Liverpool beat Inter Milan in the group phase of the Champions League, with the Serie A giant crashing out against Norwegian side Bodo/Glimt in the play-off roundInter Milan midfielder Nicolo Barella says a "made up" penalty awarded to Liverpool at the San Siro earlier this season is the reason that his team has crashed out of the Champions League.Barella captained Inter in the play-off round defeat to the Norwegian outfit Bodo/Glimt, with the Italians losing both home and away and heading out 5-2 on aggregate.But the 29-year-old made the point that had Liverpool not beaten Inter thanks to a controversial spot kick converted emphatically by Dominik Szoboszlai, it would have made the top eight spots and therefore already have booked a place in the last-16.READ MORE : Sweden manager responds to Alexander Isak injury latest following Arne Slot updateREAD MORE : Champions League player's father claims his son could sign for Liverpool this summer"We tried but they were better," Barella is quoted as saying by Goal. "It is infuriating that we slipped out of the league phase by one point because they called a made-up penalty in the 90th minute [vs Liverpool]."With that, we didn't end up in the top eight. Without it, we would have avoided the two extra matches and the trip to Norway, but that is the new Champions League."The incident in question involved Florian Wirtz, who went down after a minor pull on his jersey from Barella's teammate, Alessandro Bastoni.Although play initially continued, a VAR intervention saw the referee head to the pitchside monitor, where he subsequently pointed to the spot — a decision that was met with widespread derision.Former Manchester United and Arsenal midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan was equally perplexed by the call at the time."I don't know how they came up with a penalty that never existed but this is football," he said. "We are not happy. If you give a penalty like this, then every contact in the box is a penalty.""I don’t understand why the VAR had to intervene when the referee saw it all," Italian manager Fabio Capello, working as a pundit, added. "[It was an] obvious simulation [with Wirtz] throwing himself to the ground."Inter boss Cristian Chivu was more willing to focus on his side's lack of a performance against Bodo/Glimt across the two legs."We tried every possible way against a team that was well-organized in a low block, with 10 players behind the ball," he said. "We couldn’t break them down, and they found a mental comfort zone."
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