Premier League: David Moyes Unhappy With "Rubbish" VAR Despite West Ham Win At Leeds
Mateusz Klich opened the scoring for Leeds at the second attempt from the penalty spot after Lukasz Fabianski was penalised for coming off his line in saving his Polish international teammate's first spot-kick.
- Agence France-Presse
- Updated: December 12, 2020 01:35 pm IST
Highlights
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West Ham boss David Moyes labelled the use of VAR as "rubbish"
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Moyes was angry about Fabianski being penalised for coming off his line
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West Ham came from behind to beat Leeds United 2-1
West Ham boss David Moyes labelled the use of VAR as "rubbish" after his side had to come from behind to beat Leeds United 2-1 and move up to fifth in the Premier League table on Friday. The Hammers could not have had a worse start as Mateusz Klich opened the scoring at the second attempt from the penalty spot after Lukasz Fabianski was penalised for coming off his line in saving his Polish international teammate's first spot-kick. Moyes were left exasperated with the decision based on the smallest of margins, while the retake was allowed to stand despite encroaching by Leeds United players.
"Until we get the VAR sorted I don't think I'll be happy," said Moyes.Â
"It's a really good result but we had another setback after 30 seconds. There are some terrible decisions that are happening at the moment.
"Whoever saw it must have had Fabianski's foot x-rayed. The decision was rubbish."
However, West Ham exposed Leeds' struggles to defend set-pieces to move within a point of the top four.
Tomas Soucek levelled by heading in Jarrod Bowen's corner, although Leeds goalkeeper Illan Meslier should have done better.
The winner arrived in similar fashion as Angelo Ogbonna powered in Aaron Cresswell's free-kick 11 minutes from time.
West Ham were inches away from another set-piece goal when Fabian Balbuena hit the post, but the visitors comfortably held out to continue their impressive season so far.
"It worries me because it is causing an uneveness and we are finding it hard to correct it," said Leeds boss Marcelo Bielsa on his side's struggles at set-pieces.
"It was a fair defeat. We prepared ourselves to face a game of the characteristics it had today and they were superior."
A fourth defeat in six games leaves Leeds in 14th on their first season back in the top flight for 16 years, but with an eight-point cushion above the relegation zone.