Howard Webb, PGMOL’s chief refereeing officer, has apologised to Brighton and held talks with them about the decision-making process in the game.
It is the third apology the club have been given by PGMOL this season for decisions made on the field.
The VAR calls which went against Brighton
17 mins: With Spurs leading 1-0, Kaoru Mitoma’s goal is ruled out for handball but replays show it may have hit his chest.
55 mins: VAR rules out Alexis Mac Allister’s goal for handball after he deflects in Danny Welbeck’s shot
72 mins: : Mitoma goes down under Hojbjerg’s challenge but VAR says no penalty, along with referee Stuart Attwell.
The scores were level at 1-1 when Kaoru Mitoma appeared to be fouled by Pierre-Emile Hojbjerg in the area, with referee Stuart Attwell initially declining to penalise the Tottenham midfielder.
The footage was looked at quickly by VAR Michael Salisbury at Stockley Park, before play resumed with no spot-kick being awarded.
It was one of three strong claims by Brighton – none of which were awarded to the visitors.
They are also keen for a wider discussion regarding other decisions that have gone against them this season.
Tottenham went on to win the feisty encounter – which saw both Brighton manager Roberto De Zerbi and Tottenham interim boss Cristian Stellini sent off – 2-1 to keep themselves within three points of the top four.
Defeat for Brighton saw them drop down to seventh, 10 points off fourth-placed Manchester United.
Brighton’s first apology from PGMOL this season came after referee David Coote and VAR Neil Swarbrick decided not to send off Fabinho for a nasty challenge on Evan Ferguson during the Seagulls’ FA Cup fourth-round victory over Liverpool.
The second came after Pervis Estupinan had a goal incorrectly disallowed in the 1-1 Premier League draw at Crystal Palace when the VAR drew the offside lines in the wrong place when reviewing the goal.
Following the defeat at Tottenham, Brighton defender Lewis Dunk hit out at the officials, saying: “There’s no point having VAR in the game if you’re not going to make big decisions like that. That changes everything, I just don’t understand it.”
Dunk also questioned why the officials decided to uphold the decision to disallow Mitoma’s earlier goal for a debateable handball but not overturn the call not to give the Japanese winger what looked to be a clear penalty, adding: “They can make the decision for the handball but can’t make the other ones.
“I think they made one tight decision for a handball but they don’t make a clear decision on the penalty.”