Barcelona have formally complained to UEFA after their 2-0 defeat to Atlético Madrid in the first leg of the Champions League quarter-finals. The club moved quickly after the match and pushed the issue beyond post-match frustration.
The complaint focuses on a key moment in the second half. Barcelona believe the officials made a major error and say that error affected the flow of the game and the result.
The handball incident
The flashpoint came in the 54th minute. Atlético goalkeeper Juan Musso appeared to restart play, and defender Marc Pubill then handled the ball inside the area. Referee István Kovács allowed play to continue, and VAR did not step in. That decision sparked angry reactions from the Barcelona bench and players.
Barcelona said the officials failed to apply the law correctly. The club also criticised VAR and described the lack of intervention as a serious mistake.
Why the complaint matters
Barcelona did more than protest one call. The club argued that similar decisions in recent Champions League seasons have gone against them and created what it sees as an uneven standard. That wider claim has now become part of the story.
The row also adds pressure to UEFA because officiating consistency is already a live issue in European football. Barcelona now want answers, not just outrage.
What comes next
The second leg will take place in Madrid on Tuesday, April 14. Barcelona must overturn a two-goal deficit to stay in the competition. That gives the return leg even more edge.
For now, the tie has two battles. One is on the pitch. The other is over the decision Barcelona believe changed the first leg.
This is IDNN. Independent. Digital. Uncompromising.