I don't think and would never accuse any official - even Moss, Friend and Oliver - of cheating or deliberately favouring "big" teams BUT until PGMOL recognise that there is without doubt an unconscious bias towards Sky 6 clubs it will never improve. For me it's the application of VAR that is wrong and that is demonstrated by last night decision. I accept the rule which has been dug out means Ramsey was offside according to the law. What I don't believe is that VAR would have done more than check the offside/handball if that had been Uniteds goal and the obscure rule would have stayed obscure for a little while longer.Only the PGMOL can change this and only then if they see the bias and want to change it. As an aside I presume this routine was a Nanny MacPhee cunning plan that in the end worked against us.
Quote from: baddowvillans on January 11, 2022, 10:10:20 AMI don't think and would never accuse any official - even Moss, Friend and Oliver - of cheating or deliberately favouring "big" teams BUT until PGMOL recognise that there is without doubt an unconscious bias towards Sky 6 clubs it will never improve. For me it's the application of VAR that is wrong and that is demonstrated by last night decision. I accept the rule which has been dug out means Ramsey was offside according to the law. What I don't believe is that VAR would have done more than check the offside/handball if that had been Uniteds goal and the obscure rule would have stayed obscure for a little while longer.Only the PGMOL can change this and only then if they see the bias and want to change it. As an aside I presume this routine was a Nanny MacPhee cunning plan that in the end worked against us.It wasn't disallowed for offside. Murphy fouled Cavani by standing still and allowing the defender to run into him. Let's see how that works on Saturday if we do the same thing!!
Quote from: Holte132 on January 11, 2022, 11:02:02 AMQuote from: baddowvillans on January 11, 2022, 10:10:20 AMI don't think and would never accuse any official - even Moss, Friend and Oliver - of cheating or deliberately favouring "big" teams BUT until PGMOL recognise that there is without doubt an unconscious bias towards Sky 6 clubs it will never improve. For me it's the application of VAR that is wrong and that is demonstrated by last night decision. I accept the rule which has been dug out means Ramsey was offside according to the law. What I don't believe is that VAR would have done more than check the offside/handball if that had been Uniteds goal and the obscure rule would have stayed obscure for a little while longer.Only the PGMOL can change this and only then if they see the bias and want to change it. As an aside I presume this routine was a Nanny MacPhee cunning plan that in the end worked against us.It wasn't disallowed for offside. Murphy fouled Cavani by standing still and allowing the defender to run into him. Let's see how that works on Saturday if we do the same thing!!It WAS offside, we know this because the ref gave an indirect free-kick, not a direct one as would be the case with a foul. The element under discussion with the ref going to the monitor wasn't whether he was in an offside position (or not), which is usually where VAR comes in (because JJ clearly was in an offside position), but whether he interfered with Cavani's ability to challenge for the ball. That's why he went to the monitor, because that's a matter of opinion, not fact, and hence the ref's call. It wasn't a "foul" in the sense it would have been given elsewhere on the pitch, but the standards are different here because he started in an offside position so technically ANY interference counts as offside.I was really angry last night, and I still think they took WAY too long to reach their decision, but I accept it was unfortunately the right one.My view is that the ref saw the coming together in real-time and thought "no foul, it's just players coming together" - but he did that not realising JJ was offside. Once he saw JJ was offside on the replay, that coming together becomes an offside offence, even if it doesn't reach the level of a 'foul' anywhere else on the pitch. You don't have to foul them to be offside, unfortunately.
Quote from: Smithy on January 11, 2022, 11:08:33 AMQuote from: Holte132 on January 11, 2022, 11:02:02 AMQuote from: baddowvillans on January 11, 2022, 10:10:20 AMI don't think and would never accuse any official - even Moss, Friend and Oliver - of cheating or deliberately favouring "big" teams BUT until PGMOL recognise that there is without doubt an unconscious bias towards Sky 6 clubs it will never improve. For me it's the application of VAR that is wrong and that is demonstrated by last night decision. I accept the rule which has been dug out means Ramsey was offside according to the law. What I don't believe is that VAR would have done more than check the offside/handball if that had been Uniteds goal and the obscure rule would have stayed obscure for a little while longer.Only the PGMOL can change this and only then if they see the bias and want to change it. As an aside I presume this routine was a Nanny MacPhee cunning plan that in the end worked against us.It wasn't disallowed for offside. Murphy fouled Cavani by standing still and allowing the defender to run into him. Let's see how that works on Saturday if we do the same thing!!It WAS offside, we know this because the ref gave an indirect free-kick, not a direct one as would be the case with a foul. The element under discussion with the ref going to the monitor wasn't whether he was in an offside position (or not), which is usually where VAR comes in (because JJ clearly was in an offside position), but whether he interfered with Cavani's ability to challenge for the ball. That's why he went to the monitor, because that's a matter of opinion, not fact, and hence the ref's call. It wasn't a "foul" in the sense it would have been given elsewhere on the pitch, but the standards are different here because he started in an offside position so technically ANY interference counts as offside.I was really angry last night, and I still think they took WAY too long to reach their decision, but I accept it was unfortunately the right one.My view is that the ref saw the coming together in real-time and thought "no foul, it's just players coming together" - but he did that not realising JJ was offside. Once he saw JJ was offside on the replay, that coming together becomes an offside offence, even if it doesn't reach the level of a 'foul' anywhere else on the pitch. You don't have to foul them to be offside, unfortunately.If it is that clear a decision why did it take over 3 minutes for the VAR ref to ask Oliver to have a look at it?
Also, am I the only one who saw Lidelof hauling Ollie back when he hit the bar? He had a big handful of his shirt - how is that not a foul? Surely it made it harder for Ollie to get his shot off?
Quote from: Bobby Boy on January 11, 2022, 11:14:50 AMQuote from: Smithy on January 11, 2022, 11:08:33 AMQuote from: Holte132 on January 11, 2022, 11:02:02 AMQuote from: baddowvillans on January 11, 2022, 10:10:20 AMI don't think and would never accuse any official - even Moss, Friend and Oliver - of cheating or deliberately favouring "big" teams BUT until PGMOL recognise that there is without doubt an unconscious bias towards Sky 6 clubs it will never improve. For me it's the application of VAR that is wrong and that is demonstrated by last night decision. I accept the rule which has been dug out means Ramsey was offside according to the law. What I don't believe is that VAR would have done more than check the offside/handball if that had been Uniteds goal and the obscure rule would have stayed obscure for a little while longer.Only the PGMOL can change this and only then if they see the bias and want to change it. As an aside I presume this routine was a Nanny MacPhee cunning plan that in the end worked against us.It wasn't disallowed for offside. Murphy fouled Cavani by standing still and allowing the defender to run into him. Let's see how that works on Saturday if we do the same thing!!It WAS offside, we know this because the ref gave an indirect free-kick, not a direct one as would be the case with a foul. The element under discussion with the ref going to the monitor wasn't whether he was in an offside position (or not), which is usually where VAR comes in (because JJ clearly was in an offside position), but whether he interfered with Cavani's ability to challenge for the ball. That's why he went to the monitor, because that's a matter of opinion, not fact, and hence the ref's call. It wasn't a "foul" in the sense it would have been given elsewhere on the pitch, but the standards are different here because he started in an offside position so technically ANY interference counts as offside.I was really angry last night, and I still think they took WAY too long to reach their decision, but I accept it was unfortunately the right one.My view is that the ref saw the coming together in real-time and thought "no foul, it's just players coming together" - but he did that not realising JJ was offside. Once he saw JJ was offside on the replay, that coming together becomes an offside offence, even if it doesn't reach the level of a 'foul' anywhere else on the pitch. You don't have to foul them to be offside, unfortunately.If it is that clear a decision why did it take over 3 minutes for the VAR ref to ask Oliver to have a look at it? I don't agree with how long it took, OBVIOUSLY it was far too long, but I think they looked at the Wakins touch that would have made Ings offside, and Ings' possible handball first because they are matters of FACT. They're binary. VAR can disallow the goal on those decisions without having to get the ref to review a decision at the monitor based on an 'interpretation'.Imagine a scenario where they got the Ref to look at the screen first for the JJ block, and he says, "Nah, that's ok", and THEN they disallow the goal for an Ings handball? The place would be absolute bedlam.They did the reviews in the right order, but took WAY too long on it.
Quote from: Smithy on January 11, 2022, 11:19:07 AMQuote from: Bobby Boy on January 11, 2022, 11:14:50 AMQuote from: Smithy on January 11, 2022, 11:08:33 AMQuote from: Holte132 on January 11, 2022, 11:02:02 AMQuote from: baddowvillans on January 11, 2022, 10:10:20 AMI don't think and would never accuse any official - even Moss, Friend and Oliver - of cheating or deliberately favouring "big" teams BUT until PGMOL recognise that there is without doubt an unconscious bias towards Sky 6 clubs it will never improve. For me it's the application of VAR that is wrong and that is demonstrated by last night decision. I accept the rule which has been dug out means Ramsey was offside according to the law. What I don't believe is that VAR would have done more than check the offside/handball if that had been Uniteds goal and the obscure rule would have stayed obscure for a little while longer.Only the PGMOL can change this and only then if they see the bias and want to change it. As an aside I presume this routine was a Nanny MacPhee cunning plan that in the end worked against us.It wasn't disallowed for offside. Murphy fouled Cavani by standing still and allowing the defender to run into him. Let's see how that works on Saturday if we do the same thing!!It WAS offside, we know this because the ref gave an indirect free-kick, not a direct one as would be the case with a foul. The element under discussion with the ref going to the monitor wasn't whether he was in an offside position (or not), which is usually where VAR comes in (because JJ clearly was in an offside position), but whether he interfered with Cavani's ability to challenge for the ball. That's why he went to the monitor, because that's a matter of opinion, not fact, and hence the ref's call. It wasn't a "foul" in the sense it would have been given elsewhere on the pitch, but the standards are different here because he started in an offside position so technically ANY interference counts as offside.I was really angry last night, and I still think they took WAY too long to reach their decision, but I accept it was unfortunately the right one.My view is that the ref saw the coming together in real-time and thought "no foul, it's just players coming together" - but he did that not realising JJ was offside. Once he saw JJ was offside on the replay, that coming together becomes an offside offence, even if it doesn't reach the level of a 'foul' anywhere else on the pitch. You don't have to foul them to be offside, unfortunately.If it is that clear a decision why did it take over 3 minutes for the VAR ref to ask Oliver to have a look at it? I don't agree with how long it took, OBVIOUSLY it was far too long, but I think they looked at the Wakins touch that would have made Ings offside, and Ings' possible handball first because they are matters of FACT. They're binary. VAR can disallow the goal on those decisions without having to get the ref to review a decision at the monitor based on an 'interpretation'.Imagine a scenario where they got the Ref to look at the screen first for the JJ block, and he says, "Nah, that's ok", and THEN they disallow the goal for an Ings handball? The place would be absolute bedlam.They did the reviews in the right order, but took WAY too long on it.My concern is that if you want to you can find an infringement. At every corner. At every free kick. If you want to...And there's the issue. Some times the refs want to more than others.
If colliding with a player in an offside position is now given irrespective of whether it is interfering with play then surely sides defending a similar dead ball can engineer the same situation every time.