We will have atleast 10 goals ruled out by VAR this season.
I don't think daylight was a law as much as guidance at one point. Yes but Sterling still had a goal ruled out for his arm which is silly. Fair enough mate I just think refs in this country are cowards so will end up relying on it more and more. It isn't just for clear and obvious though is it? I would be in favour if it was. Also, it takes too bloody long. I don't like it personally especially the issue around celebrating a goal and the disallowing of scoring of a goal becoming a celebration I dont like that. But there you go it's happening as you say.The highlighted points...
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There's never been a daylight rule has there? And even if there was what if there is just the tiniest fraction of daylight? Talk about imaginary lines all you like but daylight being the measurement for offside is just as imaginary.
If your arm is beyond the defender then you're still not offside. It's not a part of the body you can score with.
Of course, there'll still be subjective decisions. No proponent of VAR argues that this isn't the case or says the decisions will be 100% correct.
It has been brought in for clear, obvious and result affecting errors. Can you point out one match was VAR has officiated every aspect of the game or even 20% of the decisions given?
During a 2 year worldwide trial...
68.8% of matches had NO review
The average game had less than 5 checks...not reviews but merely checks to see if a review was necessary
Average time "lost" to VAR accounted for less than 1% of playing time
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I can fully understand the argument against VAR. Overall I'm only marginally in favour of it and not to a degree where I'd be bothered about it being scrapped but many arguments against it are based entirely on fabrication and a heavily biased negative perception of what is actually happening.
Nah, bin this thought off straight away. We dont need offsides, which are one way or the other, being subjective. You're either offside or your not. No matter how long the decision takes to arrive to, they need to get it right.
Its black or white though. If we have the technology to get it pinpoint, then why does a decision, which is either offside or not offside, need to be questioned. Their shouldn't be a grey area or margin of error when it isn't subjective.The game has been fine for 100s of years without the need for someone to see it a toe is slightly in front of the last defender.
Just because technology can pinpoint 0.01 seconds of movement of the human body, doesn't mean a player has gained a meaningful advantage over someone else.
Its black or white though. If we have the technology to get it pinpoint, then why does a decision, which is either offside or not offside, need to be questioned. Their shouldn't be a grey area or margin of error when it isn't subjective.
But if it gets to the point where it needs to be over a certain distance to be ruled an obvious error, if you check that then you are gonna confirm if its offside or not in the process. So if they are offside but not enough to be overturned then the team on the receiving end of that decision are gonna feel aggrieved. Whereas if it remains how it is, no one should feel aggrieved as the decision is right.I understand that. I've just have the problem with the implementation that should be the other way round (the refs etc go to VAR not vice versa).
The old saying of no one ever said that they could, the question is whether they should.
And fully expect "rule changes" to implement both
It's still subjective though. Andy Gray did a piece on it the other day which highlights it well, that depending on which frame you use to decide when the ball was kicked, a player can move from onside to offside and vice versa. You can't perfectly define when a pass was made because it isn't instantaneous, so the decision you're making is still subjective, only now over a matter of millimetres.Its black or white though. If we have the technology to get it pinpoint, then why does a decision, which is either offside or not offside, need to be questioned. Their shouldn't be a grey area or margin of error when it isn't subjective.
"Technology will kill post-match debates"
Well, that argument is pretty dead and buried.