Yeah that's true, I was thinking more about how often they're wrong, but yes, impacting our enjoyment I agree.I think the offside ones are the worst myself. This is where the 'instant celebration' aspect is most impactful
Yeah that's true, I was thinking more about how often they're wrong, but yes, impacting our enjoyment I agree.I think the offside ones are the worst myself. This is where the 'instant celebration' aspect is most impactful
Surely it will do the opposite as at the moment all the errors are human ones.My conspiracy theory is that Refs are deliberately/subconsciously making VAR seem bad, in an attempt to delay AI from taking their jobs.
Never work. What happens if the tech fails on one players boot? Player changes his boots during the game does it need calibrating prior to him continuing?Offside is easy to fix.
Do it ALL by feet - shoulders, head, arms don't matter. Just feet.
Put a little microchip in the front, side, and back of each boot, and get some radio waves flying about - done.
(By feet, tech wouldn't really be needed, as level can be always either onside or either offside - i don't care which - just want consistency.
So what if "Level" is creating inconsistency? "Spotto Bollocko Level." Do SB level as offside for the first half of season, and then as onside for second half, or, is onside for the team with most corners, or, the most possession in opposing half.
The not interfering with play gig; 15m away from ball action and didn't pull defenders out of position, or off pitch = exempt.
The current mess really needs to be changed.
Yeah it will.Surely it will do the opposite as at the moment all the errors are human ones.
as thick as Lee Mason or only as thick as John Brooks?Green line should be much thicker……
How things were is how we got here now.Back to how things where but keeping goal line technology. Win some, lose some.
The solution is already available. The Premier league will probably now fast track the same semi automatic VAR system FIFA used at the World Cup.
I don't know if it's still the case, but a few years back when I was still watching NFL, the authorities had an iron grip on the game, and managers were not allowed to comment on the performance of the officials (of course some would occasionally, and then be hit with fines).How things were is how we got here now.
Need a root and branch overhaul on how football is talked about and reported on.
As that's never going to happen, binning off VAR will change nothing, possibly be even worse now...
"If we still had VAR..."
I disagree. It has put the advantage with the defenders again, whereas it used to be benefit of doubt with the attackers. We need to go back to that. I'd say there needs to be clear space for it to be offside.If you're going to simplify it to just feet, then one chip per boot is enough. But you still need someone to say which attaching player's chips to use, and judging by Estupinan's disallowed goal, they'd be capable of getting that wrong.
VAR is a mess, but I don't think the offside decisions are that big of an issue (this weekend aside). Seeing goals ruled out for a player being an inch offside is annoying, but not the worst part of VAR.
Never work. What happens if the tech fails on one players boot? Player changes his boots during the game does it need calibrating prior to him continuing?
Whilst I know there's some truth in your point that some people don't like authority and can't see their own bias etc, I don't think that's the big issue, which IMO is the howlers we used to get. The goal we scored against Germany in the WC, for example. I also wouldn't have been impressed if we hadn't got the penalty for the assault on Mason Mount against France.I don't believe there is anything that can realistically be done that would stop people feeling aggreived. If we get rid of VAR there will be the regular on-field mistakes that half the footballl fandom would whine about because 'VAR would have sorted that one - those were the things it should have dealt with, let's bring it back for things like that'.
Even if they don't call for VAR to return, there will still be complaints about pretty much every refereeing decision because we culturally refuse to accept their authority, because without ever even reading the rules of the game or intrstructions to referees believe we know the rules and the game better than them and refuse to acknowledge our own biases when looking at incidents involving the team we've followed and invested so much of ourselves into for 30 years, or situations involving our rivals, etc
If they remember to draw them in the first place that isautomation is the only solution unfortunately. all this 'just measure it from x or y,' does nothing because there's still going to be a millimetres distance between onside and offside.
It doesn't matter how much we prune and sculpt the VAR guidelines, if the people operating it can't even draw the lines in the right place then we're going to have issues
But not as thick as the people running it.Green line should be much thicker……