Graham Potter cursed his rotten luck on his Stamford Bridge return as he felt Chelsea relied on two fortunate goals to come from behind to beat his West Ham side.
Potter believed Pedro Neto’s equaliser came after a foul on Jarrod Bowen by Levi Colwill in the build-up, while VAR also studied closely whether Marc Guiu had touched the ball which would have seen it disallowed for offside.
The PGMOL's match centre last night said there was not enough evidence to prove Guiu made contact.
Chelsea’s winner then arrived when Cole Palmer’s cross was deflected in by Aaron Wan-Bissaka for an own goal as Enzo Maresca’s side moved back into the Premier League’s top four, leaping above Manchester City and Newcastle.