clubchamp98
Journeyman Pro
That’s what I said.Hearing analysis since, it seems that VAR did the right thing by bringing it to the attention of the ref, given the competition’s harsher interpretation of handball.
That’s what I said.Hearing analysis since, it seems that VAR did the right thing by bringing it to the attention of the ref, given the competition’s harsher interpretation of handball.
Not to the VAR official it wasn’t
I agree it was never a pen.
But the ref has to be stronger and tell him he’s wrong..
But in this case like so many others we have two Qualified referees with polar opposite opinions but one has changed his mind on very clear evidence that proved it hit his chest first.
your entitled to your opinion though.![]()
But that was just a recommendation from the advisory board.... UEFA never actually implemented that aspect (deflecting off another part of the body) of the handball rule.I thought exactly the same, only just had time to respond. Again look at the Fa cup. If the home team is a Prem team we have VAR. If not, no VAR so linesman Has to flag. It does my head in. Referees reffing a game differently depending what ground there at.
Re last nights penalty decision. The UEFA rules are clear from April. If it comes off the body and hits the arm no penalty. That’s the rules, surely one of the two officials ( Ref and VAR) should have known that and at that point said lthe rules state that is not a penalty”.
Why is just the VAR guy stood down from last night though. Shocking.
It sounds like we agree on most of it.
1, it shouldnt have been a pen
2, ref should have said no to the VAR
The only difference is I dont think VAR should have asked the ref to look at it. As you say, 2 qualified refs looking at the same incident cant agree and that is whats causing the issues. The decisions are still subjective.
It is interesting that on one hand you think VAR was correct in calling the referee to review the decision, yet VAR was wrong in thinking it could be a penalty. In the words of Roy Keane "That is their job". Not to ask referees to review any decision at critical points of the game, even if it is a farce. But to ask the referee to review a decision when they think there is a good reason he made a mistake. And not just because they are 51/49 in thinking it is a mistake (as that is quite clearly subjective), but that they are more like 80/20 he made a mistake, thus making it a more obvious review.Yes but in this case VAR was wrong. but the ref bottled it he should have corrected them after looking at the screen.
His job is to get it correct no matter the pressure from VAR or home fans!
I never said “review everything”
but a penalty in extra time ???
I think they were correct to ask him to look.It is interesting that on one hand you think VAR was correct in calling the referee to review the decision, yet VAR was wrong in thinking it could be a penalty. In the words of Roy Keane "That is their job". Not to ask referees to review any decision at critical points of the game, even if it is a farce. But to ask the referee to review a decision when they think there is a good reason he made a mistake. And not just because they are 51/49 in thinking it is a mistake (as that is quite clearly subjective), but that they are more like 80/20 he made a mistake, thus making it a more obvious review.
So, VAR were just plain wrong, and it was a shocking decision to ask for the review.
Yes, the referee then also needs to take responsibility. However, in my previous post, I tried to outline reasons that mitigate why he might have caved. He's also a human being, and no matter how strong you want him to be, he has to leave the stadium at some point. He has to go to the airport and catch a flight home. Given what happened to Taylor a season or so ago, I wouldn't fancy doing any of that with hundreds of angry French people all around me. Especially when they are fully aware 2 or 3 VAR officials all thought it was probably a penalty, and this single onfield official went against that. At least without VAR, you can partly forgive a ref for missing something live, but as a fan you might have got it wrong yourself. But as a fan, when you see a VAR review, you now are 100% aware that the footage must indicate a penalty. So, if the VAR guys have communicated to him that they've seen something in the last 3 minutes they looked at it, then in the 20 to 30 seconds he is getting at the monitor, he is probably doubting his decision, and maybe missing something they all think they've seen.
Also, I noticed that when they showed him the images on the monitor, they did the usual focus on one angle, did the still and super slow mo back and forth, and used the images that made it look most like a pen (even though it still didn't). As soon as he walked away and gave the final decision, it showed the video to the other side, which looked nothing like a penalty (still in slow mo). I'm not sure they ever showed him the images in real speed. So, VAR are basically giving the onfield ref biased footage, in that it is geared up to justify why they brought him over in the first place. If they bring him over for a potential handball, they are automatically going to disregard any footage that doesn't back up their reason to bring him over in the first place.
So they were wrong not to ask the ref to review the earlier "Handball"?I think they were correct to ask him to look.
But what we think ( no pen) most fans would agree In UK.
But given the rule was only a recommendation VAR you could argue was correct and it follows so was the ref.
Its a problem if over Europe rules are interpreted differently than the PL
To me this looks like what’s happened.
So who’s right and who’s wrong.
Its a mess.
Well it’s not consistent that’s the problem in the interpretation of the handball rule.So they were wrong not to ask the ref to review the earlier "Handball"?
Either way, there is a big mess in this match. Either the VAR is instructed to ask the referee to review every incident, even if they think he got it spot on. Or they only ask the ref to review something they think he got wrong. Whatever their instruction (I suspect is is the latter), the VAR operator messed up.
And that is scary as hell. If they can't even get the most important decisions correct with the desired consistency fans generally want (and throw in some absolute howlers), just imagine how horrendous it will be if they get involved in more decisions, many of which of even more subjective nature. There'll come a point there will be no need for an onfield referee (at least the abuse to him will stop). Just have 3 guys in a studio, who can send text to the big screen in the stadium to inform teams what every decision is.Well it’s not consistent that’s the problem in the interpretation of the handball rule.
Well we all agree it’s an absolute mess.
But on the news this week they were saying VAR is due to get more involved ,second yellows ,free kicks etc.
Be plenty to discuss
As a fan, there is never a game I ever feel I can just chill out for most of it as they are comfortable.