Norway coach says team must ‘accept’ England’s controversial World Cup goal
MIAMI GARDENS, Fla. — Norway coach Ståle Solbakken could have complained.
To the whole world, it appeared his team had been the victim of a call that should have wiped England’s first goal off the board, as the ball had seemed to hit the overhead camera wire to give away possession.
“OK, it was a bit bizarre, the things that happened today, but that’s also part of football,” Solbakken said. “That’s also part of why football is the best sport in the world, because things like that can happen. But yeah, we have to accept it.
“And I know it’s tough now, it’s tough for the players, it’s tough for me. We don’t have a good feeling now. But hopefully in a week when we look back, we have a much better feeling.”
Bellingham, who tied the game 1-1 after the impromptu buildup that followed the ball hitting the wire, said, “I didn’t see that,” when asked about the moment.
FIFA, in a statement posted to X, said that the chip in the ball had not sensed any contact with the wire.
“The sensor in the Connected Ball showed no peak in the ‘heartbeat of the ball’ when in the air,” the statement said, “and therefore no evidence that the ball touched the overhead wire and changed the movement of the ball.”
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The chip in the ball has already proven controversial, as it was used to rule out Croatia’s tying goal in its Round of 32 match against Portugal. Then, the sensor allegedly showed the ball had hit a hair on a Croatian player’s head, making the play offside.
“There’s a chip in the ball [that] can tell you if a hair touches it, as we know since the Croatia-Portugal game,” England manager Thomas Tuchel said. “They should be able to tell you if it happened. I’m not aware of it. I didn’t see it.”
Solbakken urged media not to focus on the controversy.
“We will talk about the wire until we are all dead,” he said in Norwegian, through an interpreter. “I hope we can think about and talk about other things. That’s my hope. I hope that will not be the story of this team. It shouldn’t be.”
Bellingham was not happy with Tuchel’s comments after the game, with the manager saying in a sideline interview he didn’t like how the team had played.
“Maybe he doesn’t know what it’s like to play in these types of conditions against Erling Haaland, [Martin] Ødegaard, [Antonio] Nusa, [Alexander] Sørloth,” Bellingham said. “That’s not an easy team to play against. I think we tried to create a positive environment. We should continue that going into the final four. I can’t speak highly enough of the lads. … Sometimes you have to win dirty and we did that again tonight.”
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