Or a pint. Hang on, this sounds ok!Even the ref looked embarrassed. Took so long it killed the atmosphere. We don't score a lot so imagine having to wait 3 mins everytime before a goal is confirmed !!! Enough time to nip out for a pie!
Or a pint. Hang on, this sounds ok!Even the ref looked embarrassed. Took so long it killed the atmosphere. We don't score a lot so imagine having to wait 3 mins everytime before a goal is confirmed !!! Enough time to nip out for a pie!
I think most people accept errors that are really tight to call, or that can go either way. It's the injustices that are obvious that sting and need to be eliminated.
After the first few matches they pretty much got it right in the World Cup (at least until the final).
What a mess in the Citeh game.
On a side note the close ups of the pitch, it looks awful, very patchy and long grass
This isn’t what people wanted... all the majority wanted was goal line technology to prevent travesties of justice like the Frank Lampard non goal against Germany. Let the officials get on with doing their job and just help out with the goal line stuff...
VAR can be as efficient, we just need the rules sorting out and some clarity about when VAR will be used in game situations.
Goal line technology, for example, is a right or wrong decision and these decisions take roughly 20 seconds or less to check.
It's complete bollocks isn't it.
There's a reason it works in other sports. They are structured games of phases. Natural breaks. Also, the culture of those sports is when a key moment happens (a try or wicket), they celebrate but they don't go MAD. The crowd don't lose their marbles.
In football, a goal is SUCH a huge event in comparison. Creating doubt about every goal (which is what even having VAR does) instantly causes an issue.
You then have the fact that the VAR reviews in other sports are on technicalities. Rugby for example "did the ball go forward, was it grounded properly, Was the player in front of the kicker?" These are all binary things, yes or no. Football might be "Was there a foul on the keeper?" That's a matter of opinion. Completely open to managers getting angry that a decision has been reversed incorrectly.
Finally, the whole crowd gets involved. It's theatre. Perhaps go the NFL route, let the refs be mic'd up but ONLY to clearly announce what is being reviewed and to then announce the decision. Show it on the big screen. Why are the people who PAY to go to the games being given a worse show than those watching at home.
I'm just waiting for the moment a foul happens in the box (but is missed), the team go up the other end, score.....and then the ref looks at VAR and rules it out.....and then gives a penalty the other way. The ball can be up the other end of the pitch in a few seconds.
It's instant.
But that is virtually impossible to define.
This season Albion scored a goal from a corner at Newcastle. It was a perfectly good goal, with no infringements, but TV replays showed that the ref had awarded us a corner when it should have been a goal kick to Newcastle. So how far back do you take it? Do you just consider the goal? Do you go back and consider the decision that led to the corner? Or do you go further back and check the phase of play in the build-up to the corner / goal kick, in case there had been an earlier foul or incorrect decision?
VAR will wreck football.
What’s the point of going to your local, if it still exists, on a Saturday evening and arguing about the controversial points of a game when VAR has been used? The final nail, first driven into the coffin of football, by Sky and their multi angle replays. What are we supposed to talk about now, baking?
As far as I can see, the only true beneficiaries of VAR are the bookies.