An offside check lasting more than five minutes, a potential penalty that allegedly wasn't checked and another that was given described as "scandalous". Premier League officials are back under the spotlight after another day of controversy.
Burnley manager Vincent Kompany says the officials cost his team points again after defeat at Bournemouth while Wolves boss Gary O'Neil heavily criticised the penalty award against his side in their thrilling draw with Newcastle.
Green lines appeared on the screen as VAR checked an offside call against Burnley forward Jay Rodriguez's potential late equaliser, suggesting the decision would be overturned and a goal awarded. However, the check, which lasted nearly six minutes in total, continued and lines were re-drawn showing Rodriguez to be offside.
After this controversy, Burnley also felt they should have had a penalty for a handball by Chris Mepham deep in stoppage-time. The incident was not even checked by the VAR, officials told Kompany.
Later on at Molineux, Newcastle were awarded a penalty after defender Fabian Schar got ahead of Wolves' Hwang-Hee Chan as he cleared, appearing to be tripped by the swing of the forward's boot. Replays showed contact to be extremely minimal but VAR did not ask referee Anthony Taylor to go to his screen.
Here Sky Sports takes a closer look at the three incidents...
The check began after Rodriguez was flagged for offside after scoring what would have been an equaliser for Burnley in the 89th minute at relegation rivals Bournemouth, who moved out of the bottom three with their first victory of the season.
The VAR checked to see if the on-field decision of offside was correct.
Initial replays without lines appeared to show that Rodriguez was offside although
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