As others have said, I've no problem with scrapping the VAR element of "human beings reviewing videos of things the ref might or might not have missed", but if they scrap it for offsides, I think we'd be net losers in terms of the impact. Our high line is SO important to the way we play, and we're so well drilled at enforcing it, that we would inevitably end up shipping goals that would otherwise be deemed offside.If it's to be semi-automated offsides with the new system, and a change only to the human element of VAR, then I'm happy with it.
Of all the VAR decisions offsides are the ones which take longest and still often look contentious due to the camera not being in line or frame rate. The semi-automated version should help with that. For other decisions the VAR officials need to be separated from the PGMOL referees so it isn't just an arse-covering exercise. Overseas refs on VAR would be a simple solution.
Giving the 90 seconds still means you take away the spontaneous enjoyment of celebrating a goal. In the old days if it was tight everyone just looked across at the lino for a split second. If they miss a blatant offside everyone usually knows at the ground and wouldn't be surprised to see the var check going up on the screen.
Quote from: Exeter 77 on May 16, 2024, 09:07:24 AMOf all the VAR decisions offsides are the ones which take longest and still often look contentious due to the camera not being in line or frame rate. The semi-automated version should help with that. For other decisions the VAR officials need to be separated from the PGMOL referees so it isn't just an arse-covering exercise. Overseas refs on VAR would be a simple solution.Of all the things that annoy me with var the worst is what you called the frame rate. The rules state that offside is adjudged when "the ball is played" Who decides which frame is the correct one to use? Forward one frame and it's offside. Back one frame and it's onside. If human intervention could be removed and an algorithm introduced to decide on a consistent basis without bias I would be happy to go with it. Hopefully the semi automated system will deliver this.
Quote from: The Edge on May 16, 2024, 11:25:11 AMQuote from: Exeter 77 on May 16, 2024, 09:07:24 AMOf all the VAR decisions offsides are the ones which take longest and still often look contentious due to the camera not being in line or frame rate. The semi-automated version should help with that. For other decisions the VAR officials need to be separated from the PGMOL referees so it isn't just an arse-covering exercise. Overseas refs on VAR would be a simple solution.Of all the things that annoy me with var the worst is what you called the frame rate. The rules state that offside is adjudged when "the ball is played" Who decides which frame is the correct one to use? Forward one frame and it's offside. Back one frame and it's onside. If human intervention could be removed and an algorithm introduced to decide on a consistent basis without bias I would be happy to go with it. Hopefully the semi automated system will deliver this. I agree totally, as I've said before. When you see the still photo they decide to draw the lines on, the picture of the ball at that point in time is usually a blurry mess about 3 foot wide.
Adding a 30 second time limit will just make everything far less accurate and increase the amount of wrong decisions. Some situations are complex or at least require different camera angles. There's no point bringing in tech and then hamstringing it.I think we should wait to see how much difference semi-automated makes, because offsides are the most frequent and often most annoying applications of VAR. Once that's sorted I'd hope the whole thing will start to feel less intrusive.As for daylight between the players, aside from the fact that it would be disastrous for how we play, it would fundamentally change how the game is played, inevitably leading to low blocks and so probably won't have the upside people are hoping for. And it would just shift the line of calculation, there wouldn't necessarily be any less controversy.
Just wondering, could anyone off the top of their heads give an example of a goal, and best of all a significant goal, that was either wrongly allowed, or wrongly disallowed, in any game pre-VAR?
Quote from: Flamingo Lane on May 16, 2024, 12:48:41 PMJust wondering, could anyone off the top of their heads give an example of a goal, and best of all a significant goal, that was either wrongly allowed, or wrongly disallowed, in any game pre-VAR?Hand of God.