The Sun (Malaysia)

Lampard must ignore VAR gripe

- Ű BY JACK RATHBORN

Agloomy Frank Lampard looked on in dismay each time Michy Batshuayi squandered one of his many glorious chances as Manchester United pulled off a third win against Chelsea this season.

The Belgian striker has never boasted a complete game but is now without ice in his veins when the chances arrives, emphasisin­g the glaring lack of depth to this squad to underline the predicamen­t Lampard is now facing.

There is a simple question the Blues boss must consider ahead of Saturday’s pivotal match with Spurs as their top four hopes teeter on the edge.

A reinvigora­ted United and a stubbornly resurgent Tottenham – both of whom have endured injuries to their own star forwards – have closed in on their now slim one-point advantage in fourth.

So will Lampard continue to bemoan the fate of VAR or embrace a test of his craft that his rivals have so relished in recent weeks?

Yes, this was an especially bitter pill to swallow as United snatched a 2-0 win at Stamford Bridge between admittedly two poor sides.

VAR sided with the visitors on three occasions and only once, for Olivier Giroud’s disallowed goal, was Lampard convinced he was not wronged.

But injuries to Harry Kane and Marcus Rashford have seen Jose Mourinho and Ole Gunnar Solskjaer scramble for Plans B and C, despite the daunting prospect of sitting on the outside as they chase the lifeline of Champions League qualificat­ion.

Lampard, who was “livid” after not securing his own Steven Bergwijn or Bruno Fernandes, must now respond like his rivals.

“They (the decisions) are crucial, Maguire should get a red, then he gets a goal, the game changes off that,” Lampard claimed.

“The second viewing, different angles, if you’re not going to look at the monitor then you’re not going to get it right. That was wrong.

“And the Zouma goal? Azpilicuet­a gets shoved in the first place, it’s certainly not clear and obvious. And Giroud was offside.

“It’s just a wrong decision (to not send off Maguire), it’s harder to take with the presence of VAR. Everybody I’ve spoke to has said the same.”

Deprived of Tammy Abraham, Callum Hudson-Odoi, Christian

Pulisic and Ruben Loftus-Cheek entering this game, Lampard now faces the daunting task of conjuring up another plan to defeat his old master Mourinho before he can even think about Bayern Munich.

“The gap is down to one point, the season starts here, the fight starts now,” Lampard defiantly concluded.

This is clearly a jaded side that lacks quality, but they are evidently now turning to their manager for inspiratio­n to snap their poor run.

There will be time afforded with Roman Abramovich almost certain to resist a hasty decision, but the moment has come for Lampard to embrace this test of ingenuity and prove his managerial credential­s. – The Independen­t

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