Fulham saw Josh King's opener controversially ruled out by VAR against Chelsea before his side suffered a 2-0 defeat at Stamford Bridge.
King thought he had given his side the lead in the 21st minute when he cut inisde the box and tucked his effort into the bottom corner, only to see his celebrations cut short by referee Rob Jones.
Jones was instructed by Michael Salisbury on VAR to review footage of Rodrigo Muniz's contact with Trevoh Chalobah in the build up to King's goal.
Shortly before the 18-year-old was played through and raced into the Chelsea penalty area, Muniz had shielded the ball and stepped on the foot of Chalobah.
After reviewing the pitchside monitor, Jones addressed the Stamford Bridge crowd to confirm the goal had been disallowed due to the "careless challenge" made by Muniz on Chalobah.
"I do not think it is a foul, it should stand. I do not know where else the attacker can put his foot. He has taken a long time over this Rob [Jones]," said former Premier League referee Mike Dean on Soccer Saturday.
"Rob has been sucked in by the VAR [Michael Salisbury], he has just landed on his foot, which can only go in one place, it is a poor, poor call.
"The VAR should just stay out of it, it is not clear and obvious error, but he did not have the nerve to stick with the on-field decision, he panicked, it is just not a foul at all. I do not know anybody who would say that was a foul."
Sky Sports' Jamie Carragher labelled VAR "shocking" in the aftermath of the incident and it would become another talking point in the second half after Joao Pedro headed the hosts into the lead just before the break.
Chalobah was once again involved in the incident, this time seeing his shot blocked by the outstretched arms of Ryan Sessegnon inside the area, prompting another monitor check for the referee.
After a four-minute delay, with VAR also analysing a potential handball for Joao Pedro in the build-up and a foul from Moises Caicedo on Alex Iwobi, Chelsea were eventually awarded the penalty to double their lead through Enzo Fernandez.
"Correct call, there is a slight nudge [from Joao Pedro], not enough for a handball," Dean continued.
"But the ball is then reworked and the way he [Sessegnon] has made his arms bigger, it has to be a penalty kick."
Two goals with VAR at the root cause of both of them. For Fulham, it marked their first defeat of the season but as Silva's frustration on the touchline showed, it could have been completely different.