Liverpool vs Peñarol: Disallowed Goal Controversy

The president of Nacional, Ricardo Vairohe referred to the goal canceled to the Liverpool striker, Abel Hernándezin the match against Peñarol that enabled the aurinegros classification to the quarterfinals of the AUF Uruguay Cup.

Vairo said he did not see the meeting but that this morning he learned of everything that happened through social networks where white of some criticisms from his team’s fans.

“I was reading the messages that say we are sleeping the nap (referring to arbitrations),” He began by saying the president of Nacional in note with the morning program of El Espectador football.

After seeing the goal canceled due to the lack of Liverpool striker, Abel Hernández, against a defense of Peñarol, Vairo said: “I saw it through networks and somehow it is what I have always been saying that there are situations where interpretations are completely different, especially what they are grabs, pushing, and the famous issue of the hands within the area that they give for too many interpretations and the same is never charged.”

The president of Nacional added that: “Above all I am seeing with the shoves, which at the beginning was shoulder shoulder, then it was shoulder with back, and now you are inside the area and push you with open arms and it seems that it is normal. All those things that happen inside the area and that out they charge you.”

Vairo understands that: “As they are always fine plays, that if it were a penalty it depends for who is charged or not. They are issues in which I always said, that when there are too many regulatory things that are left to free interpretation, these things are generated,” he concluded by saying.

Marcus Cole

Marcus Cole is a senior football analyst at Archysport with over a decade of experience covering the NFL, college football, and international football leagues. A former NCAA Division I player turned journalist, Marcus brings an insider's understanding of the game to every breakdown. His work focuses on tactical analysis, draft evaluations, and in-depth game previews. When he's not breaking down film, Marcus covers the intersection of football culture and the communities it shapes across America.

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