Credit: Hasan Karim - Breaking Media / Sky Sports
Credit: Hasan Karim - Breaking Media / Sky Sports

'That's the problem' - Ex-refs chief reacts as Man City fans fume over controversy

Harri Burton

Senior Correspondent AUTHORITY Senior football journalist specialising in refereeing and officiating; former contributor to The Football League Paper, Late Tackle, and the Premier League; University of Derby graduate. FOCUS Refereeing controversies, football finance and governance, PGMOL decisions, and officiating analysis across the Premier League, EFL, and SPFL. THE INSIGHT Harri utilises a network of officiating and industry contacts to deliver verified, expert analysis of refereeing decisions and PGMOL policy. He provides the regulatory clarity behind the controversy to ensure fans get the full picture.

Published on

Man City fans were wrong to be furious over the non-awarding of a penalty for an incident involving Bernardo Silva against Bournemouth.

That is according to former PGMOL chief and ex-FIFA referee, Keith Hackett, who exclusively told Football Insider that referee Anthony Taylor likely had help from VAR to come to the right conclusion on Sunday, 2 November.

Man City beat Bournemouth 3-1 to move up to second in the Premier League table, though the clash was far from simple, as Tyler Adams equalised from a rather dodgy decision.

David Brooks appeared to foul Gianluigi Donnarumma at a corner, dragging down the goalkeeper's arm to prevent him from getting a proper connection on his clearance, only for the goal to stand.

Bernardo Silva caught up in controversy in Man City win

That was not the only major talking point, however, as Erling Haaland scored his 12th and 13th league goals of the 2025-26 campaign, with Nico O'Reilly putting the icing on the cake against the Cherries.

Andoni Iraola was slammed for his tactical mistake against the Citizens, and had VAR not got involved later in the game, it could have been even worse for the travelling side from the south coast.

In the 28th minute, Bernardo Silva attempted another cross into the box, one which was deflected onto Alex Jimenez's arm and out for a corner, though the home support was adamant that a handball should have been awarded.

Bernardo Silva playing for Manchester City at the Etihad Stadium in 2025-26.
Bernardo Silva was claiming for a penalty against Bournemouth. (Credit: Imago)

Re-analysing the incident, it became clear to Hackett that because the initial cross had rebounded off the defender's leg first, there was no claim for a penalty, and therefore, the correct decision had been reached.

Anthony Taylor spot-on to deny Man City penalty claim

Speaking exclusively to Football Insider about the potential penalty call, the former referee said: “That’s the problem. The player has no chance of moving his arm out of the way, so that’s not a penalty kick.  

“The complication of handball is that when it’s deflected [off the knee], it’s not deliberate handball, and therefore, not penalised. The match officials got that one right. 

“He’s probably got his mate, without visible VAR interruption, verbally communicating that it isn’t a penalty. He’s likely getting that guidance.” 

www.footballinsider247.com