Loreen's entry "Tattoo" became the big jury favorite from which she took home 340 points. However, the viewers' greatest support did not go to the winner, but ended up with Käärijä and his "Cha cha cha". From the audience he received 376 points while Loreen received 243.

And the dissatisfaction about the win ending up wrong has not gone unnoticed, in social media messages are now spreading that the international jury's votes should be written off and not allowed to come back in future competitions.

Gave zero points

In the host city of Liverpool, where fans have now begun to make a pilgrimage home, SVT runs into a couple of disgruntled fans from Finland.

"The crowd had their say, and that's the entry that should have won," says Sonja, who travelled from Finland hoping to see her home country take home her second ever ESC win.

She does not see that the international jury has any relevance left in the competition.

The Finnish jury gave Sweden its twelve. But according to Eurovision's official figures, viewers in Finland gave the neighboring country a whopping zero points.

"It's a kind of love-hate relationship," says Sonja.

The support inside the arena was also great for Käärijä, where the audience could be heard shouting his name several times during the evening. Even when Sweden was awarded its twelfth from Lithuania, fans almost drowned out the Finn.

Sweden's televoters, for their part, gave their twelfth to the Finnish contribution.

Käärijä: "A bad loser"

During a press conference that took place after the competition, Käärijä, or Jere Pöyhönen as his real name is, said that he had not yet had time to grasp the result.

"I have to take this in for a moment. I'm a really lousy loser. I admit that," he said, according to Yle.

Should the audience votes be worth more than the jury votes? Hear more fans in Liverpool give their views on the matter in the clip above.

SVT is seeking the EBU for a comment.