I'm happy to hold my hands up and confess that how I thought VAR interventions worked was wrong, so I'm hoping someone can clarify for me.
Before yesterday, my understanding was that VAR would only be able to rule out an awarded goal if there was an offside involved.
Before yesterday, my understanding was that if VAR saw any possible non-offside offence in the review of an awarded goal, they would send the on-field ref to the VAR monitor to review that possible offence themselves in order to determine whether the goal should still stand or not.
So, with the Mac Allister "goal", I'm surprised that if the goal was awarded on the field, the VAR official was able to rule out the goal without the on-field referee reviewing the (questionable) handball himself to come to the final decision.
So, I guess the question is: can VAR officials rule out any goal for any reason without the on-field referee being involved?
Before yesterday, my understanding was that VAR would only be able to rule out an awarded goal if there was an offside involved.
Before yesterday, my understanding was that if VAR saw any possible non-offside offence in the review of an awarded goal, they would send the on-field ref to the VAR monitor to review that possible offence themselves in order to determine whether the goal should still stand or not.
So, with the Mac Allister "goal", I'm surprised that if the goal was awarded on the field, the VAR official was able to rule out the goal without the on-field referee reviewing the (questionable) handball himself to come to the final decision.
So, I guess the question is: can VAR officials rule out any goal for any reason without the on-field referee being involved?