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Posts
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Everything posted by OTF
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It's pretty simple though; if someone who is employed to help you has had ample time in a quiet focussed environment to review countless replays of multiple angles on an incident and determines that you made a clear and obvious error it goes without saying that instead of looking at the monitor in the middle of a noisy stadium objectively you're looking to see what you got wrong. The VAR should be the one yo make the ruling IF it's clear and obvious as they're in an environment to review. If the VAR can't clearly determine something based off the replays then the on-field decision should be upheld. This includes not only when the footage is unclear but also when there is interpretation of the rules required and it's not clear - e.g. excessive force, some handball decisions (natural position) and the like.
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The VAR system is not broken, the referees using the VAR system are broken. It's like they feel they have to leave an imprint on every game, make their existence known. Both situations cited they had no reason at all to interject. They haven't even said sorry or confirmed that the decisions were wrong above, "acknowledge the incidents" is the most cowardly politician style response possible. Unfortunately these are not alone, they just happen to be the most obvious and blatant fuck ups. It's kind of good that they happened so closely because there's at least a chance that they do now take some punitive action against those involved as well as some steps to reduce the chance of more incorrect interference in the future.
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International relationship Newcastle / Gelsenkirchen
OTF replied to Hintermann's topic in Newcastle Forum
@Isegrim is our German relations officer. -
A few more games like this and he might start gesturing the other way to Joelinton.
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Obviously, but if they can't even acknowledge the most patently obvious errors that are by far the biggest talking points in three or four games then it's a solid indicator for their behind the scenes attitude and what will go on behind closed doors.
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Agree 100% Even when they get it wrong you at least can understand why they ruled a particular way. There should be nothing to hide.
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His response was measured and reflective rather than angry simply because he knows there's nothing to gain from anger, except to deal with it and move on from it if that's how you work. The Premier League site has no mention whatsoever of any of the drama, so it's pretty clear that their standard response of don't acknowledge the problem will be what we get, with no visibility of whether there has been or will be any action taken behind the scenes to address the various inexplicably erroneous decisions that affected so many results.
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Rugby league uses them pretty well in Australia. The captain of each team gets to make one challenge per match to an on-field decision. They have to challange immediately after the play. If their challenge is upheld they retain the ability to make a challenge later in the game, if the original decision stands they lose their challenge and can make no more. If the video footage is not conclusive enough the original call remains and the captain retains their challenge. It still doesn't mean that the VAR (called 'the bunker' in league) gets everything right, but for the most part they do. It's also never a case of the VAR referring the decision back to the on-field ref by getting them to watch certain footage. The decision is made by the bunker and relayed to the onfield ref as well as on the big-screen.
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Jeez, clear double standards at play.
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I haven't seen that one as yet but I'm not at all surprised. The FA are fucking hopeless at responding to and taking action against their own shortcomings, which these erroneous decisions must absolutely fall in the remit of. They'll say nothing and do nothing as none of the media darlings have been harmed.
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The VAR decision in our game was worse IMO, but I'd be equally annoyed about that decision if I supported West Ham.
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Poor VAR decision in the West Ham game also denying a goal for incidental contact after Mendy dived at the feet of Bowen to punch the ball clear.
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It's a tough one because it's not patently clear the differences in the instructions and intended positioning for Willock, Longstaff and Joelinton. For me it would still be Longstaff as he wants too much time on the ball where-as Anderson's strength seems to be his close control and sharp interplay. Positionally that means Willock maybhave to sit back a bit with Joelinton best with a free-roaming pass.
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5 goals Brentford, a hat-trick from Toney.