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Updated Jun 30, 2026 · 11:15
Sports World News Updated Jun 30, 2026

Klopp Slams VAR: "Arsenal Won't Be Champions" After Germany's World Cup Exit

Jurgen Klopp criticized a VAR decision that disallowed Jonathan Tah's extra-time goal for Germany against Paraguay in the 2026 World Cup Round of 32. He sarcastically suggested that if such goals are illegal, Arsenal would not be Premier League champions due to their set-piece success. The defeat marked Germany's earliest World Cup exit, while Paraguay advanced in a major upset. The result is among the biggest knockout shocks in modern World Cup history based on rankings.

FIFA World Cup 2026: "If goal is illegal, Arsenal won't be PL champions" Klopp questions VAR after Germany exit

Berlin, June 30

Former Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp, while speaking to German broadcaster Magenta TV, questioned the Video Assistant Referee decision that ruled out Jonathan Tah's extra-time goal during Germany's FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32 defeat to Paraguay.

Speaking to MagentaTV after Germany's elimination, Klopp criticised the VAR decision and took a dig at reigning Premier League champions Arsenal, suggesting that if Tah's goal was illegal, many of Arsenal's set-piece goals would also have been ruled out.

"If the goal is illegal, then Arsenal won't be English champions. They've scored 60 per cent of their goals that way," Klopp told MagentaTV.

Germany thought they had secured a place in the Round of 16 when Tah headed home from a corner in the 101st minute of extra time. However, following a VAR review, referee Jalal Jayed disallowed the goal after ruling that Germany defender Waldemar Anton had impeded Paraguay goalkeeper Orlando Gill in the build-up.

The defeat marked Germany's earliest exit from the FIFA World Cup 2026, while Paraguay progressed to the Round of 16 after a memorable night defined by VAR controversy, defensive resilience and clinical finishing from the penalty spot.

It was also only their second defeat on penalties at a major international tournament, the first coming against Czechoslovakia in the 1976 UEFA European Championship final (5-3), as per OptaJoe.

The result also ranks among the biggest knockout upsets in modern World Cup history. Germany entered the tournament ranked 10th in the FIFA World Rankings, while Paraguay were 41st, a gap of 31 places.

Since 1994, only three World Cup knockout eliminations have featured a larger rankings disparity: Spain's defeat to Russia in 2018 (60 places), Italy's loss to South Korea in 2002 (34 places), and Spain's quarter-final exit to South Korea in 2002 (32 places).

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

Klopp should focus on his own career rather than taking digs at Arsenal. VAR is there to ensure fairness, and if the goalkeeper was impeded, it's a clear foul. Germany's early exit is sad, but rules are rules. Also, ranking gap of 31 places? That's why we love football! ⚽

Vikram M

Karma is real. Klopp spent years moaning about Liverpool not getting decisions, now he's on the other side. But his point about consistency is valid—if that goal is disallowed, then half of Arsenal's corners should be reviewed too. VAR is a mess, and FIFA needs to sort it out before the next World Cup.

Sneha F

As an Indian football fan, I feel for Germany. But this is what makes the World Cup magical—minnows like Paraguay beating giants! 😲 Klopp's comment about Arsenal is funny, but he should remember that Arsenal actually win trophies. Germany need to rebuild, just like our Indian team needs to work on set-piece defending.

Rajesh Q

Klopp's bitterness is showing. He's still scarred from not winning the Premier League with Liverpool. VAR decisions are subjective, but this one looked correct—the defender clearly pushed the goalkeeper. Germany can't complain; they had 120 minutes to score a legitimate goal. Paraguay deserved it. 🇵🇾

Kavya N

Honestly, I'm tired of Klopp's excuses. He was a great manager, but this constant whining is unbecoming. The goal was correctly ruled out—impediment is impediment. And Arsenal's set-piece goals are mostly legal; his comparison is flawed. Germany's early

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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