Waggy76 Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 It is time , we stopped this nonsense ! Quote
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Hasta Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 On 19/01/2018 at 05:37, Paul said: Willian is widely reported as earning £110 - 120,000 per week. I’d say £500,000 is the sort of fine which might make these vastly overpriced, overpaid players think? Would you fine a cricketer 5 weeks wages for appealing for a catch when he knows the batsman didn't nick it? Quote
Hasta Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 On 19/01/2018 at 08:08, JacknOry said: I don't think fines would work - there would be all kinds of legal who-ha about it. 500k fines if a player is adamant he didnt cheat and it might just look a bit like a dive - it would all be too contentous when money is involved. Id say put it on the clubs. Instant three match ban if deemed to be diving, rises by one for each further offence, so 4, 5, 6 etc. Clubs would then have no chance but to stamp it out of their players. Problem is most diving incidents have varying opinion. Everyone agrees that Dioulf dived at Ewood when playing for Bolton. However people have alternate views on the Morata / William incident's last week. Big punishments can only be applied if it's absolutely clear.. Quote
chaddyrovers Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 VAR doesnt work in football. Far too many grey areas Quote
arbitro Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 We had VAR at Ewood today. Very awful refereeing. 6 Quote
Paul Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 30 minutes ago, Hasta said: Would you fine a cricketer 5 weeks wages for appealing for a catch when he knows the batsman didn't nick it? Why not? It’s proportionate. If a player earns £1000/week and another £100,000/week they are punished equally in real terms. There’s nothing admirable about cheats in any sport. Players need to respect the sport which feeds them, it’s officials and supporters. Quote
Hasta Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 (edited) 3 minutes ago, Paul said: Why not? It’s proportionate. If a player earns £1000/week and another £100,000/week they are punished equally in real terms. There’s nothing admirable about cheats in any sport. Players need to respect the sport which feeds them, it’s officials and supporters. Fair enough depending on if the grey areas can be avoided. What if a cricketer thinks he's nicked it, appeals, the batsman clearly hasn't hit it and then the appealer gets fined. It can only be used absolute clear cases like the Diouf incident. Many yellows I see for diving are grey. Even under VAR they would be grey. Edited January 27, 2018 by Hasta Quote
Rover_Shaun Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 VAR is killing what little interest I still have in live football. If I want to watch a sanitised event I will watch the wife bleaching cloths Quote
broadsword Posted January 27, 2018 Posted January 27, 2018 If var is retained, I will barely believe it. It will completely kill the game, given time. The only positive thing I can think of is that this should kill off the debate once and for all. Quote
JacknOry Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 4 hours ago, Hasta said: Problem is most diving incidents have varying opinion. Everyone agrees that Dioulf dived at Ewood when playing for Bolton. However people have alternate views on the Morata / William incident's last week. Big punishments can only be applied if it's absolutely clear.. Thats pretty much what I meant in a round about way - its far too contentious and there are different opinions. In some cases you would not be able to say for sure if it was an intentional dive or not - yes some are obvious but even then there might be a small chance it was not a dive. Start throwing around huge fines like that would end up with players in the courts I would expect. Stick to non-monetary punishments that will hurt the team such as instant 3-match bans and the likes of Morata would not be doing it anymore . Quote
Norbert Rassragr Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 It needs to be made available on the big screens at modern stadiums (so the crowd can see what is going on), sped up and used as it is in rugby union. The ref says "can you look at that" whilst play goes on. However, since it is football, it has been completely mishandled and all the fans hate it. 1 Quote
Hasta Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 Just watched the Liverpool game. For the first disallowed goal, Barry is given offside. As the ball comes In, you can clearly see the keeper.pushing Barry to get him out of the 6 yard box. Therefore it should have been a penalty. If Barry does that to the keeper he blows straight away. Quote
Norbert Rassragr Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 Barry was backing into the keeper on purpose though. So did he foul the keeper? Quote
Sparks Rover Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 29 minutes ago, Colt Seavers said: VAR! What is it good for? Getting home late Quote
Hasta Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 (edited) 1 hour ago, Norbert Rassragr said: Barry was backing into the keeper on purpose though. So did he foul the keeper? No he wasn't. He stood his ground. The keeper pushed him forward when the ball was in flight and only then did he back back in to his position. If you are going to review the passage of play on video then you have to analyse the whole situation. It would be soft but you can't tell me the keeper putting two hands and pushing like that isn't a penalty. Edited January 28, 2018 by Hasta Quote
Roverthechimp Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 Strange that the system isn't being used to punish divers and so forth - only to check decisions that affect betting - sorry i mean of course ensuring that results are correct in accordance with the spirit of fair play  1 Quote
grizfoot Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 It certainly adds some good comedy value. How is it fair that this VAR is only being trialled in certain ties? Imagine your team gets knocked out of the FA Cup to a shocking decision that would have got overturned had your team's game been part of this VAR experiment. I feel like the technology will end up favouring this bigger sides because there's always going to be more controversial decisions involving those team because they spend more of the game attacking and borderline penalties like the one Liverpool got will always be reviewed and the referee will be pressurised into giving it. Quote
Stuart Posted January 28, 2018 Posted January 28, 2018 5 hours ago, grizfoot said: It certainly adds some good comedy value. How is it fair that this VAR is only being trialled in certain ties? Imagine your team gets knocked out of the FA Cup to a shocking decision that would have got overturned had your team's game been part of this VAR experiment. I feel like the technology will end up favouring this bigger sides because there's always going to be more controversial decisions involving those team because they spend more of the game attacking and borderline penalties like the one Liverpool got will always be reviewed and the referee will be pressurised into giving it. That’s like saying bigger sides get more penalties because they spend more time in the opposition 18 yard box. It’s kind of intuitive. VAR should be all about getting to the facts and giving a correct decision. Nothing wrong with that in principle. Issues seem to be the length of time it takes and the potential to undermine the referee. There was an interesting cricket VAR call recently where a wicket keeper made a catch with the webbing of his glove on the ground when the ball hit the floor. The umpire gave a ‘soft out’ decision. It was then down to VAR to try to prove the opposite. On a close call where the angle can’t give a 100% decision, the referee’s decision stands. The issue then is how long it takes to review and deliberate. Would this be added on as injury time? Personally I’m only a fan of VAR to clear things up in the event that a ball has crossed the line or not. Once play has stopped it would be then that any concerns (e.g. over the line or offside) should be addressed. Quote
Moderation Lead K-Hod Posted January 29, 2018 Moderation Lead Posted January 29, 2018 Only in football could such a hash be made of something which works so successfully in other sports. I fully embrace the idea of using technology to help eliminate mistakes, but I can't support it in such a shambolic manner. 1 Quote
Rover_Shaun Posted February 1, 2018 Posted February 1, 2018 On 29/01/2018 at 09:46, K-Hod said: I fully embrace the idea of using technology to help eliminate mistakes He has a whistle and his judgement. What more can we ask ? Quote
philipl Posted February 17, 2018 Posted February 17, 2018 Value Added Reseller. Is this what agents are called these days? Quote
Rogerb Posted February 18, 2018 Posted February 18, 2018 The var line should be parallel with the 18 yard line not running off at an angle in the man u game. If they don't realise that there is no hope for accuracy of this system Quote
had.e.nuff Posted February 18, 2018 Posted February 18, 2018 I am for anything that upsets the big teams they have had the best of the decisions for a long time. Quote
had.e.nuff Posted February 18, 2018 Posted February 18, 2018 Another thing about VAR is it shows how much they care about the paying fans they just leave every one in the ground in the dark about what's going on, it seems to be all about the TV spectator .At least in rugby league they put something up on the scoreboards . Quote
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