FIFA has broken its silence over the controversial VAR decision that overshadowed Germany’s shock FIFA World Cup 2026 exit, insisting the disallowed extra-time goal against Paraguay was in line with new refereeing guidelines introduced before the tournament.The governing body responded a day after four-time champions Germany crashed out in the Round of 32, losing 4-3 on penalties to Paraguay after a 1-1 draw. The defining moment came in the 101st minute when Jonathan Tah headed home what appeared to be the winning goal, only for referee Jalal Jayed to overturn it following a VAR review for a foul by Waldemar Anton on Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill.The decision sparked widespread criticism across Germany, but FIFA referees chief Pierluigi Collina defended the interpretation, saying officials had been instructed to punish attackers who deliberately obstruct opponents without attempting to play the ball.
FIFA explains controversial VAR decision
Addressing the debate, Collina said the incident matched the guidance issued to referees before the World Cup.“Although keeping a position is not a foul per se, when an attacking player is not interested in the ball and deliberately moves, even marginally, with the clear intention of obstructing opponents’ movement and prevents him from defending, then referees, and VAR when needed, should carefully analyze the incident and intervene,” Collina said.“This is especially the case when the tactic aims to prevent the opposing goalkeeper from being able to defend the goal.”ALSO READ: Why Klopp targeted Arsenal while slamming VAR after Germany’s World Cup exitCollina stressed that the stricter interpretation should not have surprised teams.“Coaches and players were informed so it should come as no surprise that referees will punish these fouls,” he said.The FIFA refereeing chief also praised several rule changes introduced at the tournament to reduce time-wasting, including limits on goal kicks, throw-ins and substitutions, as well as requiring injured players to remain off the field for one minute.“These measures have all been very effective and unanimously considered as very positive innovations,” Collina added.
Germany furious after dramatic exit
FIFA’s explanation came after Germany legend Thomas Muller launched a scathing attack on VAR, insisting his side had been denied a legitimate winning goal.“I honestly don’t know what VAR is looking at anymore. What a call is that? The goalkeeper must be the luckiest player on the pitch because, from everything I’ve seen, Germany have scored a perfectly legitimate goal,” Muller told Magenta TV.The former Germany forward accused officials of searching for a foul that did not exist.“We, the Germans, feel used and cheated. This is wrong. This is daylight robbery on the biggest stage in football. If that’s a foul, then football has completely lost its consistency because we’ve seen far stronger challenges allowed all tournament,” he said.Muller also sympathised with teammate Jonathan Tah, whose disallowed goal was followed by a missed penalty in the shootout.“You work your whole life to play at a World Cup, you fight for every ball, you finally score what could be the winning goal, and then someone sitting in a room hundreds of metres away decides to erase that moment over a decision that millions of people will disagree with. That’s heartbreaking for every player on that pitch,” he added.He concluded by questioning football’s reliance on technology.“I can accept losing to the better team. I can accept missing chances. But I cannot accept having a perfectly good goal taken away because of an interpretation that nobody understands. Germany deserve better than this, and football deserves better than this. Right now, it feels like we’ve been punished by technology instead of protected by it,” Muller said.The defeat marked Germany’s earliest-ever World Cup exit and only their second loss in a penalty shootout at a major international tournament, while Paraguay advanced to the Round of 16 after one of the biggest upsets of the 2026 competition.








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