VAR scrap, keep or fix it?
Please dont answer if you are not a football fan, thanks.
Please dont answer if you are not a football fan, thanks.
Goal line technology isn't VAR. There is a sensor in the ball and sensors in the goal. If the ball crosses the line the ref gets a signal on a device on his/her wrist.Keep goal line, scrap the rest.
Goal line technology isn't VAR. There is a sensor in the ball and sensors in the goal. If the ball crosses the line the ref gets a signal on a device on his/her wrist.
Again, Rugby and Ice Hockey have another similar rule.Another thing football could take from rugby is having the ref wearing a mic. so we can heat explanations for decisions and players would be less inclined to abuse the ref
I play hockey (field hockey, not this ice nonsense ). Same happens there -> no clear reason to change the decision = on field decision remainsBoth have a similar rule to Rugby. If it's not clear and obvious, then the call on the field/ice stands.
Exactly the same in hockey. It works really well. Plus, you can only ask for a decision if it affects a goal or a scoring opportunity, not in the middle of the pitch. Umpires can also ask for a review if they are uncertainAnd with Baseball, the only way there is a review is if a team ask for it. Each team has one review. If they win the review, they keep their review and can do it again. If they lose, they lose it.
Hockey has 3 cards. Green = 2 minute suspension. Yellow is 5 or 10 mins. Red is permanent (plus a 16-40 day mandatory ban). It works very well. A red card is a very rare occurrence.To which end, I like the way that rugby does yellow cards. It's similar to ice hockey.
I think Football could learn a lot from it.
Don't need mics. Go up and abuse the umpire in hockey, he'll give you a green/yellow card and tell you to sit down for a bit. Problem solved. No idea why football puts up with abuse of the ref.Another thing football could take from rugby is having the ref wearing a mic. so we can heat explanations for decisions and players would be less inclined to abuse the ref
Why can most other sports seem to fix it and Football can’t?I play hockey (field hockey, not this ice nonsense ). Same happens there -> no clear reason to change the decision = on field decision remains
Exactly the same in hockey. It works really well. Plus, you can only ask for a decision if it affects a goal or a scoring opportunity, not in the middle of the pitch. Umpires can also ask for a review if they are uncertain
Hockey has 3 cards. Green = 2 minute suspension. Yellow is 5 or 10 mins. Red is permanent (plus a 16-40 day mandatory ban). It works very well. A red card is a very rare occurrence.
Don't need mics. Go up and abuse the umpire in hockey, he'll give you a green/yellow card and tell you to sit down for a bit. Problem solved. No idea why football puts up with abuse of the ref.
Because football is basically a religion to a lot of people. Religion abhors change. They treat their stars as Gods and assume that their God can do no wrong. Thus referees are seen as the enemy rather than arbiters of fairness. Hence it's ok for a God to abuse the enemy. (Slightly sarcastic but with elements of truth).Why can most other sports seem to fix it and Football can’t?
This is it for me. I don't want football to become like other sports. Sadly, it's going that way and the genie is out of the bottle. You can see it week after week with hordes of "fans" leaving the ground early because their team is taking a shoeing and they don't like it. VAR just adds to the prawn sandwich brigade viewing experience. I like the odd contentious refereeing decision - it adds to the occasion. That said, abuse of the ref needs to be stamped out.Because football is basically a religion to a lot of people. Religion abhors change. They treat their stars as Gods and assume that their God can do no wrong. Thus referees are seen as the enemy rather than arbiters of fairness. Hence it's ok for a God to abuse the enemy. (Slightly sarcastic but with elements of truth).
That should be made a rule whether they scrap VAR or not.In Rugby, only the captain can approach the ref.