The referee doesn't use VAR at all - they instruct him. It isn't rugby where the ref can call for a check.Was ok apart from using VAR a bit too much. Assume on penalty saw Connelly on ground and checked with VAR to see what happened. Not his fault VAR made joke decision.
The referee doesn't use VAR at all - they instruct him. It isn't rugby where the ref can call for a check.[/QUOTE
Never new that. Are you telling me if a ref is not 100% sure about something he cant ask VAR to look
VAR constantly monitor the game and will inform the ref if a decision needs changing. There is a two way dialogue so the ref can explain what he has seen but every decision is looked at regardless of the ref. Until yesterday, they gave a very heavy weighting to the ref's original decision.The referee doesn't use VAR at all - they instruct him. It isn't rugby where the ref can call for a check.[/QUOTE
Never new that. Are you telling me if a ref is not 100% sure about something he cant ask VAR to look
Hard to disagree with what you say, I actually like Andy Madley as a ref, (he is far better than his brother Bobby was), and was a somewhat 'lucky' ref for us back in our Championship days, when we seemed to win a lot of games when he was officiating.
Was a little bit over reliant on his whistle yesterday l thought, and looked a little bit rusty somehow, doesn't get to referee many Premier League games l guess.
I thought he was decent.
VAR constantly monitor the game and will inform the ref if a decision needs changing. There is a two way dialogue so the ref can explain what he has seen but every decision is looked at regardless of the ref. Until yesterday, they gave a very heavy weighting to the ref's original decision.
They are constantly monitoring the match, but they can only interfere in four situations: red card, goal, mistaken identity and penalty decisions.
https://www.premierleague.com/VAR
https://www.skysports.com/football/news/11661/11777969/var-in-the-premier-league-the-ultimate-qa
For objective situations they can inform the ref of errors (and they are not subject to a clear and obvious test). For subjective situations (eg fouls, penalties) the ref explains what he saw that led to his decision, the VAR can then advise him if what he saw happened or not. The VAR doesn't make a judgement as to whether the ref's decision is right or wrong, just if what he based his decision on actually happened. For our penalty yesterday it is most likely that he thought, like many of us did, that Connelly slipped so no penalty, the VAR will have advised him actually there was contact. The final decision always rests with the onfield ref.
Well yes. No way I could be arsed to type all of that though. Especially as it has been touted non stop for the first month of the season.
Not sure about the final decision being with the onfield ref though as they don't use the little TV. That was supposed to be the plan but it doesn't happen so if the on field ref can't watch it back, they are very unlikely to reject what they are told.