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  1. Get involved: 'Is this even football anymore?'published at 12:17 BST

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    I’m actually getting tired of the claims of being saved by the ref. It was a certain push on Stones, the camera wire hit not really affecting the flight of the ball, it’s crazy.

    Miles, Cambridge

    Probably got a bit lucky with the ball hitting the wire, but hard to disagree on Norway's disallowed goal. Two hands, clear shove, easy foul.

    Alexander, Edinburgh

    All the talk about decisions going England's way but what about the overturned penalty, foul on Kane for Norway's first and standing on Jude's Achilles. While people are moaning a two-handed push in the chest shouldn't be foul. Is this even football anymore?

    Tom, Manchester

  2. Where is Spence meant to put his leg? - Shearerpublished at 12:13 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Norway's players immediately gesticulated to referee Clement Turpin that Djed Spence had dived after England were awarded a penalty in the second half of extra-time.

    The England defender ran into the penalty area and planted his right boot in front of Oscar Bobb in what former Three Lions forward Alan Shearer described during his BBC One commentary as "an attempt to shield the ball".

    Bobb's momentum saw him clatter into the back of Spence, who fell to the floor.

    After reviewing the incident on his pitchside monitor, Turpin decided that there was no foul and overruled his award of a penalty. The inference was that Spence had engineered the contact, rather than taken a dive.

    "Where is he meant to put his leg?" asked Shearer. "He puts his leg in front of him in the hope that he can get across him. To shield the ball. That's part of your job as a forward, to do that."

    • Click below to watch the incident again. What do you think?
    Media caption,

    Was VAR right to overturn this England penalty?

  3. Postpublished at 12:11 BST

    Haaland Snr may have been more forthcoming than his son with his views on the match officials in Norway's quarter-final defeat to England, but the Three Lions did not have it all of their own way either...

  4. I would like to put Norway on the map - Haalandpublished at 12:09 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Norway

    Erling Haaland of Norway in action during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Quarter Final match between Norway and England at Miami Stadium on July 11, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida.Image source, Getty Images

    Football is a game of contrasting opinions, clearly, but Norway striker Erling Haaland preferred to focus on the positive and they way his team represented the nation on football's biggest stage.

    "We are touched by the fact we have done so well and it's brought people together in Norway," Haaland said, after losing 2-1 in extra time to England in the quarter-finals.

    "There is a lot of positivity in the joy we have had in our country and here as well.

    "It's difficult to think over things right now. It's quite an insane event. You really do have to experience this. That has been my goal.

    "I would like to put Norway on the map and establish us as one of the best teams in the world. I think we have sold Norway on the map here."

    He has also charmed the American public with a series of well-received social media posts during the World Cup that have seen his following on Instagram grow from 40 million before the tournament began to 63.9 million.

  5. Get involved: 'Norway were quite clearly robbed'published at 12:05 BST

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    Norway were quite clearly robbed. There's no 2 ways about it. The ball clearly hit a wire, and the Haaland push is never a foul. England fans love to complain about any minor decision against them, but refuse to admit when they have been lucky. No class as usual

    James, Brighton

  6. Get involved: 'Haaland Snr needs to pipe down'published at 12:04 BST

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    Haaland Snr needs to pipe down. Saved by the ref? He’s just salty that Norway couldn’t be saved by his son.

    Hon, Sussex

  7. Why Haaland was substitutedpublished at 12:03 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    It was more than a surprise to see Erling Haaland substituted at half-time of extra-time.

    With his side chasing an equaliser, arguably the most fearsome striker on the planet made way.

    Some speculated that manager Stale Solbakken had made an almighty call based on Haaland's performance but the Norwegian coach has clarified the Manchester City striker was carrying an issue.

    "It was not a tough decision to take him out because he was finished, maybe I should have done it 10 minutes before," said Solbakken.

    "But he obviously had a tremendous World Cup, we used his energy and power for game after game after game.

    "I think that he also got a dead leg in the second half so that combined with fatigue. But he did everything he could, he was a little bit unlucky in a couple of situations, but scoring seven goals in five games for us. He had a fantastic World Cup."

    HaalandImage source, gett
  8. Postpublished at 12:02 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Norway also hit the bar in the second half and snatched at a couple of good opportunities to add to Andreas Schjelderup's somewhat fortuitous first-half opener.

    Luckily for England, none of those chances fell to Norway's leading goalscorer Erling Haaland, who was unable to add to his tally of seven goals for the tournament.

    The Manchester City striker was substituted before the second half of extra time, and has been left stranded one goal behind Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe in the race for the Golden Boot...

  9. We were so close - Odegaardpublished at 11:57 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Martin Odegaard of Norway looks on during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Quarter Final match between Norway and England at Miami Stadium on July 11, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida.Image source, Getty Images

    Norway captain Martin Odegaard was left wondering what could have been after his side exited the World Cup at the quarter finals stage.

    "It's difficult. I feel that we were so close," he said, after Norway gave up a one-goal lead to lose to England 2-1 in extra time.

    "We did what we could, maybe we were in a low block in the first half but they didn't do anything and we got ahead.

    "Then we conceded two easy goals and didn't get much help from the referee. The margins went against us and we had a bit of bad luck."

    Overall, Odegaard was pleased with his side's World Cup campaign.

    "It's been fantastic, it's been a fairytale," he said. "We can be proud of ourselves.

    "The whole world is talking about us, a quarter-final in the World Cup is a huge achievement. Now we have a taste of it."

  10. Watch: Referee Turpin applies new law to disallow Norway goalpublished at 11:52 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Torbjorn Heggem's second-half effort for Norway would not have been disallowed in the Premier League last season as the incident happened before the corner took place.

    A new law introduced for the World Cup was applied in this case, allowing referee Clement Turpin to bring play back and order that the corner should be retaken.

    Turpin was asked by the VAR to review the incident on his pitchside monitor after he had originally missed a push from Erling Haaland on Elliot Anderson as the two players grappled before the corner.

    He ruled that Anderson had been unable to help defend the corner as a result of the push.

    • Click on the play icon below to watch the incident. Do you think it was the correct decision, or were England lucky?
    Media caption,

    Norway goal ruled out after VAR intervention

  11. Postpublished at 11:51 BST

    The video assistant referee was certainly kept busy in England's win over Norway, John...

  12. This is why football is wonderful - Barnespublished at 11:42 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Former England winger John Barnes knows a thing or two about what it takes to reach a World Cup semi-final.

    He helped the Three Lions into the last four at Italia 90, and was denied a place in the semi-finals of Mexico 86 by the twinkle toes [and hand] of Maradona.

    Speaking on 5 Live earlier today, he gave a poetic response to concerns about VAR and spidercam, saying football is "wonderful" because of its imperfections.

    "Throughout this whole World Cup, Fifa are interpreting offsides - ‘is it a penalty? Is the ball over the line? Is it a red card?’

    "And of course, we then think we’ve perfected it [football]. Us mere mortals think we have done it now with VAR and all of that.

    "But then they’ve thrown another little spanner in the works - a little wire flying above the ground. The ball hits it and we now can’t agree on whether the ball hits it.

    "This is why football is wonderful."

    John Barnes in the England 1990 team that faced Cameroon in the World Cup quarter-finalsImage source, Getty Images
  13. The margins were not in our favour, but that's life - Solbakkenpublished at 11:36 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Stale Solbakken, Head Coach of Norway, applauds fans after the 1-2 loss during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Quarter Final match between Norway and England at Miami Stadium on July 11, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida.Image source, Getty Images

    Norway manager Stale Solbakken acknowledged that, in football, sometimes you get the rub of the green and sometimes you don't after his side were knocked out by England.

    "I feel sorry for the lads," he said after England came from behind to beat his side in extra time.

    "This is top level sports at it's best or it's most gruesome. We were lucky against Brazil, today we were not so lucky. We had margins go in our favour against Brazil, but not today.

    "Sometimes you're lucky. We were lucky against Brazil. Today we were not. The margins were not in our favour, but that's life."

    He was philosophical about the Erling Haaland foul which led to a second Norway goal being chalked off.

    "These things happen," said Solbakken, who was shown on TV footage angrily throwing a bottle of water into his dugout in response to the refereeing decision.

    "We just want to wish England the best of luck."

  14. Get Involved - 'There's no luck, just mistakes from Norway'published at 11:25 BST

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    There's been no evidence whatsoever that the ball hit the cable, and it was a blatant foul from Haaland. There's no luck, just mistakes from Norway that cost them the game. Teams in this World Cup need to learn to lose better than this constant moaning they've been doing

    Curtis, Nottingham

    This refereeing narrative seems very unfair. FIFA themselves confirmed via their ball sensor that it didn't hit a cable. We also had a penalty overturned that was very similar to the one given against Kane in the Mexico match.

    Alan, Surrey

  15. Ball does seem to come down quite quickly - Rooneypublished at 11:16 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    That goal clip may not have provided definitive evidence, but check out the analysis below from Wayne Rooney.

    The former England striker says the "ball does seem to deviate and come down quite quickly" following the goal kick from Orjan Nyland.

    The ball landed at the feet of England's Elliot Anderson and he started the attack that led to Jude Bellingham's equaliser.

    However, presenter Jason Mohammad read out a statement from Fifa that said the data from the ball's sensor showed no peak in the graph to suggest a connection with the spidercam.

    Media caption,

    Did spider cam impact England's opener?

  16. 'The ball fell straight down, right in front of the bench, so it did touch it'published at 11:10 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    England were trailing to Andreas Schjelderup's opener for Norway when the incident in the build-up to their opener occurred in first-half stoppage time.

    Replays showed Norway goalkeeper Orjan Nyland's goal kick passing close to the spidercam cable suspended above the playing surface.

    The ball then fell for Elliot Anderson, who fed Anthony Gordon before the England winger passed for Jude Bellingham to drive on to the ball and calmly score.

    Several Norway players immediately surrounded referee Clement Turpin, arguing the goal should not have stood. Head coach Stale Solbakken was seen talking to the match official at half-time.

    Of the decision, Solbakken said: "He [the referee] says that he didn't see it himself and that he didn't get any message that it actually happened.

    "That's a good explanation and since Fifa says there was no touch and there was no signal from the chip of the ball, then he can't do anything about it. The ball fell straight down, right in front of the bench, so it did touch it.

    "Many on the bench reacted immediately. I was not one of them, but many of them saw it."

    The goal clip below does not quite pick up the "touch" described by Solbakken...

    Media caption,

    'England's everyman, every game!' Bellingham scores England equaliser

  17. Did ball hit spidercam before England goal?published at 11:01 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Adwaidh Rajan
    BBC Sport

    The spidercam is seen during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Quarter Final match between Norway and England at Miami Stadium on July 11, 2026 in Miami Gardens, FloridaImage source, Getty Images

    Norway's impressive World Cup campaign ended in a 2-1 quarter-final defeat by England, but their exit was accompanied by frustration as they felt Jude Bellingham's equaliser should have been disallowed for an unusual reason.

    The Norwegians claimed the ball struck one of the spidercam wires in the build-up to Bellingham's equalising goal in Miami.

    Had it been determined that the ball had touched a wire, the goal would have been ruled out and play restarted with a dropped ball.

    "It's ridiculous, this one with the wire," Norway and Fulham midfielder Sander Berge said after the game.

    "[The result] 2-1 says itself – there are small margins and we know which way it went."

  18. 'Saved by the referee' - Alf-Inge Haalandpublished at 10:51 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    Tweet by Alfie Haaland which says: "Saved bye [sic] the referee. Hope you win the WC now. But feel we got robbed today."Image source, X

    Erling Haaland's dad has weighed in on discussion about how officiating impacted Norway's exit from the World Cup, suggesting England were "saved by the referee".

    He felt the game could have had a very different outcome after the Three Lions ran out 2-1 winners after extra time in Miami.

    With the score 1-1, Torbjorn Heggem seemed to have given Norway the lead again before VAR said that Erling Haaland had fouled Elliot Anderson in the lead up and chalked it off.

    The referee later failed to stop play after the ball hit a camera cable in the build-up to England's equaliser.

    After the match, manager Stale Solbakken said that "the margins were not in our favour".

    But Haaland's dad Alfie took a stronger view, posting on social media to say that Norway had been robbed.

    "Saved bye [sic] the referee", wrote Haaland, who earned 34 Norway caps between 1994 and 2001.

    "Hope you win the WC now.

    "But feel we got robbed today."

    In a separate post, he wrote: "Well done Bellingham and referee."

  19. Get Involved - 'England got lucky with disallowed goal'published at 10:42 BST

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    I think we need to talk about how lucky England have been. The ball hit a camera cable for Jude’s first goal which is a drop ball, and as Rooney said, England got lucky with disallowed goal. Tuchel must be livid, but relieved England got through.

    Paddy, Ireland

  20. 2-1 to VAR - the key refereeing decisions in England's win over Norwaypublished at 10:36 BST

    Norway 1-2 England (AET)

    A general view as the screen shows a VAR review on the second goal by Torbjorn Heggem #17 of Norway during the FIFA World Cup 2026 Quarter Final match between Norway and England at Miami Stadium on July 11, 2026 in Miami Gardens, Florida. The goal was overturnedImage source, Getty Images

    The video assistant referee played a key role in England's win over Norway.

    One decision very much went in the favour of England, while the other two went against them:

    • Harry Kane had a goal ruled out at the end of the first half for offside, when England were very much in the ascendancy moments after Jude Bellingham's equaliser. It was a clear decision and there were no complaints from the Three Lions.
    • Norway, however, were incensed by a decision after the break, when Torbjorn Heggem prodded home from close range following a corner, only for play to be brought back for an Erling Haaland push on Elliot Anderson before the corner had been taken. It was 1-1 at the time so, if the goal had been allowed to stand, Norway would have retaken the lead.
    • England were condemned to a nervous finale in the second half of extra-time after referee Clement Turpin overturned his original decision to award a penalty for a foul on Djed Spence, when the Three Lions led 2-1. VAR intervened and after Turpin looked at a replay on the pitchside monitor he decided Spence had initiated contact with Norway's Oscar Bobb, purposefully planting his leg in front of him.