Daily Mail

Sweden star slams VAR ‘catastroph­e’

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the last years, they’ve always performed well. ‘Reaching the semi-final has been really great already. We saw that we brought a lot of inspiratio­n but I think our fans gave us a lot of inspiratio­n, too. ‘I hope they’re going to bring us lots of energy again. It was really an extra dimension, what we had at our last games. That’s really exciting and we hope we’re going to make them proud again.’

There will be live screenings of England’s semi-final in Trafalgar Square and various fan parks up and down the country. Millie Bright, who played in England’s last two semi-final defeats, revealed the support from the home crowd has been crucial. ‘It’s the response we’ve been looking for and that we’ve wanted in the women’s game,’ she said. ‘In this tournament, the crowd has been unbelievab­le. ‘It shows the growth of the game and the direction we want to continue in.’

While a calm Wiegman and Bright batted away questions on the importance of tonight’s match, Sweden came out firing as they criticised UEFA for their use of VAR at the tournament. Peter Gerhardsso­n’s side had goals disallowed for offside against Switzerlan­d and Belgium, but Swedish former referee Jonas Eriksson claimed the VAR lines had been drawn incorrectl­y.

‘If you’re talking about the complaint that our staff made it’s obvious, we haven’t seen it ourselves but a Swedish referee at home in a studio pointed out that they drew the line incorrectl­y,’ Gerhardsso­n said. ‘My feeling is sometimes we put too much trust in VAR, you don’t know until the ref whistles “game on” if it’s a goal or not. ‘We’re going to have to hope that they’ve looked at improving themselves for the semi-final.’

Sweden also claimed that UEFA are using half as many cameras as they do in men’s football. Their star forward Kosovare Asllani said: ‘Using 50 per cent fewer cameras in our tournament than in the men’s game, that’s a catastroph­e really because the decisions can’t be made with the same precision.

‘So it’s not just for us, there are other teams. There are situations where you should have more cameras and it can be really decisive.’

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