"You need the referee and VAR to make the calls independently" - Graham Potter says Manchester United players pressurized official for Lewis Dunk red card
Brighton and Hove Albion manager Graham Potter has slammed the referees for caving into pressure from the Manchester United players which led to Lewis Dunk being sent off.
The 30-year-old brought down Anthony Elanga early into the second-half and got himself booked, but the home players weren't too impressed with a yellow.
However, following a VAR review, referee Peter Banks reversed his initial decision and showed him a red instead.
Potter, though, feels VAR's intervention wasn't needed. He said the officiating team should've been stronger in the face of aggression from Manchester United's players.
Speaking to the press after the defeat, he said:
"It was a yellow card live, Webster was there on the cover. It is not clear and obvious. I don’t understand the intervention."
When pressed on the referee being pressured for his decision, he said:
"Asking the question you are answering the question. I don’t blame them I am not being critical it is what it is. They have to do their bit for the team but you need the referee and VAR to make the calls independently."
Brighton had Manchester United on the ropes in the first-half
Dunk's red card came just minutes after Cristiano Ronaldo had opened the scoring for United, making it worse for the Seagulls, who looked the better side in the opening stanza.
They upped their game once again after a while, with Jakub Moder also hitting the bar, but couldn't find a way back into the match.
Instead, Bruno Fernandes put the final nail in their coffin with a stoppage-time goal to seal all three points for Manchester United.
Yet Potter was content with his side's performance and complimented them for putting up a fight in the opening stanza.
He said:
“I thought we were the better team in the first half, I was really happy with our performance, the attacks Man United had were from our giveaways but it’s not easy here to control their transitions, they attack big spaces really well."
He added:
"We don’t start the second half well enough, we got punished with a world-class finish from a world-class player, then a controversial red card and it was about us trying to hang on, we rode our luck in that period. We gave ourselves a chance, Jakub hit the bar and Danny had that header. I’m proud of the performance."