Michael O'Neill said his Northern Ireland players were "angry and upset" after teenage debutant Callum Marshall saw a stoppage-time equaliser ruled out by VAR for a marginal decision in Friday's 1-0 Euro 2024 qualifying defeat to Denmark.Marshall had only been on the pitch for a few minutes when the West Ham youngster flicked on Jonny Evans' header to find the corner of the net, cancelling out Jonas Wind's 47th-minute strike and sparking huge celebrations amongst the 1,700 travelling fans.But hearts sank as referee Daniel Stefanski signalled a VAR check that would last a full five minutes, with Tomasz Kwiatkowski taking an age to review the footage before determining that Evans had been fractionally offside when the free-kick was sent into the box."I thought it was all about 'clear and obvious' and the different terminology that we have in different situations," O'Neil said. "If it takes that long to disallow a goal why would they disallow it in that situation?
I don't know whose call that is."The referee obviously doesn't go to the monitor to look at it so whoever is looking at it has to take that decision.
But I'm baffled that it took so long, and clearly the margin was so minimal. For me it's not how the technology should be used."Jordan Thompson had sent in a free-kick from 40 yards out on the right, with Evans heading it goalwards and Marshall's flick beating Kasper Schmeichel."By the time Jonny heads it Jonny is clearly onside so we're looking pre-the delivery of the ball," O'Neill said. "Did he gain any advantage?
The referee said to me something about 30 centimetres. I don't know where he gets that from."I'm not really sure where we gain an advantage.