Rangers appear to have been wrongly stripped of their clean sheet on the weekend as VAR ignored a clear foul on Conor Goldson prior to the only goal they conceded on Saturday.

The Lowdown: Luckily didn't make a difference

The Gers certainly put the pressure on at the top of the SPFL table by beating Kilmarnock 3-1 at Ibrox with the only downside being that Rangers failed to keep a clean sheet.

Michael Beale will be furious at the fact they couldn't shut out Kilmarnock on the weekend, but the fact that it made no difference to the final score as they put the game to bed by racing into a three-goal lead will satisfy him.

However, the fact that VAR was once again in the spotlight for all the wrong reasons at Ibrox will anger Beale and the fanbase as it looked to be a pretty clear foul just seconds before Kilmarnock's goal.

The Latest: Foul on Goldson goes unnoticed

While the goal did nothing to alter the scoreline, the fact that VAR looked at this foul and decided that Ash Taylor didn't use Goldson to get a better jump while also pinning down the Gers defender.

This image clearly show that Goldson had no chance or ability to get off the ground, even if he wanted to, as the  Kilmarnock defender was all over him.

The Verdict: VAR failing to impress in Scotland

Bringing in VAR midway through the season was a bizarre decision when it was announced and now it looks even more strange as officials clearly aren't competent enough or had sufficient training on how to spot incidents as of yet.

This is because judging by the image and videos that have emerged following Rangers' win, it's very clear that Goldson is being fouled, yet nobody back in the VAR booth spotted it or thought it was a foul. This looks like something you would see in Rugby from a line-out, nevermind on a football field.

However, while VAR must be criticised for not spotting this, referee William Collum was in an excellent position to spot the foul himself and this will raise questions and doubts over whether or not referees are now not making decisions, knowing that VAR should correct them if they miss anything, which is not what it was brought in for. And, the referee's original decision always carries more weight.