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Phoenix coach wants VAR back in A-League

3 minute read

Wellington A-League coach Ufuk Talay wanted the competition to keep the VAR system even before some refereeing decisions went against his team on Friday.

Coach UFUK TALAY talks to media during a Wellington Phoenix training session at Martin Luckie Park in Wellington, New Zealand.
Coach UFUK TALAY talks to media during a Wellington Phoenix training session at Martin Luckie Park in Wellington, New Zealand. Picture: Hagen Hopkins/Getty Images

Wellington coach Ufuk Talay is already missing the controversial VAR system, after his team was on the wrong end of some crucial refereeing decisions in Friday's A-League loss to runaway leaders Sydney FC

Third-placed Phoenix scored first but lost 3-1 to Sydney and now have only the minutest mathematical hope of preventing the Sky Blues from winning the Premier's Plate.

The first match of the restarted competition produced plenty of drama, but Phoenix got no joy when it came to the big decisions in the game at Sydney's Netstrata Stadium

They had two penalty calls rejected and a goal rubbed out by a line-ball offside call when the game was 1-1.

The contentious VAR system has been suspended for the reminder of the competition's home and away schedule, with a decision to be made later about finals.

"A lot of people were not in favour of the VAR and now all of a sudden we are on in favour of the VAR to be there because it's not there," Talay said.

"I was quite pleased with the VAR, the way it worked, and I believe it should be there."

Sydney coach Steve Corica felt referee Chris Beath made the right decisions and had a good game

While Wellington finished their three-match series against Sydney with a draw and two losses, Talay was very happy with the way his side played on Friday night.

"We played some really good football, I thought we were the better side," Talay said.

"Performance-wise very happy, but result-wise disappointed

"The players will have a lot of confidence, I think they know that they played well.

"We will grow from this, we've got another five games to build that momentum up again."

Influential imports Ulises Davila and Gary Hooper played around 25 minutes on Friday off the bench, after having a couple of weeks less training in Australia than their teammates.

Both were were staying in a separate hotel from the rest of the squad, after completing an isolation period following time spent overseas.

"We will slowly build them up and try and give them game time so they can regain their fitness," Talay said.

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