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[Football] Right then. After that demonstration... VAR? Yes or No?

VAR


  • Total voters
    444


Stat Brother

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 11, 2003
73,888
West west west Sussex
So VAR sees an offside that wasn't.
Then misses the handball that might have been.
Before disallowing a goal that was.


"It's not football any more".
 




Lower West Stander

Well-known member
Mar 25, 2012
4,753
Back in Sussex
It's not VAR, it's the way it's used; the rules; and the officials.

I like the idea employed in tennis where players get a set number of challenges.

Also, it simple has to be put own the screen and we need to hear what the officials are saying to each other, so mic them all up.

It's not hard, it's just football is so way behind in its adoption of technology.

Yep this.

In cricket, or US sport, everything is shown on the screen and described and explained by the officials.

The way football is dealing with this is laughable.

Mike Riley is an idiot.


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Tom Hark Preston Park

Will Post For Cash
Jul 6, 2003
72,321
IMHO there should be a strict time limit on VAR. If it takes more than, say, 2 minutes to decide, then the original decision (or non-decision) should stand. Because otherwise it's too close to call within the spirit of the game.
 


darkwolf666

Well-known member
Nov 8, 2015
7,651
Sittingbourne, Kent
So Burn was offside from the free kick but play carried on for ages till Burn scored including Bournemouth having plenty of touches , just killing any enjoyment of scoring now

A question I have posed before. What if a red card offence us committed in that period of play, the Burn one today had plenty of opportunities for foul play to be committed. If play is taken back to the point of the original offence, then any subsequent incidents can't happen, and therefore can't be penalised, can they?
 




whosthedaddy

striker256
Apr 20, 2007
459
Hove
The Cockwombles that allowed the use of VAR in the Premier League, long before it was proved as an accurate model of consistency, need to hang their heads in shame.

The 3 points for a win that was brought into the game of footbal in the1995-96 season was so that football teams were encouraged to try and score more goals and win games rather than go for a boring stalemate, thus the football fans was seeing more goals and getting entertainment value.
VAR has appeared to have the opposite effect. Subjective video images, which are sometimes inconclusive at best, are now being used to write off perfectly good goals such as Dan Burns' today, it's pathetic and needs to be sorted out pronto.
 


BensGrandad

New member
Jul 13, 2003
72,015
Haywards Heath
Or have a time limit. If VAR cannot be 100% sure within 30seconds then it is "inconclusive" and the benefit of the doubt goes to the attacking side.
If it should be "clear and obvious" then it shouldn't take long to establish there is an error.

This is too logical for the authorities to bring in plus the notion that the law on offside needs changing so that offside is only such if a part of the body that you can score with is offside.
 


DIFFBROOK

Really Up the Junction
Feb 3, 2005
2,267
Yorkshire
I've disagreed from the start. Football is played by humans. Like forwards who miss open goals, or keepers who let goals slip between their legs, referees make mistakes. It's part of the game.

Let's improve our officials by better training. No coincidence that England has few officials at tournaments.

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Sarisbury Seagull

Solly March Fan Club
NSC Patron
Nov 22, 2007
15,000
Sarisbury Green, Southampton
VAR has just made an even bigger fool of itself in the Norwich game than it did in ours.

It’s actually making wrong decisions, not just questionable, Pukki was onside. It’s ridiculous. Football administrators are clueless wankers.

Anyone that is for this shit hates football.
 


GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,178
Gloucester
IMHO there should be a strict time limit on VAR. If it takes more than, say, 2 minutes to decide, then the original decision (or non-decision) should stand. Because otherwise it's too close to call within the spirit of the game.

Two minutes? I'd give it twenty seconds, max. And maybe only ten for offside.
 


ROKERITE

Active member
Dec 30, 2007
723
VAR has just made an even bigger fool of itself in the Norwich game than it did in ours.

It’s actually making wrong decisions, not just questionable, Pukki was onside. It’s ridiculous. Football administrators are clueless wankers.

Anyone that is for this shit hates football.

I was always against the idea but no-one could have foreseen just how it would suck the fun out of the game.
Weren't we told it would only be used if there was a clear and obvious error? What was clear and obvious about Burn or Pukki's goals?
 




GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,178
Gloucester
The problem with having a time limit is that it makes corruption possible. Either deliberate, or accidental through subconscious bias.

"It probably is a Man United red card... but I think I'll just let the clock run down..."
It might with fans running it, but not the referees. And of course it's much easier to send off a United player at Old Trafford if you're safely locked away in secure premises 100 miles or so away!
 


GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,178
Gloucester
I was always against the idea but no-one could have foreseen just how it would suck the fun out of the game.
Weren't we told it would only be used if there was a clear and obvious error? What was clear and obvious about Burn or Pukki's goals?

It's a misinterpretation by the officials of 'clear and obvious error', As Dermot Gallagher keeps telling us (and tbf he's not alone), 1 millimetre off-side is 'clear and obvious' - yes, after six views from different angles in slo-mo it is clear and obvious offside - but as it's so marginal is not a clear and obvious error by the referee.

Perhaps they should have used 'glaringly obvious error' as the criteria instead.
 


GT49er

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Feb 1, 2009
49,178
Gloucester
If you don't think referees have subconscious bias already, then you haven't been watching the Premier League for the last 20 years!

This would be heavily exacerbated if they had the option of running down a timer when making a decision...

Referees having been refereeing from a secure room at a safe distance for the last 20 years - and without the risk of angry red-shirted players right in their face swearing at them..
 








Pavilionaire

Well-known member
Jul 7, 2003
31,262
The blackest in a number of black VAR days.
 


Stato

Well-known member
Dec 21, 2011
7,366
VAR has just made an even bigger fool of itself in the Norwich game than it did in ours.

It’s actually making wrong decisions, not just questionable, Pukki was onside. It’s ridiculous. Football administrators are clueless wankers.

Anyone that is for this shit hates football.

The Pukki one is not worse than Dan Burn's. The Pukki decision was based on a questionable frame of the moment when the ball was played, but showed that part of his body was offside. The Burn one was based on a frame when the ball has already left Mooy's foot, the lines drawn are in the wrong place and the measurement is of something that was two or three phases before Burn's shot. The question of whether Burn was offside from the free kick should have been a moot point as soon as the Bournemouth defender headed it clear.

Whatever technology is brought in, it seems that Eddie Howe's teams will always get incorrect decisions given in their favour against us. Thankfully, unlike Fletcher's handball winning them a penalty, them being awarded a penalty for Calderon's fair tackle outside of the box and the sending offs against Burnley, this latest error didn't affect the result.
 




amexer

Well-known member
Aug 8, 2011
6,830
If they are going to use lines why not change rule to say both feet have to be behind it
 




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