VAR was the huge talking point from Saturday's entertaining Premier League fixtures.The technology, which many fans still detest, was used to make some very dubious calls.In West Ham's 2-1 defeat away at Chelsea, Maxwel Cornet had a goal chalked off after VAR declared that Jarrod Bowen had fouled Edouard Mendy in the build-up.It was an incredibly harsh call and Newcastle had a goal cheaply disallowed too in their match against Crystal Palace for an apparent infraction by Joe Willock.

Yeah, it really wasn't a good day for VAR and Leeds fans also weren't overly happy with the use of the technology during their 5-2 defeat away at Brentford.

In the first half, a penalty was awarded to the home side for a challenge by Luis Sinisterra on hat-trick hero Ivan Toney inside the box.

The referee didn't initially give it as a foul, but was asked to go check the pitchside monitor and he eventually overturned his decision.

It was very soft and you can understand why those in the Leeds contingent are unhappy.

The fact the away side were then denied a penalty of their own in the second half, for what appeared to be a much more blatant foul on Crysencio Summerville, only added to their anger.

Video: Should Leeds have been awarded a penalty vs Brentford?

Yeah, you have to feel for Leeds there.

But while it was a day to forget for Jesse Marsch's side, the VAR debacle in the game at least paved the way for a rather brilliant video.

While the referee was checking the monitor to see whether Toney was indeed upended in the box by Sinisterra, one Brentford fan was seen waving what appeared to be money in his direction.

Check out footage of the incident captured from the stands...

Video: Brentford fan appeared to offer the referee money

Well, you certainly don't see that every game! Imagine the scenes if the referee had taken the money...

After the eventful game at Brentford, Marsch - who was actually sent off - labelled the use of VAR as showing a "lack of respect" towards him.

He said in his post-match interview: "I was speaking with the fourth official, trying to be as respectful as I possibly could. Even when a penalty was given that I probably didn't think was a penalty and then when you don't see it reciprocated, it's the respect. That lack of VAR visit is a lack of respect in the end.

"I was calm even when Brentford were given the penalty, even though I didn't see it right away, but normally when the phrasing is 'clear and obvious' and it takes that long to watch it and look at it then for me, it's not clear and obvious.

"When I saw it at half-time, I didn't believe it's a penalty and if it is, it's an incredibly soft one. I was told by the referee committee and the league in our managers' meeting before the season started that the threshold for penalties was going to go up so that was not, for me, represented by that decision.

"Then there's an action where I think Summerville is actually more of an egregious foul and it doesn't even get looked at for VAR, I'm clearly dissatisfied. I've got to figure out how to have discussions with the league or with referees to help understand how some decisions get made."