Tottenham Hotspur sit two points from safety with four games to play, and a growing body of evidence suggests that refereeing decisions, applied with staggering inconsistency all season, have played a genuine role in putting them there.
Look, we’re not going to pretend Tottenham’s problems are entirely the fault of referees. Three managers, a broken squad, and a run of form that makes for genuinely grim reading. Those are real problems. They belong to the club and nobody else. But what has happened to Spurs in front of match officials this season isn’t just bad luck. It’s a pattern.
The evidence has been building since August. It came to a head this week when the Premier League’s own KMI panel admitted what most Spurs supporters had already concluded: Bryan Brobbey should have been sent off during the 1-0 defeat to Sunderland on April 12.
Not only was the decision wrong on the day, but it directly cost Spurs their captain for the rest of the season. Cristian Romero suffered a partial knee ligament tear in the collision that followed. The admission from the KMI panel? Four days later, after the points were already gone. Roberto De Zerbi summed it up perfectly: “Can we play again that game?”
No. They cannot.
Three identical pushes, three completely different decisions for Tottenham
This is where it becomes impossible to dismiss as coincidence. Over the course of this season, match officials have dealt with three near-identical push incidents in and around the penalty area. All three involved Tottenham. And somehow, they came to three different conclusions.
Randal Kolo Muani had a goal ruled out in the north London derby for an alleged push on Gabriel Magalhaes. The contact was marginal. Former PGMOL chief Keith Hackett said the Arsenal player “backed in” and that Gabriel’s reaction was excessive. The goal did not stand.
One week later, Raul Jimenez pushed Radu Dragusin in the build-up to Fulham’s opener at Craven Cottage. The goal stood. Hackett described the decision as wrong, telling Football Insider: “The bar is somehow being raised for pushing incidents. All that leads to is confusion.”
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Then came Brobbey on Romero at Sunderland. A two-handed push. Romero’s season ended. Brobbey stayed on the pitch.
So which is it? Is a push a foul or isn’t it? Because right now, the answer seems to depend entirely on whether you’re playing Tottenham or playing against them. Tottenham were so exasperated by the pattern that they wrote to PGMOL chief Howard Webb seeking clarity. PGMOL declined to comment. Of course they did.
Spurs vs West Ham: Saturday’s officiating subplot
The Wolves win on Saturday was huge. But even that came with its own officiating subplot, and this time, the injustice didn’t land on Spurs. West Ham beat Everton 2-1 on the same afternoon. Everton had a strong handball appeal waved away by referee Stuart Attwell and ignored by VAR.
West Ham’s Mateus Fernandes appeared to handle the ball in the box while attempting to mark Thierno Barry. The shout was dismissed. The decision kept West Ham two points clear of the relegation zone.
The standard of evidence required to award that penalty, in a match with direct relegation implications, was no higher than the standard used to disallow Kolo Muani’s goal in the north London derby three months ago. The decisions went in opposite directions.
Throw in the fact that Andre got away with a clear red card on Bissouma – a red card that Romero himself would have been brandished in a heartbeat – and it becomes all the more frustrating. You could forgive mistakes and inconsistencies if the luck at least evened itself out, but Spurs haven’t been awarded a penalty all season, and red cards against Tottenham seem to come at a premium.
The cumulative cost for Tottenham Hotspur
This season has already seen more refereeing errors than the entirety of last season. 58 KMI errors by the end of March compared to 44 across the whole of 2024-25. The errors are not being distributed equally.
Let’s be specific about what’s happened to Spurs: a goal wrongly disallowed vs Arsenal, a goal allowed against them vs Fulham that shouldn’t have stood, and a red card not shown vs Sunderland that the league’s own panel later admitted was incorrect. That last decision cost them their captain and directly led to a 1-0 defeat.