MPs also questioned city council bosses over why police intelligence from a meeting with Dutch police, considered as crucial to the decision to ban Maccabi fans, was not included in minutes by the SAG.
Council leader John Cotton was joined at the hearing by Richard Brooks, executive director of city operations, and Anthony Cox, director of law and governance.
Cotton added he had concerns over “some of the information” that was placed in front of the SAG.
He refused to say whether he had confidence in Guildford and said he had “serious questions” he would like to see addressed following the inquiry.
“That [safety advisory] group can only work on the basis of candor and confidence of the material that’s placed before it,” he said.
The committee criticised the minutes as giving a “biased picture” of the meeting and said it showed pressure coming from two councillors who pressed away fans should not attend the game.
Brooks said the minutes may be an “incomplete picture” and “not a perfect record” of the meeting but he did not agree that it was a “biased picture”.