Haven’t we already had this discussion about the offside? Much more likely that it was a conversation between ref and linesman then VAR getting involved at that stage. You appeared to agree with that at the time but now are repeating your claim that VAR was involved. Tough to work out why you’d do that …Not the penalty. That wouldn’t have been given.
Offside was 13 seconds before flag went up so clearly some VAR communication.
Not sure why some get the hump when VAR helps get the right verdict , I’d feel robbed if that penalty wasn’t given and the Liverpool goal allowed to stand.
As Webb says, VAR agreed with the ONFIELD decision. The decision taken by ref and. Lino THEN confirmed by VAR.Haven’t we already had this discussion about the offside? Much more likely that it was a conversation between ref and linesman then VAR getting involved at that stage. You appeared to agree with that at the time but now are repeating your claim that VAR was involved. Tough to work out why you’d do that …
As Webb says, VAR agreed with the ONFIELD decision. The decision taken by ref and. Lino THEN confirmed by VAR.
fuck all to do with VAR having a word with the Lino.
You can hear from the audio that VAR got immediately involved, before the "onfield" decision was made. The VAR had a word not with the LINO but with the REF which caused the REF to make the decision. The REF heard the VAR / AR2 argue interference and that's what the ref gave as the onfield decision.As Webb says, VAR agreed with the ONFIELD decision. The decision taken by ref and. Lino THEN confirmed by VAR.
fuck all to do with VAR having a word with the Lino.
It's annoying isn't it. The biggest benefactors of VAR become the victims, and City needed help to win. All it takes it one decision for this to happen.Isn't it weird that the day after Liverpool lose, and one of the goals was a contentious offside, the BBC open up a debate, for everyone, to discuss how the beautiful game needs to change.
Impeccable timing!
I think you need to rewatch it mate.You can hear from the audio that VAR got immediately involved, before the "onfield" decision was made. The VAR had a word not with the LINO but with the REF which caused the REF to make the decision. The REF heard the VAR / AR2 argue interference and that's what the ref gave as the onfield decision.
So when we refer to what the onfield decision was in this case, after hearing the audio, it was VAR who advised the REF to rule offsides to begin with, as the onfield decision, before the official review started. In the video, as pointed out by the man interviewing Webb, the way the laws are written for offside do not seem to cover this situation.
With the way the offsides rule is written, it talks about the player needing to "clearly" obstruct the opponent's (in this case the keeper's) line of vision. Then there's "making an obvious action which clearly impacts the ability of of an opponent to play the ball".
The "obvious" action might have been an obvious action to avoid the ball whilst in an offside position, but it didn't "clearly" impact the ability of the keeper to play the ball. Maybe it "arguably" impacted the ability of the keeper but not "clearly". The keeper appeared to see the ball just fine and reacted to the ball as he would. If the offsides law said that any obvious action that prevented an offsides player from contacting the ball would be considered offside, then that would be one thing. But that's not the way the law is written.
With the way the law is written, his interference did not appear to meet the required threshold of clearly obstructing the keeper's vision or preventing the keeper from playing the ball. I don't see how either of those aspects were met.
You can see Robertson and Doku locked up right in front of the keeper prior to the corner being kicked, at this point Robertson is still onside, then they release and Doku moves forward whilst Robertson becomes offside, then he moves away and ducks the header.
The decision seemed to be made not by the referee, not by the lino, and not by the VARs during the VAR decision. But by the AR2 who contacted the REF right as the ball hit the back of the net in which he argued there was interference. This ironically instinctive decision in real-time by the VAR seemed to determine the decision, because once the ref accepted this and ruled it as his "late" onfield decision, then that decision needed further evidence to overturn.
While interference could certainly be argued here, similarly to how it was argued in the United Forest match or in other situations, the process through which this decision was made was highly flawed and problematic on a number of levels.
I was referring to the AR2 communication with the Referee as VAR involvement. When we talk about an onfield decision, that typically involves the referee making his own decision based on what he saw or the lino raising his flag based on what he saw.I think you need to rewatch it mate.
There is literally not a single word spoken by anybody in the VAR room until after the referee and linesman have discussed it, the referee blows his whistle and states ‘The onfield decision is offside.’
The very first words we hear from the VAR are ‘The onfield decision is offside.’
Yeah and the V in VAR stands for VIDEO, so saying that VAR got involved immediately is nonsenseI was referring to the AR2 communication with the Referee as VAR involvement. When we talk about an onfield decision, that typically involves the referee making his own decision based on what he saw or the lino raising his flag based on what he saw.
What happened here was unusual in that the AR (VAR stands for Video - AR) got involved immediately and didn't do what he normally would do which would just be to either flag the offside or keep it down so it would go to review. Instead he contacts the ref and makes an argument for interference. The AR2 got involved immediately which ended up determining the decision following the VAR review, which is largely what created the controversy. The AR didn't have to do that, if he would have just done his job, then the incident could have been reviewed properly without the presumption of interference being established prior to the review.
Goal should have stood, we would be fuming if that was not given
Ok, let me clarify. The Assistant Referee got involved immediately and his involvement shaped the VAR decision that followed.Yeah and the V in VAR stands for VIDEO, so saying that VAR got involved immediately is nonsense