City boss Nicky Law can't get that Brighton goal out of his system - and is now calling for technology to be introduced into football.

"It was so disappointing to lose to such a controversial goal last Saturday," he said. The more I see it the worse it gets.

"I still do not think it was a goal."

Bobby Zamora's strike settled a game which City did not deserve to lose and tomorrow Law hopes to get a fairer crack of the whip at Coventry.

"It shouldn't be like this in 2003 with the technology we have got at our disposal. It was different with the Geoff Hurst goal in 1966."

Law just cannot understand why such decisions are left to the officials.

"We are still getting done on a regular basis with debatable decisions. There has got to be a better way of doing it. You can't put a decision like Saturday's behind you. This is a multi-million pound business. There's people's jobs at stake - these decisions have got to be right.

"It's not about managers, players or referees' egos, it is about getting things right. In two or three seconds watching the Sky cameras, you can tell if a goal was a goal. The game can still flow - there has to be some way of working it out."

Earlier this week, City chairman Gordon Gibb said he would not be joining Crystal Palace chairman Simon Jordan's crusade to have video technology introduced into the game.