Mikel Arteta celebrates. Alamy Stock Photo

Mikel Arteta hails officials for 'brave' VAR call as Jarrod Bowen fumes at decision

West Ham had a late equaliser ruled out after goalkeeper David Raya was adjudged to have been fouled.

MIKEL ARTETA PRAISED referee Chris Kavanagh and the VAR officials for their “brave” decision to disallow Callum Wilson’s equaliser for a “clear foul” in the final seconds of Arsenal’s contentious 1-0 win at West Ham on Sunday.

Arteta’s side looked as though they had suffered a huge blow in the Premier League title race when Wilson slammed home in stoppage-time after Gunners keeper David Raya dropped the ball.

But Kavanagh eventually disallowed the goal for a foul by Pablo on Raya after being advised by the VAR officials to consult the pitch-side monitor.

West Ham were furious with the decision but Arteta claimed justice was done.

“Today I have to congratulate them. They showed a lot of courage and bravery to stand out and give the opportunity to the referee to have a look at the action,” he said.

“When you see the picture, there is no question that it is a clear foul. They were very brave. The action deserved that.

“In my opinion, it is very clear. They are the rules and we ask for consistency.

“But today I realised for the referees to be in that position and make that call and change the course of one the two teams, what a responsibility. What a big call.”

West Ham captain Jarrod Bowen blasted the controversial decision after their celebrations were curtailed by the prolonged VAR intervention that ended with Kavanagh changing his decision.

Nuno Espirito Santo’s side remain in the relegation zone, one point behind fourth-bottom Tottenham, who have a game in hand against Leeds on Monday in the battle to avoid crashing into the Championship.

“A real blow. We thought we’d done so well to get back in it and had it taken away from us,” Bowen said.

“When you look at the screen for five minutes you’ll find something, a lot of grappling and a lot of holding. Do I think it’s the right decision? No.

“Where’s the consistency? As a fan you don’t want to celebrate a goal and then wait eight minutes and it’s taken off you.”

West Ham had appealed for fouls by Declan Rice and Trossard that could have led to a penalty in the Wilson incident.

And Bowen claimed officials are not consistent enough when dealing with potential fouls at set-pieces.

“Corners are physical. The Premier League is physical. That’s why everyone loves it. You have to expect contact at corners,” he said.

“If you give that you have to give all the holding calls in the world and that’s not the way people want the game to go down.

“I don’t want to sound bitter but last week we had one with Tomas Soucek held at Brentford and we didn’t get a penalty. But then you can’t give one like that today.”

The controversial decision left Arsenal on the brink of winning the title for the first time in 22 years.

They sit five points clear of second-placed Manchester City, who host Crystal Palace for their game in hand on Wednesday.

The north London club will be crowned champions if they beat Burnley at home on May 18 and win at Palace on 24 May.

“I am going to certainly remember this day. It was a rollercoaster of emotions,” Arteta said.

“We knew it was going to be tough day; West Ham are fighting for their lives and we are trying to win the Premier League.

“So much at stake. We started the game so well and had three big chances. Then the injury of Ben White, we had to make a change and adapt, we had to make difficult decisions.

“We threw everything we had to try and win it. We were rewarded for that courage.”

With the long-awaited title now in touching distance, Arteta singled out Raya and Martin Odegaard for their priceless contributions.

Raya made a brilliant save with his foot to keep out Mateus Fernandes’ close-range effort when the score was still 0-0.

Odegaard, used sparingly by Arteta in recent weeks, came off the bench to provide the assist for Trossard’s winner with a clever run and pass.

“If you want the chance to major trophies, you need moments and actions and the individuals creating those magic moments and David certainly – like Martin Odegaard – created a moment to win us the game,” said Arteta, who has also led Arsenal to the Champions League final against Paris Saint-Germain on May 30.

“Martin made an incredible action to win us the game after David’s save. In the end, this is the beauty of the Premier League.”

Asked how he felt about Arsenal being two games from title glory, Arteta added: “Now we leave and enjoy what we have done today, because as I said it has been an incredible week.

“Those players, the way they are standing in front of the opportunity and showing resilience, it is remarkable.”

– © AFP 2026

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