Howard Webb admits Forest should have had at least one penalty against Everton
Howard Webb has admitted Nottingham Forest should have been awarded at least one penalty in their recent highly-charged fixture against Premier League relegation rivals Everton.
Everton claimed a 2-0 win at Goodison Park on April 21 but Forest were incandescent that three separate penalty appeals were ignored by referee Anthony Taylor, with VAR Stuart Attwell not interfering.
Webb, the chief refereeing officer of Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL), believes Ashley Youngâs challenge on Giovanni Reyna and his potential handball were both open to interpretation.
The next episode of Match Officials Micâd Up airs this evening, with the match clips selected to be used as follows:
— PGMO (@FA_PGMOL) April 30, 2024
â Everton v Nottingham Forest â no penalty awarded for a challenge by Ashley Young on Callum Hudson-Odoi in 55th minute
â Brentford v Brighton & Hove Albion â⊠pic.twitter.com/4GKGjlcJkc
But speaking during the Match Officials: Micâd Up programme on Sky Sports, Webb accepts Youngâs tackle on Callum Hudson-Odoi should have led to Attwell directing Taylor to review the on-field decision.
âThe referee waves away the penalty appeal,â Webb said. âWe did hear Anthony Taylor in the footage say that he believed the ball had been played by Ashley Young, and we know thatâs not the case.
âWe know only Callum Hudson-Odoi touches the ball. The VAR looks at it and asks himself the question, âWas the non-award clearly and obviously wrong?â and came to the conclusion it wasnât.
âYou hear him describing two players tussling for the ball. He doesnât see a clear action by Young that he considers to be worthy of intervention, one that reaches the threshold of being very clear.
âWe would have preferred an intervention for the referee to go to the screen to make a judgement in this situation and probably would have come out with a different outcome if that wouldâve happened.â
Forest issued an extraordinary statement immediately after the match, saying they had warned PGMOL that Attwell was a Luton fan â another relegation rival â but that the refereesâ body did not change his appointment.
Forest called for the audio to be released publicly, but later accepted an offer from PGMOL to hear it in private. Forest are understood to have heard the audio now but have not issued any comment.
âThe game is played by human beings, itâs officiated by human beings,â Webb added. âOur job is to try to ensure that we have a positive impact on the game by identifying correct decisions on the field.
âThis wasnât one. When that doesnât happen, the VAR consistently recognises when an error has happened on the field and steps in.
âBut of course theyâre humans making judgements as well so we always are trying to reduce the number of errors that we make.â
The Premier League is investigating Forestâs statement related to Attwell to determine whether it breached competition rules, while the Football Association asked for observations from Forest manager Nuno Espirito Santo, full-back Neco Williams and referee analyst Mark Clattenburg over comments they made about the officiating of the match.
On the first two penalty appeals being turned down, Webb said: âWe felt (they) were really subjective calls.
âThe first one involving some contact from Ashley Young on Gio Reyna. There was contact. The referee saw that but didnât feel it was impactful enough to penalise.
âWeâve set quite a high threshold for penalising contact all over the field really, but also in the penalty area. Itâs what the game has asked us to do.
âNot every single contact is a foul and this was one where there was quite minimal contact, consistent with other situations that weâve waved away this season. The VAR quite rightly checked that one.
âThe second one was a handball penalty situation. Ashley Young involved again. The ball hits his arm.
âHeâs moving as he tries to close a shot down from short distance and the referee deemed that the arm was in a natural position and the VAR check completed that one as well â quite understandably, in this subjective zone of handball. We thought both of those situations were in line with our expectations.â
Webb also said that referees making in-stadium announcements after being sent to the pitchside monitor by the VAR â which was seen at last yearâs Womenâs World Cup â is something that is being looked at for the Premier League.
He added: âOne of the things youâll have seen maybe in FIFA tournaments, like the Womenâs World Cup, is announcements from the referee once theyâve been to the screen.
âSo weâre looking at that, weâre keeping an open mind about whether thatâs something we could utilise in the Premier League.â
The League has agreed to introduce semi-automated offside technology (SAOT) from next season, with it anticipated that the technology will be ready to be introduced after one of the autumn international breaks.
Webb added: âAt the moment weâre using software, dropping lines from playersâ body positions, which takes time to do in a diligent way. Semi-automated offsides will speed that process up.â





