Daniel Farke Fires Back at Roberto De Zerbi in Heated Exchange Over Contentious Leeds Penalty Call
The fallout from the fiery Premier League encounter between Leeds United and Tottenham Hotspur has refused to die down, with the post-match narrative firmly centred on a contentious penalty award that has divided opinion throughout English football.
The defining moment arrived when Leeds were handed a spot-kick following a VAR review of a challenge in the box — a decision that immediately ignited fury on the Tottenham touchline. Roberto De Zerbi made no attempt to conceal his anger, reportedly venting his frustration over what he considered an unnecessarily harsh call that fundamentally changed the complexion of the match.
In his post-match address, De Zerbi took direct aim at the inconsistency of VAR decision-making in the Premier League, arguing that the contact involved was negligible and that such rulings are “killing the flow of the game” by penalising defenders too severely in the modern era. He went on to suggest that players are now “afraid to defend naturally” out of fear that the slightest or most accidental contact will result in a penalty being awarded against them.
Those comments drew a swift and impassioned response from Leeds manager Daniel Farke, who refused to let the criticism go unanswered. Farke mounted a passionate defence of the referee’s decision, insisting the penalty was entirely warranted and accusing those questioning it of turning a blind eye to the reality of what took place. In his view, the challenge was sufficiently clear and dangerous to justify VAR stepping in.
The flashpoint has once again thrown the ongoing VAR and penalty consistency debate back into the spotlight. With two managers holding fundamentally opposing views, the controversy shows little sign of subsiding.
What is beyond dispute is that a single refereeing call not only shaped the outcome of a crucial relegation battle — it also sparked one of the most charged and outspoken managerial confrontations of the entire season.

