At a Glance:
- A rival manager has admitted Arsenal’s VAR decision vs West Ham was correct.
- The incident involved a late disallowed equaliser after a foul on David Raya.
- Arsenal fans have reacted strongly, seeing the admission as validation.
For Arsenal fans, this one feels different. Not because of the decision itself. Not even because of the timing. But because of who has now said it.
After days of debate surrounding the late VAR call against West Ham, a rival voice has stepped in and delivered something close to confirmation.
And for many supporters, that says everything.
Roberto De Zerbi makes telling VAR admission after Arsenal controversy
The conversation has not gone away.
If anything, it has intensified.
However, this latest reaction cuts through the noise.
“200% it was a foul on Raya.”
It is not vague. It is not cautious. It is definitive.
Although the suggestion that VAR may have “felt pressure” adds another layer to the discussion, the key takeaway remains clear; from a football perspective, the decision itself was correct.
That matters.
Because when a rival figure acknowledges it so directly, the debate shifts.
Arsenal fans react as rival admission reinforces key moment
Unsurprisingly, Arsenal supporters have not missed this.
The reaction has been immediate.
There is a sense of vindication around it.
After a season where consistency has often been questioned, moments like this feel even bigger; especially when looking at where Arsenal would be in the Premier League table if VAR didn’t exist.
Some fans have even pointed out the wider irony; particularly given how rival supporters simply cannot cope with Arsenal’s imminent Premier League title win.
There is also growing recognition that this moment could have swung everything. Had the goal stood, Arsenal’s title push would have taken a major hit.
Instead, the correct call preserved control.
Why this moment carries real weight in the title race
This goes beyond one decision.
Because in a title race defined by fine margins, clarity matters just as much as outcome.
Arsenal needed the right call.
They got it.
And now, they have something even more powerful.
Validation.
Not from pundits aligned with the club. Not from fan opinion. But from outside voices who have no reason to protect Arsenal.
That changes the narrative; especially when contrasted with reactions elsewhere, including how Martin Keown fired back at Peter Schmeichel over the West Ham incident.
It turns controversy into confirmation.
And in a season where every point, every decision and every moment carries weight, that could prove just as important as the goal that ultimately won the game.



