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Thrifty non-licker
If a VAR reversal kept us in the English Soccer Premiership come next May, many folks would be lauding it....'What a great innovation'.
Trigaar obviously doesn’t go to watch live.
If a VAR reversal kept us in the English Soccer Premiership come next May, many folks would be lauding it....'What a great innovation'.
No it is not. We wanted the ability to overturn obviously incorrect decisions, not "he was offside by 2mm" nor did we want the game held up for every major moment. Giving the teams one, maybe two, referrals deals with the issue. Very few wanted this.
If a VAR reversal kept us in the English Soccer Premiership come next May, many folks would be lauding it....'What a great innovation'.
Yes I know this another VAR thread, but one with a slight difference in that it has a tried and tested solution. The whole push for a VAR came from the need to stop howlers such as the "Hand of God" and other such notorious incidents. What we have ended up is a bloody monstrosity that only the most pedantic of perfectionists can like. Why not follow both cricket and tennis and give the sides a certain amount of referrals per half (probably one certainly no more than two) and leave the rest up to the on field refs, who I would not give the power of referral to as I suspect they would be too scared NOT to use it if they had it.
This then gives the ability to the Captain/Manager to challenge a decision based on what his team are telling him.
This system would deliver what was behind the push that led to VAR rather than the perfectionist system we have been lumbered with.
I feel a large part of what makes it work in cricket and tennis is that the review system engages the fans. They all know what is going on there is an announcement of the review, big screen shows the tennis ball missing/clipping the line, or shows the three reds for the lbw decision. All very visual, and tense and all of these reviews are line calls. Brilliant, great, perfect. Except the standard of cricket umpiring has fallen through the floor but that is a different conversation.
Football has it right with the goal line technology, again a simple line call, on, and here is the key, an immovable line. But VAR is a mess, the offside calls are still subjective as the line is drawn from a camera angle not necessarily looking straight down the line. The ball being passed is also subjective when exactly did it leave the players foot? So even offside, the second most simple, line based decision cannot truly be ruled on accurately under the current conditions.
As for the handball decisions against attacking sides we have seen so far this season, well that needs to be changed immediately. Both Wolves and City have had goals chalked off against the spirit of the game and laws as I understand them.
Finally, back to my original point. Until they find a way of engaging the fan at the match with the VAR system then it is a huge no from me. Whatever the VAR officials are looking at should be on the big screen, and the audio of any discussion should be broadcast too. We have paid to be there, we should be fully informed of what is going on.
Even if somehow the FA found a way to deal with all these issues I would probably still be anti VAR as for me football is about the visceral passion of scoring a goal, it is the rarity and difficulty of scoring a goal that makes football the sport it is. That is why the world loves this game, for that moment when you totally lose your shit, that we are going to do this you know feeling, that second of unadulterated joy. That is football, and that is why VAR is not and never will be football for me.
It doesn't deal with it at all. In fact it would make it even worse. Teams would save their one or two referalls for goals against them. The majority of games feature one or two goals per team. This would result in more or less every goal being refered to VAR, just as now. Pointless.
The handball decisions are because of the joke of a rule change not because of VAR.
Two challenges per game. But if your challenge is successful, you get that one back.
Generally agree with your post. If the ref doesn't see it, the linos don't see it, the eleven opposing players don't see it, the manager and coaching staff don't see it, then it is probably not a clear and obvious error.
Edit: Plus, of course, the ref should be able to ask for a review for a specific reason if he's unsure, since being unsure means he spotted a *possible* infraction.
But teams wouldn't 'waste' their referral on anything other than a goal. You'd hope the stone-wall penalties would be seen by the ref anyway. The best chance of gaining advantage for your team is to refer the goal scored against you in the hope that there is something wrong with it. Statistically, this would yield the best advantage. Very different to cricket and tennis where the score is decided by hundreds of points not just one or two as is the case for football.VAR is not just for goals, penalties come straight to mind, also a ball cleared from behind the line does not immediately trigger VAR so the team that missed out could appeal. If you call for the referral and it is dismissed that's the end of your appeals for this half. You think only one goal or one miss judged clearance or one penalty decision happens per half? Sure if you are correct you keep the referral, but that is exactly why VAR was brought in. No system is perfect but a limited referral one is more preferable than this nightmare.
Football has it right with the goal line technology, again a simple line call, on, and here is the key, an immovable line. But VAR is a mess, the offside calls are still subjective as the line is drawn from a camera angle not necessarily looking straight down the line. The ball being passed is also subjective when exactly did it leave the players foot? So even offside, the second most simple, line based decision cannot truly be ruled on accurately under the current conditions.
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Two challenges per game. But if your challenge is successful, you get that one back.
Generally agree with your post. If the ref doesn't see it, the linos don't see it, the eleven opposing players don't see it, the manager and coaching staff don't see it, then it is probably not a clear and obvious error.
Edit: Plus, of course, the ref should be able to ask for a review for a specific reason if he's unsure, since being unsure means he spotted a *possible* infraction.
This is where the rule should be changed and follow Cricket's approach, where the decision stands if it's a marginal decision.
If 50% of a players foot is offside ( or some other measure), then the goal stands. Allowing for some potential flaws in the technology.
I feel a large part of what makes it work in cricket and tennis is that the review system engages the fans. They all know what is going on there is an announcement of the review, big screen shows the tennis ball missing/clipping the line, or shows the three reds for the lbw decision. All very visual, and tense and all of these reviews are line calls. Brilliant, great, perfect.
Also if you had read my post carefully you would see that they would not be able to constantly refer, same as you cannot in Cricket or Tennis.
Seriously? If you'd read my reply you'd know that I knew that.
Bit of a chicken and egg that one. These types of handball decisions can only be made with the aid of VAR. Neither the Wolves nor City decisions were made live, therefore they are down to VAR.