by Snowflake Royal »
29 Jun 2018 13:15
Sanguine Snowflake Royal Sanguine It's the 'clear and obvious' bit that is causing some issues, isn't it?
In cricket, anything reviewed that is marginal goes with the umpire's original call. And that should have been the case with this one - yes he got the ball, yes it was from the side (ish), but if you slow it right down he contacts the leg before he does the ball. Even if you disagree on that last point, this was not a 'clear and obvious error' (i.e. there was definitely no foul), and the penalty should have stood.
Didn't the ref look at it again and change his own decision, from what people are saying?
If that's the case, then clearly the ref agreed he got it wrong, so it's not like it was unfairly overturning something ambiguous, it'd mean what he thought he saw wasn't actually what happened.
In which case it's nothing like cricket.
The point being that the VAR officials should only be referring it to the referee if they think there has been a clear and obvious error.
Do we know if there's any communication involved?
Yo refy, what was the basis of your decision on that penalty shout?
No contact
Ah, you might want to take another look. There was contact, but it's still a close one.
That's still a clear and obvious error in the ref's decision making process, but not necessarily the decision itself.
I think we have to accept that VAR isn't going to be perfect, though it'll improve. And one person's clear and obvious is different to another's.
The test is essentially, is VAR resulting in reversed decisions that are clearly incorrect, or reviews that should lead to a reversal but don't.
Failing to review some clearly incorrect decisions is obviously a flaw, but as long as the first two are met it's still a significant improvement.
There's been loads of correct decisions that would have been incorrect without VAR and very few if any incorrect decisions that would have been correct without it. Plus none of the delays have been very long and there have been no issues with playing carrying on for a while before going back.