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Premier League VAR: Three more errors recorded by Key Match Incidents panel

by Dale Johnson
May 15, 2026
in Sports
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Referee Don Robertson awards a free-kick during the Scottish Premiership match between Hibernian and Heart of Midlothian

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David Moyes has seen his Everton side wrongly denied three VAR penalties in the Premier League this season

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Operational Deficiencies in Officiating: A Review of the Premier League’s Key Match Incidents Report

The integrity of professional football officiating is under renewed scrutiny following the release of the latest findings from the Premier League’s Key Match Incidents (KMI) panel. In an environment where the margin for error is increasingly narrow and the financial stakes are measured in hundreds of millions of pounds, the efficacy of the Video Assistant Referee (VAR) system remains a central point of contention. The KMI panel, an independent body tasked with the retrospective analysis of officiating accuracy, has recently confirmed three additional critical errors in VAR implementation, bringing the season’s total to 23 confirmed failures.

This report examines the escalating trend of technical and subjective errors within the Premier League’s officiating framework. By analyzing specific case studies from the current season and comparing year-on-year data, it becomes evident that despite the technological infrastructure intended to ensure “clear and obvious” corrections, the human element of interpretation continues to introduce significant volatility into match outcomes. The following analysis dissects the statistical trends, the operational breakdowns in specific match scenarios, and the broader institutional implications for competitive equity.

Statistical Trends and Quantitative Analysis of Officiating Accuracy

The quantitative data provided by the KMI panel reveals a concerning trajectory regarding the consistency of VAR interventions. At the current stage of the season, the recorded 23 errors represent a 35% increase compared to the 17 errors logged at the same juncture in the 2024-25 season. While this figure remains marginally lower than the 30 errors recorded during the 2023-24 campaign, the upward trend from the previous year suggests a systemic regression in the calibration of the “clear and obvious” threshold.

Of the recent errors identified, all three involved penalty-area incidents, which are statistically the most impactful events in professional football. Two of these failures involved a lack of intervention regarding “holding” offenses,a category of foul that has historically suffered from inconsistent enforcement. The data suggests that while VAR was introduced to eliminate objective errors (such as offsides), its application in subjective areas (such as the intensity of contact or the timing of a foul) remains problematic. For stakeholders, this 35% year-on-year increase in verified errors indicates that the current protocols may be failing to keep pace with the speed and physical complexity of the modern game.

Operational Breakdowns: Case Studies in Protocol Mismanagement

Two specific incidents highlighted by the KMI panel serve as representative case studies of how procedural misunderstandings can lead to catastrophic sporting outcomes. The first involves the fixture between Everton and Manchester City at the Hill Dickinson Stadium. With Everton leading 3-2, City’s Bernardo Silva engaged in a sustained holding offense against Everton’s Merlin Rohl during a corner kick. The on-field official, Michael Oliver, failed to detect the infraction, and the VAR, Paul Howard, declined to intervene.

The panel’s unanimous 5-0 vote confirmed that Howard’s refusal to act was based on a flawed premise: that the holding occurred before the ball was in play. The KMI panel clarified that the holding was “clear and sustained” and continued as the ball came into play, thereby necessitating a penalty. This operational failure had a direct impact on the league table; City subsequently equalized in stoppage time, resulting in a 3-3 draw. This incident highlights a critical gap in VAR training regarding the temporal boundaries of restarts and active play.

The second incident occurred during Bournemouth’s 3-0 victory over Crystal Palace. In this instance, the error was one of commission rather than omission. Referee Rob Jones awarded a penalty to Bournemouth after Marcos Senesi went to ground under what appeared to be contact from goalkeeper Dean Henderson. Despite video evidence suggesting “minimal contact,” VAR Peter Bankes upheld the decision. The KMI panel again ruled unanimously that the threshold for a penalty was not met and that the VAR should have recommended an on-field review. These cases demonstrate a lack of standardized “contact thresholds,” where some officials are too hesitant to intervene in clear fouls, while others remain too deferential to incorrect on-field decisions.

Institutional Impact and the Challenge of Competitive Equity

The cumulative effect of these errors raises significant questions regarding competitive equity across the league. Everton serves as a primary example of the disproportionate impact of officiating variance. The club currently holds the dubious distinction of being the only Premier League side not to receive a single VAR intervention in its favor this season. Conversely, they have been the victims of three verified errors involving denied penalties,incidents that occurred against Arsenal, West Ham, and Manchester City.

For a club operating within the high-pressure environment of the lower half of the table, the loss of potential points through verified officiating errors can have dire consequences for financial stability and strategic planning. David Moyes’ assessment that the failure to penalize sustained holding creates a “free-for-all” reflects a broader sentiment among managers that the rules of engagement are becoming obscured by inconsistent technological oversight. When the system fails to correct unanimous errors, it undermines the “high-performance” culture that the Premier League seeks to project to its global audience and commercial partners.

Concluding Analysis: The Path Toward Standardized Calibration

The findings of the KMI panel suggest that the Premier League is at a critical juncture regarding its officiating strategy. While the panel provides a necessary layer of transparency, the high volume of confirmed errors,particularly those involving unanimous agreement among experts,indicates that the real-time application of VAR is currently failing its mandate. To restore institutional confidence, three areas of reform are essential:

  • Procedural Simplification: Re-evaluating the “clear and obvious” terminology to ensure it does not act as a barrier to correcting factual errors regarding the timing of fouls during restarts.
  • Enhanced Technical Training: Addressing the discrepancy between VAR officials and the KMI panel’s interpretations, particularly concerning “minimal contact” in penalty scenarios.
  • Accountability and Communication: Improving the real-time communication of decision-making logic to both players and fans to mitigate the perception of arbitrariness.

Ultimately, the 35% increase in errors this season serves as a performance metric that cannot be ignored. For the Premier League to maintain its status as the world’s leading footballing product, the precision of its technological interventions must match the elite standard of its athletic competition.

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