No indeed that wasn't my point, I'm not referring to the olden days. It does make a difference, because people are clearly irritated that offside is being given when players are practically level, whereas before there was the idea that the benefit of doubt was with the attacker. It would be given offside if the linesman was confident they were offside, not if they were about level.This obsession with 'daylight' is very odd. It's never been a rule or directive of any kind, but there seems to be a generally held belief that in the olden days it used to be 'daylight' etc etc.
I realise that isn't your point, but what would be the advantage in moving the frame of reference to 'torso', 'daylight', 'feet' or anything else? It doesn't make any difference!
Which is exactly what I said: "We'd still have just as tight calls (whether it's 1mm offside or not), but maybe the fans would be happier with it being more lenient for the attacking side."Wherever you draw the line, there will be a point that is 1mm past that line - and that will be offside. You therefore still have a situation where the player is 1mm offside.