I assume we'll be given the pictures that provided the VAR team with the evidence to determine the ball was "factually" out of play later today, but I'm not holding my breath. Even if it is out of play I think it's stretching it to say it was the same phase of play.
If it is clearly shown that it was factually out of play with an angle we haven't seen, even though it will be the longest VAR pull back ever, I can just about accept it. Even though we know it wouldn't have happened to certain other teams.
I think it's this one against Arsenal.
Even if there were incontrovertible proof of the ball being out, there is still the question of when an attacking phase commences ...
Quote from: ian c. on Today at 08:40:59 AMI assume we'll be given the pictures that provided the VAR team with the evidence to determine the ball was "factually" out of play later today, but I'm not holding my breath. Even if it is out of play I think it's stretching it to say it was the same phase of play.That's what I'm waiting for too. Like many, I think it probably WAS out, but that's not enough. This is a factual decision, and they say it was factually "out", so I want to see the evidence they based that one. It sure as hell better be more than the footage we all saw, which cannot - to the millimetre - show it as definitively out. Remember when Gary Neville showed everyone how this ball was in, despite the angle? I don't see how this incident isn't the same. If you're not looking at it from the top down, how can you be 100% certain that 100% of the ball has crossed 100% of the line? Again, I get how you can be pretty sure, but that is NOT what VAR is for in this instance - it has to be 100% sure.