VAR was once again the centre of attention in the Premier League during Sunday night's game between Tottenham and Manchester City.The technology awarded a deserved penalty to City after Serge Aurier fouled Sergio Aguero, but the time taken to reach the decision was frankly ridiculous.Ilkay Gundogan went on to miss the resulting spot kick, but Spurs goalkeeper Hugo Lloris appeared to foul Raheem Sterling in the box straight after making a wonderful save.There was minimal contact, but the Frenchman appeared to clip the on-rushing English forward.But a penalty wasn't awarded and Jose Mourinho was enraged on the touchline that VAR couldn't award Sterling a second yellow card for diving, given that the penalty wasn't given.

VAR certainly adds to the drama at times, but is that drama a positive thing? Not according to 67% of regular Premier League viewers.

According to a survey from YouGov, well over half of fans are adamant that VAR has made watching games in the English top-flight less enjoyable.

Amazingly, 29% say the technology has made their viewing experience 'a lot less enjoyable', while 38% believe it to be only 'a little less enjoyable'.

Just 12% of supporters stated that VAR has made Premier League football more enjoyable.

Only 3% ticked that it had made the experience 'a lot more enjoyable', while 9% sided with 'a little more enjoyable'.

It's certainly damning and it's clear that the Premier League drastically need to rethink how VAR is implemented across all games.

The level of interference right now is simply too great and the marginal offside calls that have plagued the 2019/20 season have been laughable.

VAR was a huge success at the 2018 World Cup and appears to be thriving across Europe, so there's no reason why it cannot succeed in the Premier League.