Monday 18 May 2026 14:28, UK
Former Premier League referee Dermot Gallagher provided live analysis on two high-profile recent controversies: Matheus Cunha’s goal for Manchester United, and the fallout from the Celtic–Hearts fixture. Speaking on Sky Sports’ Ref Watch LIVE, Gallagher set out the referee perspective, clarified the relevant laws and explained how match officials and VAR approach such incidents.
On Cunha’s goal, Gallagher broke down what referees look for when deciding whether to allow or disallow a strike. He emphasised the difference between what is visible to the on-field match official and the additional angles available to VAR, and reminded viewers that overturning a decision requires a “clear and obvious error.” He also explained how assistant referees and VAR communicate on possible offside or infringement scenarios, and why marginal calls are often left to the on-field team unless there is incontrovertible evidence to intervene.
Turning to the Celtic–Hearts fallout, Gallagher examined the disciplinary and behavioural elements that follow a heated fixture. He outlined how post-match reviews, misconduct reports and retrospective action work, and why governing bodies sometimes impose sanctions after the whistle. He discussed the referee’s duties to control the match in the moment, the limits of what can be punished during play, and how evidence used in later disciplinary panels differs from what officials can act on during a game.
Throughout his analysis, Gallagher stressed consistency and transparency: referees must apply the laws as written, VAR must follow clear protocols, and disciplinary bodies should communicate reasoning to maintain trust. He also offered practical takeaways for managers and players — keep actions on the pitch within the rules, use managers’ post-match comments responsibly, and accept that some contentious moments will always invite debate.
Ref Watch LIVE provided viewers with a clearer sense of how referees approach split-second decisions, how VAR intervenes, and why post-match procedures exist to address incidents that cannot be resolved fully during play.