VAR and Refs | General Discussion | May 15: Premier League clubs to vote on proposal to scrap VAR from next season

Pogue Mahone

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I don't understand why some people dislike the var that much when the problem is really the quality of the referees.
Of course the problem isn't the quality of the referees. That's such an inane argument. The people who hate VAR can remember watching the game before VAR and there's absolutely no rational reason for the quality of referees to suddenly nosedive at the exact same time that VAR is introduced. Bit of a coincidence, right?!? The referees are as good/bad as they've always been but VAR is putting their decisions under more scrutiny than ever before, in front of an audience that will never be happy with their decisions.

I must have made this point hundreds of times by know but look at every single thread about every controversial decision discussed on here, going back to the origins of this website. We never achieve consensus. There are always differences of opinion. And that's after days of back and forth, with unlimited time to review footage. So why on earth would we expect referees to come up with decisions that keep all of us happy, in the space of a few seconds?!? The issue isn't bad refereeing, it's a system that sets them up to fail.
 

maniak

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Of course the problem isn't the quality of the referees. That's such an inane argument. The people who hate VAR can remember watching the game before VAR and there's absolutely no rational reason for the quality of referees to suddenly nosedive at the exact same time that VAR is introduced. The referees are as good/bad as they've always been but VAR is putting their decisions under more scrutiny than ever before, in front of an audience that will never be happy with their decisions.

I must have made this point hundreds of times by know but look at every single thread about every controversial decision discussed on here, going back to the origins of this website. We never achieve consensus. There are always differences of opinion. And that's after days of back and forth, with unlimited time to review footage. So why on earth would we expect referees to come up with decisions that keep all of us happy, in the space of a few seconds?!? The issue isn't bad refereeing, it's a system that sets them up to fail.
I didn't say their quality dropped, I'm saying the issues that happen now are their fault, not VAR. VAR is just a video on a screen, it's the man that makes the decisions. How on earth is adding another tool setting them up to fail?
 

askMeNice

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Still amazing to see people that still don't see that it's the officials are the main problem. :lol:

It's been obvious from day one that they're either so poor that they're too incompetent to use it (possible) or they're deliberately sabotaging the use of it. To the best of my knowledge there's nowhere near the levels of issues with the use of VAR in other top leagues
Go and rewatch last night final cup game between Juventus - Atalanta
And yes, it's like that all season and even worse.
 

caid

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Of course the problem isn't the quality of the referees. That's such an inane argument. The people who hate VAR can remember watching the game before VAR and there's absolutely no rational reason for the quality of referees to suddenly nosedive at the exact same time that VAR is introduced. Bit of a coincidence, right?!? The referees are as good/bad as they've always been but VAR is putting their decisions under more scrutiny than ever before, in front of an audience that will never be happy with their decisions.

I must have made this point hundreds of times by know but look at every single thread about every controversial decision discussed on here, going back to the origins of this website. We never achieve consensus. There are always differences of opinion. And that's after days of back and forth, with unlimited time to review footage. So why on earth would we expect referees to come up with decisions that keep all of us happy, in the space of a few seconds?!? The issue isn't bad refereeing, it's a system that sets them up to fail.
It nosedived before VAR. Which was a large part of the argument to introduce VAR. I think referee's, particularly in england, were drastically better in the 90's.
Its just so much less disruptive in pretty much every other league in europe.
 

Pogue Mahone

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I didn't say their quality dropped, I'm saying the issues that happen now are their fault, not VAR. VAR is just a video on a screen, it's the man that makes the decisions. How on earth is adding another tool setting them up to fail?
Because it’s changed from a situation where we accept human error to one where that is no longer acceptable. It’s a radical change.
 

Pogue Mahone

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It nosedived before VAR. Which was a large part of the argument to introduce VAR. I think referee's, particularly in england, were drastically better in the 90's.
Its just so much less disruptive in pretty much every other league in europe.
That just isn’t plausible. The referees are miles fitter, always closer to the action and better trained than ever before. The big difference between now and the 90s is the existence of super slo mo replays, from more different angles, analysed over and over again on social media. No wonder the referees seem much worse. It’s a false perception though.
 

maniak

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Because it’s changed from a situation where we accept human error to one where that is no longer acceptable. It’s a radical change.
Football fans didn't accept human error before var. They don't accept it now. The radical change is that the refs have can watch replays to make better decisions. If they don't, they're the problem, not the technology.
 

Chipper

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It nosedived before VAR. Which was a large part of the argument to introduce VAR. I think referee's, particularly in england, were drastically better in the 90's.
Its just so much less disruptive in pretty much every other league in europe.
Yes, for the first time in history no English referees were invited to officiate at the World Cup in 2018 because they were judged to be not good enough. Many of them are still around now, and of those who have retired since nearly all were let loose on VAR when it first came in for 19/20.

Howard Webb was with the PGMOL from 2014-17, the years just before FIFA noticed they were all crap, and has been back there again since 2022.
 
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caid

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That just isn’t plausible. The referees are miles fitter, always closer to the action and better trained than ever before. The big difference between now and the 90s is the existence of super slo mo replays, from more different angles, analysed over and over again on social media. No wonder the referees seem much worse. It’s a false perception though.
Instant replays aren't that recent. They were there in the 90's. Multiple angles aren't even recent, i'd say it was pretty common in the early 2000's. Maybe i should go back and watch some of Collina's matches but i'm pretty certain he'll still be miles and miles ahead of the current crop.
Spain vs Netherlands in 2010 with Howard Webb refereeing was pretty fecking disgraceful. To be fair he was dealing with cynical, cheating cnuts so it was hard to get it right but the argument that instant replays would help and if he saw x, y and z he could have kept the match under control were being made then.
 

Flying high

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"There are many reasons it's shit, but the main reason for me is that it's being run by people who look at the shirt and worry about the narrative more than they judge the situation in isolation on its merits."

Sorry but how does car affect this? With or without var this will remain the same.
So why put up with the downsides of VAR?
 

OldTrevil

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The quality of officiating in PL is laughable, especially considering its wealth. They should vote to pay for PL refs summer classes and external tests at the end of it, first. :wenger:
 

The Purley King

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Football fans didn't accept human error before var. They don't accept it now. The radical change is that the refs have can watch replays to make better decisions. If they don't, they're the problem, not the technology.
Exactly - they now have all possible means available to them to make correct decisions and they still can't do it. Gordon's non-penalty from last night is another good example. Completely understandable that the ref misses it in real time, I did too, but then on the replay you clearly see the trip - and for some entirely unknown reason it wasn't overturned. Same happened with the 3rd Forest penalty claim against Everton - we can all see what happened on the replay and yet VAR decides its not a foul. I don't know how you can train out that level of utter incompetence.
 

Pogue Mahone

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Football fans didn't accept human error before var. They don't accept it now. The radical change is that the refs have can watch replays to make better decisions. If they don't, they're the problem, not the technology.
Yeah they did. This fan did. In fact I’d say a silent majority did. There was an extremely vocal minority who were never happy, of course. Goes without saying that the introduction of VAR hasn’t shut them up. Despite the fact that, ironically, it was largely introduced to appease them. All it’s done is shifted their narrative from incompetence to corruption.
 

maniak

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Yeah they did. This fan did. In fact I’d say a silent majority did. There was an extremely vocal minority who were never happy, of course. Goes without saying that the introduction of VAR hasn’t shut them up. Despite the fact that, ironically, it was largely introduced to appease them. All it’s done is shifted their narrative from incompetence to corruption.
I guess we've had different experiences with football fans in general then.
 

Blood Mage

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There's nothing wrong with VAR and a lot wrong with the corrupt and idiotic officials in this country who use it. Maybe have a look into if any of them have received brown envelopes from the Abu Dhabi group rather than scrapping VAR which will enable City to get even more outrageous decisions next season.
 

Flying high

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Well my point is that there are no real problems with VAR, only with the referees. VAR works exactly as it should.
Video Assistant Referee. Yes, the problems are mostly with the assistant referee part and their interpretation of the guidelines given to them. Though not entirely of course. Pictures aren't perfect, not high resolution enough in some cases, not always sufficient angles and the frame rates could certainly be higher. I don't know if you follow cricket, but in a situation where you know almost exactly where the significant situation is going to take place, within a meter or 2, they still often rely on snickometer(audio sensing cues) to determine if there was actually contact because the images don't always give the full picture. But even then, tech isn't really the major problem.

Some of the problems could be improved to some degree by a clearer, more concise system and methods of dealing with different situations. With the overall rules of football amended to work with VAR. For example: The handball rules, despite all the tinkering, still aren't clear enough to remove subjectivity. There is no definition for significant player on player contact in different situations. Terms like endangering an opponent are again, entirely subjective. I could go on. This is what I was expecting to see before they introduced VAR.

Plus, of course, if the people you employ are corrupt/biased/idiots then that's not going to help either.

I personally don't think we'll get to a situation where asking people to watch along on a screen will give us consistent results, in a quick enough time frame to be acceptable for general use, in such a fast moving sport as football. Telling the ref to go and watch an off the ball punch that he didn't see? Fine. I couldn't object to that. But as soon as it gets into a situation where a human is looking to correct even just some incidents the ref got wrong, the game slows down too much.

So essentially what we're left with, for me, is wait for a speedy AI based system with close to 100% accuracy and until then we go back to refs on the pitch as the least bad option. We already have goal line tech to help them. And automatic offsides appear to be nearly ready. But this in between ground where we get a small decrease in blatantly incorrect decisions at the expense of long delays, uncertainty and an extra way for officials to show their incompetencies, is just farcical.
 

ROFLUTION

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For the love of god, scrap VAR.

Football gods hear my prayer.

Just to think of all the goals we haven’t fully celebrated due to being unsure whether it stands or not.

And bring back the aggressive side of english football again. Please.
 

Heinzesight

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Increases any potential bias. They can pick and choose what they review and direct the narrative. It’s shit.

Hawkeye and SAOT improve the game. VAR doesn’t.

Also, they should bring back the official on the edge of the penalty box. It was short lived but very good.
 
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90 + 5min

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Wolves being fecked over by VAR again.

They've been one of the clubs on the end of some of the worst VAR decisions, can see why they'd want rid of it.
We have lost 20+ points because of referees and VAR. I don’t know why people love to forget that.
Regardless of VAR or no VAR, we need our club to make statements and go full ”Nottingham Forrest” when it comes to criticism. When it is needed. Our directors, manager, players can’t stand silent.
 

The Purley King

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Increases any potential bias. They can pick and choose what they review and direct the narrative. It’s shit.
……..
This is precisely the problem and can be immediately fixed by directing var to review ALL incidents that I mentioned in a previous post.
It’s so fecking simple to remedy (corrupt/inept officials aside but we’ll never solve that one)
 

awop

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Most clubs should. It's a load of bollix that has added nothing game, bring back human errors with refs and the engagement on the bar stools about their decisions.
I can't believe you're a real person. Nice try AI bot !
 

CatsOfUlthar

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The problem with VAR lies mostly with officials, they're just not making the right calls despite everything being laid out to make their job easier.

We're not going to improve the officials, they're sacrosanct, you must respect them.

If you want to improve officiating then sure, it'll be a great idea, so long as you don't stop the game after every blindly obvious decision, and don't keep calling offside because the fog of someone's breath is over the line they seem to randomly and incorrectly draw on.

Further to this point, more tech should reduce officials, not increase it.

Scrap it and train far less officials to do their job properly.
 

Red in STL

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Yeah they did. This fan did. In fact I’d say a silent majority did. There was an extremely vocal minority who were never happy, of course. Goes without saying that the introduction of VAR hasn’t shut them up. Despite the fact that, ironically, it was largely introduced to appease them. All it’s done is shifted their narrative from incompetence to corruption.,
That is definitely true, everything is a conspiracy now, but fans at matches were vocal, "who's the bstard in the black" and similar was heard at every match at some point, the difference then it there wasn't social media to rant on and forums like this weren't readily available for everyone, also the rules have changed quite a bit as well as being stricter. and a lot of modern day fans don't understad half of them!
 

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VAR technology is OK, it could improve of course especially in accuracy and speed but so does every technology. There are two main problems in my opinion:

1) The quality of the referees (there's little to do about it though).

2) The way it is implemented, which affects both officiating (referees don't know when and if to stop the play) and the flow of the game. It should work similar to tennis' Hawkeye: referees make the decisions same as before, but every team gets one chance each game to call for a VAR review to try and challenge the referee's call. If they get it right and the decision changes, they get to use the option to challenge again later. If they don't, they can't challenge any decision later. This limits time wasting, eliminates paused goal celebrations, removes part of the weight from referees backs and forces coaches (or team captains) to think carefully before using a challenge.
 

OldTrevil

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Why is there a general sentiment that nothing can be done to change the quality of refs in England. Are the English never ashamed for being a laughing stock for seemingly not knowing how to officiate the game of football?
 

Chipper

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I did shit on the officals when posting earlier and I don't think we have a good standard in England currently.

The way VAR is used, and the implementation of it is another factor for me too. The thing is, I haven't got any solutions that would make VAR completely satisfactory to me either.

Not a fan of clear and obvious, whether that's VAR at the time or the VAR independent review panel afterwards. What is clear and obvious to one person isn't to another and the threshold is all a bit murky.

In many ways I'd rather they think in terms of, "On balance, was that a penalty or not? Go and take a look at it.", instead of, "is it clear and obvious that you got the initial decision wrong?" There's an absolutely huge drawback to changing it to that though. The referee would be at his screen much more often, and it would disrupt the flow of the game more than it is currently, and it's bad now.

Makes me wonder if they should scrap VAR altogether.

From some of the audio releases of the VAR discussions released I'm not sure I like some of the things I've heard them saying either. Was watching one recently where they said "I'm going to show you a tackle, that is in my opinion serious foul play and a penalty kick". I know on-field decisions being reversed are currently rare, but maybe that sort of language puts pressure on the referee to do so the times they actually are called to screen? Perhaps they could just tell the referee they've got something they want him to look at without offering an opinion of their own? Only a minor quibble with that one.

Edit for a random one: I just went from here to reading about NFL American football rules and how they use their equivalent of VAR. Was already aware that the head coach can make challenges to decisions and call for replays to be looked at. Some people have suggested that a similar thing should happen in football. Interestingly they're not allowed to challenge subjective decisions for the precise reasons we have lots of problems with VAR. They can only use it for things that are a matter of fact because when they tried to use it for things like holding or pass interference, which would be their equivalent of was there enough contact to give a foul or not, it apparently caused the same kind of massive shit show that we're having now.

The tennis equivalent of VAR, due to the nature of the game can only really about establishing fact too. Maybe we should have kept it to that?
 
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Red in STL

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I did shit on the officals when posting earlier and I don't think we have a good standard in England currently.

The way VAR is used, and the implementation of it is another factor for me too. The thing is, I haven't got any solutions that would make VAR completely satisfactory to me either.

Not a fan of clear and obvious, whether that's VAR at the time or the VAR independent review panel afterwards. What is clear and obvious to one person isn't to another and the threshold is all a bit murky.

In many ways I'd rather they think in terms of, "On balance, was that a penalty or not? Go and take a look at it.", instead of, "is it clear and obvious that you got the initial decision wrong?" There's an absolutely huge drawback to changing it to that though. The referee would be at his screen much more often, and it would disrupt the flow of the game more than it is currently, and it's bad now.

Makes me wonder if they should scrap VAR altogether.

From some of the audio releases of the VAR discussions released I'm not sure I like some of the things I've heard them saying either. Was watching one recently where they said "I'm going to show you a tackle, that is in my opinion serious foul play and a penalty kick". I know on-field decisions being reversed are currently rare, but maybe that sort of language puts pressure on the referee to do so the times they actually are called to screen? Perhaps they could just tell the referee they've got something they want him to look at without offering an opinion of their own? Only a minor quibble with that one.
The last paragraph there is spot on, if the ref is told what you say then he's thinking I just fecked up and almost always reverses the decision, he should be told, watch the replay and make his own judgement
 

Nevilles.Wear.Prada

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Its mind blowing that a species that sent people to the moon 60 years ago, can't find a AI system that draws a line and execute a simple yes or no instruction. Its 2024.
 

NICanRed

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Wouldn't it be helpful to rewrite the rules to make them more understandable - taking out the subjective element might help. For example, if the ball hits the hand or the hand hits the ball doesn't matter. Intent doesn't matter. I know there would be outrage initially but eventually everyone would understand and it would be clearer all round.