There are moments when the football drifts into the background and the officials become the story. Aston Villa’s Europa League semi final first leg defeat to Nottingham Forest was one of those nights.
A contest overshadowed. A decision that left Unai Emery absolutely incandescent.
Villa slipped to a 1-0 loss at the City Ground. But the defining incident came long before Chris Wood’s decisive penalty. Elliot Anderson’s challenge on Ollie Watkins sparked outrage, not just for the tackle itself, but for what didn’t happen next.
The referee waved play on. VAR, after what looked like a cursory glance, declined to intervene.
Emery’s reaction? Visceral. Immediate. Sustained.
‘HE COULD BREAK HIS ANKLE. WOW, VAR, WHERE ARE YOU?’
Speaking after the match, the Villa boss didn’t hide his frustration.
“It’s a clear red card,” he said. “I don’t understand why the VAR is not calling the referee because it’s so clear.”
His words carried the tone of a man who felt the integrity of the contest had been compromised.
The incident itself? Anderson made contact with the ball. But his follow through caught Watkins high, studs showing. In an era where player safety is supposedly paramount, such tackles are meant to be scrutinised with forensic detail.
Emery took it further.
“He could break his ankle. Wow, VAR, where are you?” he asked, his disbelief cutting through the post match analysis.
This wasn’t just a complaint. It was an indictment of a system designed to correct clear and obvious errors. A system that, on this night, Emery believes failed.
‘THE REFEREE IS FANTASTIC 10 OUT OF 10’
Here’s the interesting bit. Emery separated the human element from the technological one.
His praise for the on field referee was emphatic. “Fantastic, the referee, fantastic… 10 out of 10,” he said.
That’s a calculated distinction. Recognising the limitations of real time decision- making while holding VAR to a much higher standard.
“The referee can’t watch it like me,” Emery continued, underlining the advantage of replays and multiple angles. “The VAR has a huge responsibility and he must give us an explanation.”
That demand for transparency echoes across dressing rooms and terraces alike.
THE IRONY? VAR DECIDED THE GAME AT THE OTHER END
Here’s the kicker. The match was ultimately decided by a VAR intervention, just not the one Villa wanted.
A penalty awarded to Forest. Chris Wood converted. Game over.
Emery accepted that decision, noting he hadn’t reviewed it in detail. But the Anderson incident lingered like an unresolved argument.
For Villa, the implications are significant. A 1-0 deficit keeps the tie alive, but the sense of injustice can either galvanise or distract.
Emery knows a thing or two about this competition. Five time Europa League winner. He understands the fine margins.
A BELIEVER LET DOWN BY THE SYSTEM
Here’s some context. Emery has previously backed VAR as a concept. In 2023, he said it “helps the referee always”.
That makes this latest criticism more pointed. It’s not the rant of a habitual sceptic. It’s the frustration of a believer let down by the system.
In elite football, trust in officiating is foundational. When that trust wavers, the consequences ripple far beyond a single result.
Villa’s challenge now? Channel their anger into performance. Make sure that when the next defining moment arrives, it’s decided by their football not by controversy.
Because right now? Emery is seeing red. And he’s not alone.
