maltaseagull
Well-known member
But then VAR could say the player´s thumb was stopping it being the WHOLE body nothing would change. VAR is not fit for purpose the way it is being used and the operators need to be retrained to look at the replays and use common sense on wether to over rule the referee on the pitch. Also the assistant referees need to step up and not just decide on throw ins and the occasional offside but really assist the ref and alert them to dodgy fouls etc.We already have LiVARpool, maybe we should have WoeVARhampton Wanderers? What is clear is we cannot go on like this.
VAR presently sees it's job as the arbiter of ALL the big decisions, with the referee going along with 100% of all VAR decisions. Goals are chalked off on the flimsiest of evidence, the same with penalties given. And in this decision-making process, no weight is given to the position of the referee who has seen the incident with their own eyes just yards away.
There are many problems with VAR but two of the biggest are:
1. Clear and obvious error - this is a red herring, and has never been the basis on which VAR has been applied in the Prem.
2. No element of 'Umpires Call' or ability for the ref to direct VAR.
If VAR was just for clear and obvious errors you would then have a brand new problem of what to do about unclear and obscure errors, for they are still errors.
What seems to have been lost in all of this is the 'seeking to gain an advantage' aspect. In the majority of VAR offside decisions or penalty handball decisions it is clear the deemed offender has not gained any material advantage.
And with the advent of TV and VAR it is time to revisit the offside rule. The rules was brought in to deter players from always lurking around the goal looking for goalscoring opportunities and football becoming and endless round of launching it long. I wonder just how offside you had to be in those early matches for the linesman to raise his flag. I like the Arsene Wenger proposal that the entire body of the forward should be in front of the last defender to be considered as offside.