Deutsch Wolf
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This has been taking over the match discussions lately and we're going to have to deal with it every week in the coming season...so let's discuss it properly.
These seem to be the main bones of contention, and my thoughts on them:
- Communication inside the ground is poor and the process takes too long: No arguments from me on this one. When we went to Wembley, there were two separate checks and we had no idea what was going on. Watching games on TV where VAR is involved, something fairly straightforward like an offside still takes an age, we had the incident in the Juve vs Ajax CL game where they spent ages checking if the ball had gone out for a throw in the build up. No problem with them looking but if you can't tell after 2-3 replays, you're never going to tell. Don't spend five minutes looking at the same thing, the pictures aren't going to change. Hopefully this improves as time goes on.
- It doesn't guarantee the correct decision: The most recent example being the penalty that Switzerland somehow got vs Portugal on VAR. But this is just operator error. We can't do anything about that other than get better officials who know what they're doing.
- It will kill goal celebrations: I absolutely do not buy this argument at all. Who on earth is going to watch the ball hit the back of the net for their team and not react? It just won't happen. It hasn't happened in Champions League games this year or in any of the other domestic leagues where it's used. I have used the parallels with rugby and cricket which apparently are "not the same" but I don't really see how? Nothing about that argument makes sense to me.
- Some of the decisions are too marginal: Again, can't go with this. Offsides are line decisions, just as much as whether a shot goes in or not. 0.01 yards offside or 10 yards offside, the fact remains, you're offside. This is by far the most difficult decision to get right - especially with how quick the game is these days - and any help we can give to officials should be welcomed. People are going to have to get used to the "pass through -> no flag -> goal -> check and disallowed" scenario isn't an "error" and "margin" doesn't come into it. The flag didn't go up because the linesman is told in that situation not to flag (a high chance that if there is no VAR, Lingard gets flagged offside vs the Netherlands on Thursday and no more gets said about it). There's no error to overturn because no decision has been made. It's a simple matter of fact, offside or not offside.
- We like controversy and talking points: Personally I don't want my team conceding bullshit goals that shouldn't exist and not getting clear penalties that should be given. Let's say the race for Europe had gone down to goal difference. Mané's second goal at Anfield bumps us down to 8th. Offside. Great stuff. Would we be talking about it now? Yep. Wouldn't be a very cheery conversation though. I don't want teams being impacted because a third party (the referee and/or linesmen) fuck up, they can't do anything about that. Go down because your signings were awful, you couldn't score goals, you had a leper in goal, you are Neil Warnock, you could have fixed all of that (well, Colin can't help being Colin I suppose). You can't make allowances for being robbed.
The rest seems to revolve around some kind of nebulous traditionalism which is daft as the game is always evolving. Three points for a win, goal difference rather than goal average, playoffs, backpass rules, offside rules, three/five/seven subs on the bench, banning tackling from behind and so on and so on...these have all changed the scope of the game over the last few decades. Mostly for the better, if not all for the better. You aren't going to stop watching football because of VAR. And no-one gets anywhere wishing the world could be exactly as it was when they were 21. Saying "I don't like it" and getting in a strop isn't the answer either.
Thoughts welcome.
These seem to be the main bones of contention, and my thoughts on them:
- Communication inside the ground is poor and the process takes too long: No arguments from me on this one. When we went to Wembley, there were two separate checks and we had no idea what was going on. Watching games on TV where VAR is involved, something fairly straightforward like an offside still takes an age, we had the incident in the Juve vs Ajax CL game where they spent ages checking if the ball had gone out for a throw in the build up. No problem with them looking but if you can't tell after 2-3 replays, you're never going to tell. Don't spend five minutes looking at the same thing, the pictures aren't going to change. Hopefully this improves as time goes on.
- It doesn't guarantee the correct decision: The most recent example being the penalty that Switzerland somehow got vs Portugal on VAR. But this is just operator error. We can't do anything about that other than get better officials who know what they're doing.
- It will kill goal celebrations: I absolutely do not buy this argument at all. Who on earth is going to watch the ball hit the back of the net for their team and not react? It just won't happen. It hasn't happened in Champions League games this year or in any of the other domestic leagues where it's used. I have used the parallels with rugby and cricket which apparently are "not the same" but I don't really see how? Nothing about that argument makes sense to me.
- Some of the decisions are too marginal: Again, can't go with this. Offsides are line decisions, just as much as whether a shot goes in or not. 0.01 yards offside or 10 yards offside, the fact remains, you're offside. This is by far the most difficult decision to get right - especially with how quick the game is these days - and any help we can give to officials should be welcomed. People are going to have to get used to the "pass through -> no flag -> goal -> check and disallowed" scenario isn't an "error" and "margin" doesn't come into it. The flag didn't go up because the linesman is told in that situation not to flag (a high chance that if there is no VAR, Lingard gets flagged offside vs the Netherlands on Thursday and no more gets said about it). There's no error to overturn because no decision has been made. It's a simple matter of fact, offside or not offside.
- We like controversy and talking points: Personally I don't want my team conceding bullshit goals that shouldn't exist and not getting clear penalties that should be given. Let's say the race for Europe had gone down to goal difference. Mané's second goal at Anfield bumps us down to 8th. Offside. Great stuff. Would we be talking about it now? Yep. Wouldn't be a very cheery conversation though. I don't want teams being impacted because a third party (the referee and/or linesmen) fuck up, they can't do anything about that. Go down because your signings were awful, you couldn't score goals, you had a leper in goal, you are Neil Warnock, you could have fixed all of that (well, Colin can't help being Colin I suppose). You can't make allowances for being robbed.
The rest seems to revolve around some kind of nebulous traditionalism which is daft as the game is always evolving. Three points for a win, goal difference rather than goal average, playoffs, backpass rules, offside rules, three/five/seven subs on the bench, banning tackling from behind and so on and so on...these have all changed the scope of the game over the last few decades. Mostly for the better, if not all for the better. You aren't going to stop watching football because of VAR. And no-one gets anywhere wishing the world could be exactly as it was when they were 21. Saying "I don't like it" and getting in a strop isn't the answer either.
Thoughts welcome.