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Arsenal smash and grab against Hammers as VAR dominates

Faz Ali by Faz Ali
11 May 2026
in Analysis
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Arsenal left the London Stadium with a 1-0 win, after a real dog fight of a match. A smash and grab if you like, but also a controversial decision that will dominate the week. Leandro Trossard’s 83rd-minute finish proved decisive, but the real drama arrived in stoppage time when Callum Wilson’s late leveller was ruled out after a VAR review for a foul on goalkeeper David Raya.

Arsenal: cometh the hour, cometh the man

Trossard’s strike came after a period of pressure and a string of near-misses from Arsenal. The goal arrived from a tidy move involving Martin Ødegaard, who created the chance for Trossard to curl the ball in at the near post and send the travelling fans into life. David Raya had earlier produced a couple of crucial saves to keep Arsenal level before the breakthrough.

Arsenal’s lead in the title race widened as a result. Had Wilson’s stoppage-time finish stood, the gap at the top would have been cut and Manchester City could have moved back above Arsenal with a game in hand. Instead, the Gunners left with a five-point cushion and two matches remaining.

VAR in the spotlight

The disallowed goal unfolded like this, a West Ham corner was spilled by Raya, Wilson reacted quickest and bundled the ball home, but VAR intervened, the video assistant flagged contact, Pablo’s arm across Raya’s neck as the goalkeeper attempted to claim the ball, and referee Chris Kavanagh was sent to the monitor. After watching multiple replays, which for the fans in attendance felt like an age, the goal was chalked off. The whole process, from ball over the line to final decision, stretched over four minutes, unusually long for a decision of this nature.

That sequence will be dissected from every angle, supporters and pundits split along familiar lines, some saw a clear foul on the keeper, others argued the contact was part of normal aerial tussle. What’s indisputable is the scale of the moment, a decision that effectively shaped the title race and left West Ham still in relegation trouble.

Tactical snapshot

Mikel Arteta’s side started strongly but were unsettled by a series of substitutions that disrupted their rhythm. Ben White’s injury forced reshuffles, and Arteta’s mid-game changes, including bringing on Martin Zubimendi and later reversing that move, made for a stop-start afternoon. Still, Arsenal created the better chances and relied on Raya’s shot-stopping and Trossard’s composure to secure three points.

Nuno Espirito Santo’s team grew into the match and had their moments, notably when Mateus Fernandes broke through only to be denied by Raya. The late corner that produced Wilson’s disallowed goal showed West Ham’s persistence, but the result leaves them perilously close to the drop zone.

Fallout

Arsenal now sit with a comfortable lead and two fixtures left to close out a first Premier League title in 22 years. The margin is not yet decisive, but momentum and the psychological lift of surviving a late scare matter. West Ham, meanwhile, must regroup quickly; their survival hopes hinge on points that have to come fast.

If the VAR decision is the lasting image from this match, it is because it encapsulates modern football’s contradictions: razor-sharp technology applied to human moments, and the uneasy mix of relief and resentment that follows. For Arsenal, huge relief, but for West Ham, raw heartbreak. For everyone else, another chapter in the VAR story.

This could become the biggest VAR decision in Premier League history. With 60,000 people inside the stadium, and millions around the world, all holding their breath at once, truly extraordinary scenes.

Featured image via the Canary

Tags: football
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