{"id":292513,"date":"2023-10-05T12:25:39","date_gmt":"2023-10-05T12:25:39","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sportslifetale.com\/?p=292513"},"modified":"2023-10-05T12:25:39","modified_gmt":"2023-10-05T12:25:39","slug":"11-matches-that-should-be-replayed-after-jurgen-klopp-demands-tottenham-repeat","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sportslifetale.com\/soccer\/11-matches-that-should-be-replayed-after-jurgen-klopp-demands-tottenham-repeat\/","title":{"rendered":"11 matches that should be replayed after Jurgen Klopp demands Tottenham repeat"},"content":{"rendered":"
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    Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp wants to see his side replay the defeat to Tottenham after a VAR error wrongfully disallowed Luis Diaz’s goal.<\/p>\n

    The shocking blunder has dominated football talk over the past week – and the saga took another turn after refereeing body PGMOL published audio of officials arriving at the decision. <\/p>\n

    Angry Reds supporters and even Klopp himself have responded by stating a replay would be the fairest course of action, with the German saying: “They didn’t do it on purpose and we shouldn’t forget that. Yes, it was a mistake. An obvious mistake. I think there would have been solutions. I think the outcome should be a replay. Probably won’t happen.”<\/p>\n

    Klopp’s comments have since caused a stir, with opposition fans bringing up the fact that Liverpool are by no means the only side to be hard done by as a result of refereeing decisions.<\/p>\n

    And to showcase the can of worms that would be opened by allowing matches to be replayed in football, Daily Star Sport<\/b> takes a look back at 11 major points of contention over the years which would have similar cases in favour of a rematch. <\/p>\n

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    1. \n

      Chelsea vs Liverpool (2005) – Ghost goal<\/h3>\n
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      We should probably start off with Liverpool, whose most iconic moment of the 21st century – the final in Istanbul – might not have even occurred if replays existed. Luis Garcia scored a decisive winner for the Reds at Chelsea in the Champions League semi-final back in 2005. <\/p>\n

      Labelled the infamous \u2018ghost goal\u2019, Garcia\u2019s effort deflected off John Terry before William Gallas rushed back to make a goal-line clearance. Yet dumbfounded Slovakian referee Lubos Michel took several seconds before awarding a goal despite only a hopeful Garcia appealing. Retrospective VAR footage two decades later proved the goal should not have stood.<\/p>\n

      <\/span> (Image: AFP via Getty Images)<\/span>1<\/span> of 11<\/span><\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n