No no, you're trying to twist it to suggest that VAR is allowed to do something it can't. According to them, accoridng to their design of the system where they've very clearly laid out the 4 scenarios in which VAR can intervene.
Don't let VAR (as a system) off the hook. Of course they should have been able to quickly give a free kick without needing to send the keeper off. Of course that woudl be the logical thing, but the point is that VAR is not logically and that it very clearly does not allow that to occur.
And what's annoying is that everyone deep down knows this, but yet they are foolishly pretending that this bottleneck doesn't exist.
If you genuinely believe that the keeper should have been sent off for that, I disagree, but fair play to you. It's certainly an arguable position. But the largely point is that for one reason or another, and I think I've explained quite accurately why they were unable to correct that decision. They were unwilling to issue a red card for that due to as I so eloquently outlined, due to his close proximity to the edge of the box. Like many things with VAR, ther'es a tendency to ignore the elephant in the room. There should be a loophole needed to as you've outlined, to pretend to look into a red card offense to get in the VAR reviewing "door" so to speak and then be allowed to issue something less than a red if advisable. And I would agree that sounds logical, but as I pointed out, they are technically not allowed to do that, and for good reason. Because they did that for a reason, to maintain a high threshold on what can be reviewed and acted upon, otherwise we'd have a hideous amount of reviews for all kinds of things outside the box.