Right Brain Ronnie
Well-known member
Lineker?Unfortunately pricks sometimes get a voice.
Lineker?Unfortunately pricks sometimes get a voice.
Why would Richards bring his rolls into the studio? Hasn't the BBC got a canteen these days?I’m wondering if we will get the Lineker interview with Fab when Garry asks if it’s past his bedtime before Richard’s rolls around on the floor on hysterics
Astonishing. The wanker has no shame.
Although a bit shakey first half with passes, the amount of niggley interceptions he won today was incredible, something we lacked last year and it made a difference today in us turning over attacks quicklyA mixed bag for me but I'm confident he'll grow into it. Feyernoord supporter I know reckons he's the real deal.
How can the error be 'clear and obvious' if the mistake is understandable when the referee gets one look at full speed? There was contact between the players, not in the way that the referee thought - but it wasn't a complete howler. In fact, VAR appeared to get their reasoning wrong. The commentators, listening to the conversation, said VAR instructed the ref there'd been no contact.It doesn’t matter what it looks like at full speed and one single viewing it’s what the readily available evidence (to use the PLs own words) shows, that showed the ref had made a clear and obvious error so he was rightly called to the screen. Even with the monitor not working properly the decision was made very quickly without micro analysis of each angle. Very much a win for VAR and what it’s meant to do today.
He was on my Peacock stream, he also claimed the dunk “handball” incident was 50/50Not Sky- Premier League Productions for Foreign broadcast
Absolute cockHe was on my Peacock stream, he also claimed the dunk “handball” incident was 50/50
The clear and obvious definition hasn’t changed. By your definition of it being understandable that the ref has missed it in real time VAR wouldn’t be used for 99.9% of the season.How can the error be 'clear and obvious' if the mistake is understandable when the referee gets one look at full speed? There was contact between the players, not in the way that the referee thought - but it wasn't a complete howler. In fact, VAR appeared to get their reasoning wrong. The commentators, listening to the conversation, said VAR instructed the ref there'd been no contact.
VAR got it right for once!Unless treading on a defenders leg is a penalty then this picture is pretty conclusive that VAR got it spot on today.
Disagree. No point PGMOL making a big, big deal of less VAR intervention this week if it's going to get involved in calls like that. Sure, he stood on Dunk's foot and therefore lost his balance. If Dunk had stayed on his feet, no decision to make. It was the right decision in the end but out of step with the line they'd very publicly said they'd be taking by backing the ref's call. A line which would be better for the game in the long run. We'd have some subjective decisions go for us, some against us, as it always was. There's no reason, other than your supposition, to doubt what the commentators were saying. VAR called him to the monitor because they thought there was no contact at all.The clear and obvious definition hasn’t changed. By your definition of it being understandable that the ref has missed it in real time VAR wouldn’t be used for 99.9% of the season.
What has changed is the phrase “use of readily available evidence” that means don’t spend ages analysing every angle. Watch the replay, if it shows something the ref has missed and meets the criteria of clear and obvious then call him over to the screen. Regardless of what the commentators have passed on because they’ve heard the conversation (and let’s face it they were hardly brilliant today with their mis pronouncing names and blatant bias so it’s possible they’ve misheard or mis quoted) it was the correct decision under the new guidelines.
How can the error be 'clear and obvious' if the mistake is understandable when the referee gets one look at full speed? There was contact between the players, not in the way that the referee thought - but it wasn't a complete howler. In fact, VAR appeared to get their reasoning wrong. The commentators, listening to the conversation, said VAR instructed the ref there'd been no contact.
My view, like Sky on the match this evening, is that PGMOL made a very big deal indeed of not micro-analysing decisions on the basis of replays. I can't stand Simon Hooper but it was entirely understandable that, with one look, he felt there was enough contact to award a penalty. Part of improving the implementation of VAR is accepting that some on-field calls will be contentious. Or we can just continue down the rabbit hole of VAR interrupting matches here far more than it does in Europe/international competitions and spoiling the game. Got to take the rough with the smooth.I don't understand your view in this. Yes there was contact between the players. But not in a way that results in a penalty. Dunk is stepped on , he doesn't trip the Everton player. How simple can it be?
Sounds like you're just calling to do away with VAR altogether. If VAR doesn't overrule that decision then there is no point in having it at all.My view, like Sky on the match this evening, is that PGMOL made a very big deal indeed of not micro-analysing decisions on the basis of replays. I can't stand Simon Hooper but it was entirely understandable that, with one look, he felt there was enough contact to award a penalty. Part of improving the implementation of VAR is accepting that some on-field calls will be contentious. Or we can just continue down the rabbit hole of VAR interrupting matches here far more than it does in Europe/international competitions and spoiling the game. Got to take the rough with the smooth.
That was a perfectly good example of a good var usage. The infield decision was obviously wrong. They told the referee, they looked and overturned it quickly. No big delay and the correct result was achieved.My view, like Sky on the match this evening, is that PGMOL made a very big deal indeed of not micro-analysing decisions on the basis of replays. I can't stand Simon Hooper but it was entirely understandable that, with one look, he felt there was enough contact to award a penalty. Part of improving the implementation of VAR is accepting that some on-field calls will be contentious. Or we can just continue down the rabbit hole of VAR interrupting matches here far more than it does in Europe/international competitions and spoiling the game. Got to take the rough with the smooth.