I’ve played Rugby for over 30 years, and while the game may have sped up it is nothing like football even now. Every scrum, line-out, penalty and free-kick takes at least 30 seconds to set up and eats up huge amounts of game time. That is before you get to periods of play where little is happening due to back and forth kicking, or tied up slowly going through phases of possession. I love Rugby, but it is nowhere near as free-flowing as football and does allow for reviews as it is rare you will get more than a couple of minutes of play before there is a significant stoppage for a set-piece. You would also never get a situation in Rugby like one in the Burnley-Bournemouth game last season where a goal was disallowed and a penalty awarded at the other end because one team broke and the first opportunity to review the decision came after the ball had gone into the net of the team who got the penalty. Finally, Rugby also stops the clock for injuries, reviews etc in a way football doesn’t, so if we have VAR decisions that take 3-4 minutes then we are going to see games that last nearly 2 hours before long. If we have VAR then I absolutely accept that football can learn a lot from the way the assistance is used in Rugby. My problem with it is that it fundamentally changes the nature of the game and our relationship with it as spectators. If it was just used to review serious foul play that the ref might have missed then I could just about accept it, but it will never stop at that and so I don’t think that’s a price worth paying.
Quote from: Pat Mustard on December 21, 2020, 05:33:59 PMI’ve played Rugby for over 30 years, and while the game may have sped up it is nothing like football even now. Every scrum, line-out, penalty and free-kick takes at least 30 seconds to set up and eats up huge amounts of game time. That is before you get to periods of play where little is happening due to back and forth kicking, or tied up slowly going through phases of possession. I love Rugby, but it is nowhere near as free-flowing as football and does allow for reviews as it is rare you will get more than a couple of minutes of play before there is a significant stoppage for a set-piece. You would also never get a situation in Rugby like one in the Burnley-Bournemouth game last season where a goal was disallowed and a penalty awarded at the other end because one team broke and the first opportunity to review the decision came after the ball had gone into the net of the team who got the penalty. Finally, Rugby also stops the clock for injuries, reviews etc in a way football doesn’t, so if we have VAR decisions that take 3-4 minutes then we are going to see games that last nearly 2 hours before long. If we have VAR then I absolutely accept that football can learn a lot from the way the assistance is used in Rugby. My problem with it is that it fundamentally changes the nature of the game and our relationship with it as spectators. If it was just used to review serious foul play that the ref might have missed then I could just about accept it, but it will never stop at that and so I don’t think that’s a price worth paying. TL;DR For Most posters, I agree that it marks a fundamental change for football but it did for rugby and cricket as well, the difference is the officials in those sports wanted it to succeed, I don't think they do in football.Playing at a level below the top flight doesn't really have much bearing on this, I've played for 20 years myself and I barely see my level and international and European standard as the same sport, the difference in fitness levels alone is frightening. I watch as much rugby as football and I'd say the number of slow stop-start games and faced passed back and forth is about the same between the 2. Most of the long delays that used to happen around scrums in particular are gone now the hit has been removed. Football has shorter but more regular breaks for things like corners, goal kicks and throw-ins compared to line-outs and drop-outs with free kicks and penalties taking as long in each sport in my opinion. The 1 difference is the penalty kicked into the corner for a line-out there's no equivalent of using a set-piece to gain another in football.First bold bit - how is that any different to teams passing it around their back 4 for 30-40 seconds as happens regularly when they need a breather?Second, is that honestly not true for most football games? how often do you see a period where stuff that might be reviewed is happening and the ball stays in play for 3-4 minutes? It's not as common as a lot of people think.Third, last season or the one before Cobus Reinach had a try disallowed to give a penalty against saints in their 22, I remember it well because I was fucking livid.Fourth, They already take this into account 4-5 minutes at the end of each half isn't that unusual. On top of that Football is designed around the ball being in play for roughly 2/3rds of the game time and rugby is pretty similar, if you look it up the stats back this up. Most of the clock stopping now is because of injuries or reviews, clubs taking the piss getting ready for scrums and line outs doesn't happen now.
The system is in part subjective. The camera angle is usually not in line as required for horse racing. The precise moment the ball is kicked is impossible to determine accurately compared to arbitrary lines that leave no room for judgement. Who checks the pitch dimensions that I assume are the points of reference for said drawn lines? Is the lens aberration in the camera and the monitor checked? Sounds a bit extreme I know but if one part of the process is definitive then everything else has to be. Otherwise a margin for error needs to be included which should favour the attacker.
Why should it favour the attacker? It's a law meant to stop goals being scored.
It’s really only to stop goal hanging, so surely if we’re talking about fingertips, elbows or heals something has gone wrong.Last season Jack had his back to goal, out on the wing and the back of his heal was slightly off. That’s one of probably over twenty ridiculous decisions we’ve had with VAR.
I really don't care how lines are drawn, different angles, what part of a body counts etc. I still wouldn't care if they somehow managed to come up with a 100% fool proof accurate and quick way of doing it. What I do care about is celebrating bloody goals. It massively pisses me off and is turning me off the game fast that I sit at home watching us score against the stripeys and I just sit there knowing there's no point celebrating as it might not count. Is that the game we all want to see...we score a goal...waaaaait, waaaaait bit more, hang on, bit longer...nearly done, yeah goal stands...wahey!!! Nope.