halfcenturyup
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- 12 Oct 2009
- Messages
- 14,887
Fair enough. I don't necessarily have a problem with speeding up the decision to flag for offside by using automation. As always, my problems are in looking for certainty with automation, and for how the technology actually works.
For example, the new system won't be used for "complex and very close" offside calls. Two questions.
Why is the new system not used for very close offside calls? If SAOT is accurate, why not all offside calls? If it isn't accurate to 10cm, why is there no tolerance in any offside decision?
Who determines whether an offside is complex? Artificial intelligence, apparently. Again, we are leaving subjectivity in the hands of the people who develop the technology. I am predicting that, at some point, an offside will be given in a complex situation that shouldn't have been. It's inevitable.
And I am guessing Collina's latest search for absolute truth in offsides will fail. It will either make mistakes, or disappear further and further up its own arse with more and more expensive technology and less and less relevance to the original point of punishing offside players. As it always has so far.
OK, at the risk of replying to myself like a crazy person, I think it's only fair to say that this new offside thing has worked reasonably well at the CWC. You can't tell when it is working, of course, but there have been a couple of occasions, even in the City games, where the linesman has kept his flag down but then raised it after a couple of seconds. At first sight correctly. So credit where it's due. It seems to have been OK so far.
Still plenty of time for a cock-up, though :)