What has that got to do with whether a lino should flag or not when it is very tight
You were saying that you're glad VAR decides - I was highlighting that VAR can get it wrong.
Yes, I agree.Unless it wasn't very clear, I meant in instances potentially like the lino flags, the ref blows the whistle ruling any play after that whistle dead, however we have a player through on goal, miles away from any opponent and looking at slotting it away into an empty net but because the whistle was blown, the goal they would have scored doesn't count even though replays showed that they had timed their run perfectly and were onside when the ball was played
Yes, fair enough, you're right.The whistle being blown means that VAR can't review anything, hence why, when it is very tight, the play should be allowed to continue so no flagging by the lino, and let VAR sort out if it was offside or not after it is scored. Something the poster i was replying to disagrees with, thinking it should be flagged even if it turned out to be wrong and a perfectly good goal is denied