Football

Messi slams referee over VAR after Brazil Argentina Copa America semi-final clash

Lionel Messi accused the referee of bias after Argentina crashed out of the Copa America with a 2-0 semi-final loss to Brazil.

The Argentina captain felt a number of decisions went against his side in Belo Horizonte as goals from Gabriel Jesus and Roberto Firmino in each half put Brazil through to a final against Chile or Peru.

Messi was particularly aggrieved Argentina were not awarded a penalty by referee Roddy Zambrano immediately prior to Brazil’s second goal but that was only one of a number of complaints.

The 32-year-old told reporters: “They were not better than us. They found the net early and the second goal came from a penalty they didn’t award.

“The officiating was crazy. There were clear penalties, on (Nicolas) Otamendi, on ‘Kun’ (Sergio Aguero).

“He (the referee) was on their side. In every divided ball or dispute, he inclined the pitch their way.

“It’s not an excuse, but the truth is that, in this Copa, they kept on blowing for stupid things, for handballs, penalties.

“But today, they didn’t even go to VAR when there were clear plays that should have been looked at.”

Despite the result, Messi was proud of his team-mates and believes there is a bright future ahead for the national side.

The Barcelona star said: “It was the best match we did in the Copa, against a Brazil that has spectacular players in all its lines.

“These guys made a huge sacrifice. They deserve respect. Argentina has the material to keep growing.”

Gabriel Jesus opened the scoring for Brazil (Eugenio Savio/AP)

Brazil captain Dani Alves admitted his side had needed to dig deep to secure the result.

He said: “Argentina were a very difficult opponent. We needed to make a barbaric effort.

“It’s one more step towards our goal. Everything we aimed for from the beginning we are fulfilling but we knew it would not be easy.

“I think many people doubted us but we have a lot of trust in our work.”

Ollie McAninch

Ollie McAninch is a former public and private sector economist turned digital media pioneer. After working in the media for over a decade, he helped develop The London Economic to promote independent investigative journalism. When he isn't contributing articles, Ollie spends the bulk of his time looking after animals, pressing apples and planting trees.

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