Football

Arsenal: Mikel Arteta slams 'completely unacceptable' decision to overturn penalty awarded to Eberechi Eze in Champions League semi-final at Atletico Madrid

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By Admin
Sports Journalist
Arsenal: Mikel Arteta slams 'completely unacceptable' decision to overturn penalty awarded to Eberechi Eze in Champions League semi-final at Atletico Madrid

Mikel Arteta called the decision to overturn a penalty awarded to Eberechi Eze as "completely unacceptable" after his Arsenal side were pegged back to draw 1-1 in the first leg of their Champions League semi-final with Atletico Madrid.

Substitute Eze went to ground in the box when he was challenged by David Hancko on 78 minutes. There was foot-on-foot contact and the Gunners looked set to have the opportunity to retake the lead. But VAR stepped in and advised referee Danny Makkelie to go to the monitor.

After watching multiple replays, Makkelie decided to rule out the penalty-kick he had awarded and the game finished level, ahead of the second leg at the Emirates Stadium on Tuesday.

Arteta gave a damning assessment of the decision when he spoke to TNT Sports immediately after the game.

"After going back into the dressing room, speaking to the boys and watching the penalty incident, it's extremely disappointing and annoying because it was against the rules and it changes the course of the tie," he said. "I'm very, very upset.

"The whole sequence. There is clear contact. You make the decision, you cannot overturn that decision when you have to look at it 13 times. It's completely unacceptable at this level.

"It's the wrong decision."

Declan Rice doubled down on Arteta's penalty fury by insisting Arsenal should have been awarded a "clear" spot-kick - and claimed the referee at the centre of the controversy was "provoked" to change his mind.

Under Diego Simeone's animated glare, and against the backdrop of 70,000 whistling Atleti fans, Dutch referee Makkelie watched the incident 13 times before reversing his on-pitch verdict.

And reflecting on the contentious flashpoint, Rice said: "It's a clear penalty. And I don't know how that's not been given.

"I think the fans provoked the decision and changed the ref's mind.

"UEFA is totally different (to the Premier League). In both boxes, you have to be so careful because they give absolutely everything."

UEFA explained the controversial intervention of VAR in a brief statement on its website, which read: "Atleti player, No 17, did not commit a foul on the opponent."

European football's governing body declined to provide any further clarification about the decision-making process for the penalty overturn when approached by Your Site News.

UEFA said upon introduction of the technology that "the VAR team will check all match-changing situations but only intervene for clear and obvious mistakes".

Asked in his post-match press conference if Arsenal would protest the decision to UEFA, Arteta said: "I leave that to the club to decide what's the best thing to do. Now they're not going to give us a penalty. That's it. That's gone."

This was a match defined by three penalties.

Arsenal led at half-time through a spot-kick won and scored by Viktor Gyokeres, when Hancko was again involved, bundling over the striker from behind.

But an improved Atletico levelled after the break through Julian Alvarez when VAR spotted a handball by Ben White from Marcos Llorente's shot and sent referee Makkelie to the monitor. Despite the ball deflecting off White's knee against his hand, a penalty was awarded.

On that decision, Arteta conceded the interpretation of handball in the Champions League is different to the Premier League.

"They have been consistent with that," he said. "If you are going to give a penalty for this kind of thing you have to accept it."

The handball call against White followed an even more controversial decision to punish Alphonso Davies in Paris Saint-Germain's win over Bayern Munich in the other semi-final.

Your Site pundit Jamie Carragher posted on X to say UEFA must address the definition around handball in the Champions League.

"The Champions League is the best football by a mile, but these penalty decisions for handball really are a stain on the competition. Last [night's] was worse but that should not be a penalty against White," he said.

Reflecting on his team's overall performance in Madrid, Arteta said: "I'm very proud, I said that to the boys, the way we handled the context for nine-and-a-half months, just remarkable.

"I really value what they've done because I've seen some of the best teams in the world here fall apart and concede three and four.

"We didn't get the result that we wanted, and the way we planned the game, we wanted to win it. At least it is in our hands, in front of our people.

"We want to be in that final and in a week's time we are going to have the opportunity to do so."

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