponent from playing or being able to play the ball by clearly obstructing the opponent’s line of vision; or

Challenging an opponent for the ball; or

Clearly attempting to play a ball which is close when this action impacts on an opponent; or

Making an obvious action which clearly impacts on the ability of the opponent to play the ball

Was this the right refereeing decision?

In our view, the officiating team at the Etihad Stadium have got this badly wrong.

The former Hull City fullback was standing in front of Donnarumma, but he’s clearly not blocking the Italy international’s line of sight.

Virgil van Dijk heads the ball towards goal.

(Pictures courtesy of Sky Sports)

Judging by the angle of Van Dijk’s initial header and the opposing goalkeeper’s positioning, he has an almost unobstructed line of sight.

Robertson then instinctively ducks to avoid accidental contact with the ball on its way towards goal.

Gianluigi Donnarumma lunges to try and reach a ball heading for goal.

(Pictures courtesy of Sky Sports)

Looking at where the ball nestles finally in the net, we can all surely agree that there’s no chance of Donnarumma reaching the effort.

Sky Sports pundits shocked by Chris Kavanagh decision

csads

"I think it's really harsh"

Micah Richards and Roy Keane share their thoughts on the disallowed Liverpool goal 🔍 pic.twitter.com/MqIah11v1u

— Sky Sports Premier League (@SkySportsPL) November 9, 2025

asd

Join our channel of readers on WhatsApp to get the day’s top stories straight to your mobile

Read full news in source page