TheBeautifulGame
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 17 Oct 2022
- Messages
- 527
One of the problems with VAR is that the standard of officiating has gone down the tubes. The VAR "training" of officials has actually compromised their ability to referee normally in real-time. So when you see a howler in a VAR-less match, that doesn't mean the same howler would occur before VAR was brought in or if VAR was completely scrappedI disagree, the whole reason the whole world has VAR is because the constant wrong decisions from the officials, I can't blame them - how tight the margins are at times, the pace of the game, the constant cheating, the crowd biase etc, it's a very tough job.
We had a few weekends without VAR this season in the cup and the officials missed big howlers.
That's not to say that there wouldn't be contentious decisions or the occasional missed offside, but you can't use decisions that are occurring these days with all this VAR going on (even in matches without VAR) to suggest that the same decision would have occurred way back when.
That's not to say that you wouldn't have some problems if VAR was scrapped, but compared to all the problems that we currently have, well it's no comparison really. And as it pertains to offside, the problem that exists presently is that linos are keeping their flags down and letting play continue which is unsatisfactory even if they end up with the correct decision. The handball rule has been changed and tweaked so many times since VAR was introduced that we don't even have a clear understanding of what it is anymore. So when you say :
"they couldn't spot the hand ball or saturday or Palace being offside"
was it that they couldn't actually spot the handball or was it that they were unsure if the GK was out of the box or not when he handed it? That was quite "marginal" as far as if he was outside the box or not. Something that presumably would be a perfect thing for VAR to see and correct, yet they couldn't or didn't due to presumably (ironically) not being the type of decision that VAR could intervene on. It's quite a rare kind of situation for a GK to be handing it that close to the edge of the box. But it wasn't for a lack of the officials actually seeing the handball I don't think, and since it was out of the penalty area, it wouldn't have resulted in a PK, but merely a free kick just outside the box, which could result in a goal, but is far less likely to result in a goal than from a PK.
Remember VAR was supposedly brought in to catch something that the ref completely missed on the pitch, or at least that was the idea sold to the public about what it was brought in for. So it wasn't necessarily that they didn't see the handball in real-time, but it was more likely that they didn't see that the outstretched hand of the keeper was marginally outside the box. Something that VAR could and should have corrected if it was designed properly or functioned properly.
But when you talk about hyperbole, there's hyperbole as it pertains to this situation in the sense that many people are suggesting that he should have been red carded for that. Due to the marginality of being on the edge of the box, while handball should have been called, it wouldn't be deserving of a red card, or even a yellow card in my view since it was so close to the edge of the box. It did prevent a clear goal scoring opportunity, but the keeper could not be sure he was outside the box or not with it being that close. So it was the wrong decision, both on the pitch and with VAR's non-intervention, that hurt City unfairly, but it wasn't a malicious play by the keeper that in my view would be deserving of a card. And in no scenario would that have resulted in a penalty due to it being the keeper handing it slightly outside the box. I believe that is what limited VARs possible intervention there, since it wasn't in the box, it wasn't a penalty / no penalty situation. And it's a slippery slope in that this limitation is there to prevent VAR from intervening more and disrupting the match more, like for throw-in decision errors, or handballs in the middle of the pitch that don't lead to goal scoring opportunities.
That was sort of a rare one in that the foul (handball) occurred just outside the box and that it did prevent a goal scoring opportunity, but that enforcement of the foul should have led to a free kick and not a penalty. So it was the wrong decision to not call the handball there, but a free kick on the edge of the box is the best that could have occurred for City there, not the penalty or the goal scoring chance that could have otherwise occurred had the keeper not put his hand out there. So that's a tricky one in its very nature, but the frustration is that it wasn't looked at even with VAR.
There's also no indication that with a different on-pitch referee or in a match without VAR that the referee, or the linesman wouldn't have seen that he handed it just outside the box and called the handball right then and there.
In my view, and you may disagree, but the lack of a decision there to call the handball on the pitch could well have been due to VAR's very nature, in that the ref wasn't willing to call the handball, despite seeing it, precisely because it was marginal (as far as being on the edge of the box) and that he's so used to not making decisions and letting VAR seemingly handle anything marginal that he simply didn't make a decision on it under the impression (falsely) that VAR could correct it if needed. But VAR couldn't correct it because it wasn't a pen / no pen, because it didn't directly lead to a goal (even though it very well could have) which again highlights how dysfunctional VAR is and how it only handles certain types of errors lets say while not being able to handle other types of errors.