I thought VAR worked pretty well at the world cup. Biggest difference was it wasn't their mates in the VAR room. I would make the 2 completely separate roles, preferably with no bloody contact between them. Then if something needs a second look, there is no talking, it's just signalled to the ref on pitch to have a second look. When they do, it's up to them if they want to change their mind, but it has to be clear, not a 50/50 that on the 19th angle shows something different.Was a lovely finished film little Phil, hope it gave him a bit of confidence.
Quote from: ozzjim on September 05, 2022, 11:12:03 PMI thought VAR worked pretty well at the world cup. Biggest difference was it wasn't their mates in the VAR room. I would make the 2 completely separate roles, preferably with no bloody contact between them. Then if something needs a second look, there is no talking, it's just signalled to the ref on pitch to have a second look. When they do, it's up to them if they want to change their mind, but it has to be clear, not a 50/50 that on the 19th angle shows something different.Was a lovely finished film little Phil, hope it gave him a bit of confidence. It was good see the ref at one of the matches (Michael Oliver?) being sent to the screen by VAR, but then sticking with his original decision. I don't think I've seen a ref do that before.
Again, rugby shows how the screen should work.Scenario 1 - Ref misses something really obvious and significant - VAR in his ear says "You might want to have a look at something here I think you might've missed"Scenario 2 - Ref isn't sure so asks the VAR for helpThey should be the only times the onfield ref goes to the screen and it should be done in the context of helping the onfield ref, not telling him he's wrong. The comms should be broadcast live for transparency and those shitty little screens should be ditched in favour of the monstrously big ones already installed at all proper grounds.
Quote from: Ad@m on September 06, 2022, 12:41:28 PMAgain, rugby shows how the screen should work.Scenario 1 - Ref misses something really obvious and significant - VAR in his ear says "You might want to have a look at something here I think you might've missed"Scenario 2 - Ref isn't sure so asks the VAR for helpThey should be the only times the onfield ref goes to the screen and it should be done in the context of helping the onfield ref, not telling him he's wrong. The comms should be broadcast live for transparency and those shitty little screens should be ditched in favour of the monstrously big ones already installed at all proper grounds.Rugby games are much more sanitised affairs though, with everybody politely accepting the ref's decisions, good or bad. Imagine the crowd in a bad-tempered local derby listening to the ref decide whether to give Man U a penalty against Liverpool in an important game, I think it would get ugly. I'd like to see it, and agree it works well at rugby, I just don't think it would at football.
I've never gone to a football match in the hope of seeing a ref watch replays on TV. Just bin it and let refs ref.
They don't pipe the ref discussions in the ground at rugby, they are just available to the tv audience. Football could easily work the same. But I do think the smaller monitors are more advisable than replaying the controversial moments on the big screen whilst the ref makes a decision.I honestly think the above, together with common sense flagging and the current margin for error would fix the vast majority of VARs problems in one fell swoop.
Quote from: chrisw1 on September 06, 2022, 12:56:38 PMThey don't pipe the ref discussions in the ground at rugby, they are just available to the tv audience. Football could easily work the same. But I do think the smaller monitors are more advisable than replaying the controversial moments on the big screen whilst the ref makes a decision.I honestly think the above, together with common sense flagging and the current margin for error would fix the vast majority of VARs problems in one fell swoop. They did do it for those with the Ref Link earpiece thingy (at the 6 Nations), maybe it's changed.
Quote from: Drummond on September 06, 2022, 01:11:28 PMQuote from: chrisw1 on September 06, 2022, 12:56:38 PMThey don't pipe the ref discussions in the ground at rugby, they are just available to the tv audience. Football could easily work the same. But I do think the smaller monitors are more advisable than replaying the controversial moments on the big screen whilst the ref makes a decision.I honestly think the above, together with common sense flagging and the current margin for error would fix the vast majority of VARs problems in one fell swoop. They did do it for those with the Ref Link earpiece thingy (at the 6 Nations), maybe it's changed.I was at a Northampton game where it definitely happened as well. One of the Saints players got sent off, and the reasoning was heard over the PA system.