Jonathan Tah thought he had just saved Germany from World Cup elimination. His header in extra time against Paraguay looked clean, powerful, and decisive. The German bench erupted. The fans in Boston roared. And then the VAR referee asked everyone to wait.
Within seconds, the goal was off the board. Referee Jalal Jayed trotted over to the monitor, took a look, and signaled a foul on Germany’s Waldemar Anton for blocking Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill before Tah’s header arrived. Instead of a 2-1 lead, the score stayed 1-1. And Paraguay, the massive underdog, eventually won on penalties to send the four-time world champions packing.
It was the kind of call that gets replayed in slow motion for years. And not everyone was convinced it was the right one.
The play that changed everything
The ball came in from a corner kick. Tah rose above everyone at the back post and buried the header. But as the ball hit the net, the referee’s assistant had already flagged for a potential foul. The VAR review took a couple of minutes. When it was over, the goal was gone.
Anton was positioned near Gill as the goalkeeper tried to come for the ball. There was contact. Gill went down. Whether that contact was enough to overturn a goal in extra time of a knockout match is the question that will follow this game for a while.
Alan Shearer, commentating for the BBC, wasn’t having it. “Not for me. I don’t agree with that decision at all,” he said. “He falls to the ground far too easy. Yes, there’s contact, but it’s a contact sport. There are 13 bodies in the six-yard box. Not for me.”
Former World Cup assistant referee Darren Cann also thought it was soft. “This is hardly anything — a small block on the goalkeeper,” he said during the broadcast. “I suspect it’s for a block on the goalkeeper. But it wouldn’t surprise me if it’s ruled out.”
So that leaves the question: was the contact real, or did the keeper buy it?
A World Cup shock in the making
Paraguay didn’t just survive the call. They rode the momentum into the shootout, where they kept their nerve while Germany cracked under pressure. The final scoreline — Paraguay wins on penalties — sent a jolt through the tournament. Germany, a team that had been cruising through the group stage, was gone before the round of 16.
For Paraguay, it’s a massive result. They’ll face either France or Sweden next, and suddenly nobody is treating them like a pushover anymore. For Germany, it’s another early exit to dissect. And the VAR debate is just going to add to the sting.
The tournament moves on. But one controversial whistle in a packed penalty box in Boston is going to be talked about for a long time.

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