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osarusan
23/11/2009, 10:56 AM
I'm going to post my idea about a possible way to use video technology - feel free to comment on it, and add your own opinions, as I'm sure everybody has had some thought on it. This isn't a knee-jerk reaction to Henry and Paris, I've been wondering for a while what form video evidence would take if and when introduced.

What I'd like to see is a 5th official who watches the game on a monitor in the stand. When he feels that the referee on the pitch would like to review a decision (or non-decision) regarding a possible red card (including second yellow leading to red), penalty or goal incident, he communicates with the referee to go to the side of the pitch and watch the incident on a monitor there. The referee watches and either stands by his original decision, reverses it, or makes a decision if he failed to make one in the first place.

In this way the final say is still in the hands of the on-field referee, and the usage is limited to certain situations, which means that it won't be used for every single situation. Also, it means that players can't ask the referee to review decisions, as he can only do so when the 5th official says so (otherwise the players would be moaning at the referee constantly).

Any thoughts?

pineapple stu
23/11/2009, 11:17 AM
What I'd like to see is a 5th official who watches the game on a monitor in the stand. When he feels that the referee on the pitch would like to review a decision (or non-decision) regarding a possible red card (including second yellow leading to red), penalty or goal incident, he communicates with the referee to go to the side of the pitch and watch the incident on a monitor there. The referee watches and either stands by his original decision, reverses it, or makes a decision if he failed to make one in the first place.
That's the only way I think it could work. But I wouldn't delay things to ask the ref to have a look. In the same way a linesman can flag for a foul, the fifth official would watch a replay, make his mind up (quickly, obviously) and tell the ref via the earphone. But I'm open to reasons that wouldn't work, as I don't agree with the idea of introducing rugby- or tennis-style delays into football.

FWIW, I also don't really hold with the idea that the great thing about football is that the rules are the same for the World Cup final and for the pub league, so you can't introduce video evidence at the highest level or there'll be a degree of separation. There's no linesmen at pub leve,, and I don't think anyone feels separation because of that.

osarusan
23/11/2009, 11:37 AM
That's the only way I think it could work. But I wouldn't delay things to ask the ref to have a look. In the same way a linesman can flag for a foul, the fifth official would watch a replay, make his mind up (quickly, obviously) and tell the ref via the earphone. But I'm open to reasons that wouldn't work, as I don't agree with the idea of introducing rugby- or tennis-style delays into football.
The main reason for the delay is that a big reason against the introduction of video evidence seems to be that it undermines the authority of the referee. By having the referee on the field still making the final decision, I'm trying to get around that stumbling block.

pineapple stu
23/11/2009, 11:55 AM
I'm not quite sure what you mean there.

The main reason for the delay is the idea that the ref has to stop play so someone can have a look at a telly to see if the decision was correct. Your solution still has the ref stopping play to check the telly. I'm getting around that by having the fifth official take an extra ten seconds to have a look at close calls - while the play is still ongoing - and letting the ref know he's missed something, similar to the linesman flagging for a free. The ref can also ask the fifth official to double-check something for him while play continues. We'd have a few frees called ten seconds after the event, but I don't think that's as bad as stopping play to look at a telly all the time. And there'd be no recourse to appeal from managers, just like there's no recourse to appeal from managers now.

osarusan
23/11/2009, 12:04 PM
I'm not quite sure what you mean there.

What i mean is that from what I've read, one of the reasons against the intro of video technology is that it will undermine the authority of the referee on the field. Your idea, though quicker, will mean the the 5th official is actually the one making the decision, which would probably fall under the definition of undermining the authority of the referee on the field. I'm trying to come up with a way of ensuring it is the referee on the field, not any other official, who makes all decisions (with help from all other officials, obviously).

I'm not sure we'd be looking at a TV all the time, as it would be limited to certain kinds of incidents. But it would slow down the game, that can't be avoided with video evidence.

pineapple stu
23/11/2009, 12:09 PM
I think the main things that'd undermine authority is enabling people to challenge the ref and having the ref stop play to go over and have a look at what happened; neither are options in my scheme.

Taking the Henry goal as an example, the fifth official would (let's assume) have immediately spotted the handball (and the offside) on telly and radioed the ref, who'd have awarded a free out. In theory, no-one's the wiser as to who made the call. I don't think that'd undermine the ref any more than a linesman flagging for a free.

bennocelt
23/11/2009, 12:09 PM
3 reasons why I'm against the idea of vid replays and all is...........

1) The level playing field. The simplicity of the game is the beauty of it - a ball and jumpers for goalposts and all that. Where would you draw the line? Would all teams all over the world have to have this technology to be allowed participate in leagues, what about cup games like the FA cup. Could a team argue that since Boston Fc dont have the tech then they wont/cant play them? Etc

2) The time delay it would cause looking at all the decisions and replays, etc. They always say it works in rugby, etc but does it? I often see games in RU and RL where the decision takes more than 5 minutes.
And as John Motson said last Saturday - where would it stop? For handballs? For diving? for online clearances? for offside decisions? jesus thats a whole game!!!!

3) even with replays people are still undecided. Jesus did Eduardo dive or was it momentum that carried him over? What about the Australian try last week - was it a try or not, - i didnt think it was!!! Many English people still say that the ball in 1966 did cross the line, etc etc etc

As i said before the real way to stam out cheating - is for the authorities to get tough.
As for on the line decisions - thats part of the fun

passinginterest
23/11/2009, 12:14 PM
I'd more or less go along with the above suggestions. I don't know if a 5th official would be necessary, the 4th official could review controversial incidents, I don't think you need a fifth official making constant calls.

It might be an idea to limit teams to 3 appeals to the TV match offical per game, with other appeals at the discretion of the officials. I would definitely limit the use to penalty area incidents, goals and sendings off. All of theses incidents result in a stoppage in play regardless and the 4th official reviewing thwm shouldn't add any significant delay.

pineapple stu
23/11/2009, 12:15 PM
1) The level playing field. The simplicity of the game is the beauty of it - a ball and jumpers for goalposts and all that. Where would you draw the line? Would all teams all over the world have to have this technology to be allowed participate in leagues, what about cup games like the FA cup. Could a team argue that since Boston Fc dont have the tech then they wont/cant play them? Etc
I already covered that earlier in the thread.

One problem with my suggestion, though, is the likes of the penalty against Georgia. Ref is certain it's a penalty - gives a penalty. Video ref tells him he's wrong, but you can't restart play with a hop-ball or something. That said, in that case, it's merely useless, which isn't actually too bad. you'd have to accept that once a ref has made a call to stop play, the only way a video ref could overturn it is with a decision which also stops play (e.g. instead of a goal to France, a free out).

osarusan
23/11/2009, 12:21 PM
It might be an idea to limit teams to 3 appeals to the TV match offical per game, with other appeals at the discretion of the officials. I would definitely limit the use to penalty area incidents, goals and sendings off. All of theses incidents result in a stoppage in play regardless and the 4th official reviewing thwm shouldn't add any significant delay.
I'm against the idea of a number of appeals per game. Assuming that, if the manager's appeal proves to be justified, keeps his three appeals, then we'd have managers appealing over every little thing, but managing to keep their appeals.

I don't think there should be any appeals. The referee either gets the decision from the 5th official (in Stu's version), or the referee can only consult a TV monitor when the 5th official tells him to (in my version).

osarusan
23/11/2009, 12:24 PM
One problem with my suggestion, though, is the likes of the penalty against Georgia. Ref is certain it's a penalty - gives a penalty. Video ref tells him he's wrong, but you can't restart play with a hop-ball or something. That said, in that case, it's merely useless, which isn't actually too bad. you'd have to accept that once a ref has made a call to stop play, the only way a video ref could overturn it is with a decision which also stops play (e.g. instead of a goal to France, a free out).
It might lead to a situation where a referee is less likely to blow for a free, feeling it's better that play be stopped on the advice of the 5th official (based on TV evidence, and maybe more likely to be right) rather than to blow for a free, only to find out it's wrong, and having to restart the game in a way which doesn't reflect at all the state of play when he initially blew the whistle.

bennocelt
23/11/2009, 12:38 PM
I already covered that earlier in the thread

One problem with my suggestion, though, is the likes of the penalty against Georgia. Ref is certain it's a penalty - gives a penalty. Video ref tells him he's wrong, but you can't restart play with a hop-ball or something. That said, in that case, it's merely useless, which isn't actually too bad. you'd have to accept that once a ref has made a call to stop play, the only way a video ref could overturn it is with a decision which also stops play (e.g. instead of a goal to France, a free out).

yeah I noted it, but i did use the example of a non league English team.

You could also use the DDSl, or LSL - same thing, but they use linesmen

passinginterest
23/11/2009, 12:38 PM
I'm against the idea of a number of appeals per game. Assuming that, if the manager's appeal proves to be justified, keeps his three appeals, then we'd have managers appealing over every little thing, but managing to keep their appeals.

I don't think there should be any appeals. The referee either gets the decision from the 5th official (in Stu's version), or the referee can only consult a TV monitor when the 5th official tells him to (in my version).

It would be limited regardless of the outcome otherwise I agree it could be farcical. I'd like to see it trialled in a few different guises to see what works.

Schumi
23/11/2009, 12:53 PM
The biggest problem with video refs in rugby is that referees come to rely on them too much. From the little rugby league that I watch, it seems that 90% of tries have to be confirmed by the video ref, often taking a minute or more over obvious calls; it really breaks the moment. The idea of a video linesman who can tell the ref he's made a bad decision and to go back and fix it would be an improvement but you'd still have 10 seconds or so of uncertainty where the video ref might or might not overturn a goal.

If it was to apply to red cards too, there'd be the danger of the ref's authority being undermined. If he sends a player off but the video ref overturns it, the player won't take the ref as seriously for the rest of the game.

It wouldn't really apply to football but there are also video decisions to not award a try because the ball isn't visible in the replays but an unassisted ref would have given the try to no complaints from anyone because the player 'must have scored' even if the ball isn't visible. I can't think of a similar situation in football but a decision based on a video replay isn't necessarily better than one the ref makes on his own.

I don't think managers should be allowed to appeal decisions as that would just be chaotic. You couldn't stop the game whenever a manager wants to check a decision as it would be abused and it could be 2 or 3 minutes before the ball goes out.

tetsujin1979
24/11/2009, 12:14 AM
The whole "would disrupt the flow of the game" argument doesn't wash with me.
BBC did an experiment a few months ago. They had a ref in the studio monitoring a live game. Any time there was a contentious decision (offside, goal line clearance, etc) they showed him an instant replay, and he gave his verdict.
In all but one case, he was able to deliver a verdict before the game had kicked off again.

I was surprised it didn't get more coverage at the time.

Junior
03/12/2009, 11:56 AM
Interestingly,

The one at Celtic Park last night missed a definite corner that was captured on cameras (albeit I think it would have been hard enough to call - hit a guy in the wall from a freekick)

Also the one at Evertons game in Athens missed a blatant corner. Keeper made a finger tip save.

Hodgson has come out and said based on his experience in the Europa Cup this season, he doesnt think it adds anything having the extra officials (obviously based on the few well documented mistakes/decisions not made by them in Fulhams games).

For me the key issue for these extra goal line officials is whether they will step up to the plate and call the decisions they see. In much the same why that linesmen (referees assistants - not) have not stepped up to the mark imo, I doubt somehow whether these guys will either.

pineapple stu
03/12/2009, 12:08 PM
In all but one case, he was able to deliver a verdict before the game had kicked off again.
What about contentious issues where the game doesn't stop though?

You could clear up the corners alright, but what if, say, someone in the wall for a free kick handles the ball, the ref misses is and play breaks the far end of the pitch. Do we call play back for the handball? What about a foul which takes place (maybe a professional foul) between the handball incident and the decision?

Also, what if the ref gives a penalty, but the video shows it was accidental. What then? Do you restart with a hop ball? Bit harsh on the team that had the free kick. Restart with the free? Do you always restart at the place the ball last went out of play?

Too many problems, I think.

OwlsFan
06/07/2012, 9:25 AM
So the goal line technology is to be introduced at last. However, important though it is, it is usually only called upon a few times a season. However, it is the first step on the road to technology. I would like to see techology for offside decisions resulting in goals where the manager can make one challenge with the crossed hand decision within 5 seconds.

I would also like to see a second yellow card being a 10 minute in the box rather than sent off.

Neish
10/07/2012, 9:38 AM
First time reading this thread. All for Goal line technology but the only way I would support video evidence is similar to what Owlsfan say each manager get one decision challenge per game for offside, penalties where they think simulation(diving) may have been involved, and maybe sending offs. Wouldn't support anything more than as going to a video ref several times every game will ruin matches.

Not sure about your sin bin idea though

Also think video evidence should be used after game to try and stamp out simulation(diving). Managers can lodge complaints and obvious divers get one or two warnings at first then, fines & bans

pineapple stu
10/07/2012, 11:45 AM
Giving managers one appeal would soon turn into three, five and then seven. Dead against that.

Was reading some papers in New Zealand the last week, and one of the things that came up was how referees still get decisions wrong even with a TV ref. Technology's not a panacea. Some decisions will be wrong - but relatively very, very few - and we should just live with that.

If instant goalline technology is coming in, I assume that means referees 4 and 5 are being dropped?

OwlsFan
13/07/2012, 1:04 PM
I think refs 4 and 5 will remain, hopefully to spot Thierry Henry type incidents.

I disagree that refs get very few decisions wrong. The number of incorrect penalty decisions is quite high. Football is a stop start game anyway with throw ins, goal kicks etc. A few extra to get decisions correct, I would have no objections to.

Junior
13/07/2012, 6:11 PM
Not sure about Managers having a number of appeals. I can see how it works in tennis when the player is right on top of the incident (I recall a clear one that Federer called in the Wimbledon final and he was correct, the ball was a couple of inches out). But Managers? Most of the time at least half a pitch away from the incident, calling it out of pure emotion? How would they really have a better view of the incident for where they are - Probably just calling it and having their fingers crossed. Could become a right pain in the ar$e

pineapple stu
14/07/2012, 2:35 PM
The number of incorrect penalty decisions is quite high.
We'll have to agree to disagree on that so.


Football is a stop start game anyway with throw ins, goal kicks etc. A few extra to get decisions correct, I would have no objections to.
I can't agree to disagree on this though. What if a team wants to take a quick throw? Could they be called back by a manager "questioning" a decision? The game often restarts quickly; can't have managers interfering in that. And what if a counter-claim is put in - yes, it wasn't a blue throw, but was it a red free kick two minutes before? What's the time limit on appeals?

NeverFeltBetter
14/07/2012, 2:43 PM
Not sure about Managers having a number of appeals. I can see how it works in tennis when the player is right on top of the incident (I recall a clear one that Federer called in the Wimbledon final and he was correct, the ball was a couple of inches out). But Managers? Most of the time at least half a pitch away from the incident, calling it out of pure emotion? How would they really have a better view of the incident for where they are - Probably just calling it and having their fingers crossed. Could become a right pain in the ar$e

Works ok in American Football, from what I can see.

Junior
14/07/2012, 10:09 PM
Works ok in American Football, from what I can see.

Not close enough to understanding the intricacies of American Football, but a game takes 4 hours in total right? Its pretty stop / start from start to finish - I certainly don't want that for our game!!

NeverFeltBetter
14/07/2012, 10:53 PM
Managers get two "challenges" a game and their team is punished in terms of field position or a lost timeout if calls by refs are upheld. There are furthur rules regarding timing and just what can be refrred to a video ref. The limited number and punitive aspect means they are used sparingly. A edited version of that kind of system could work very well in association football. No one is going to waste such a challenge on a throw-in.

the bear
17/07/2012, 5:19 PM
Mission impossible infra red lasers across the goal mouth. players will be issued with a print out ranking their performance after a match just like quasar

osarusan
15/12/2016, 11:31 AM
Old thread I know, but a penalty was given based on video replay for the first time in a FIFA competition.

http://www.bbc.com/sport/football/38318258


Japan's Kashima Antlers became the first side to benefit from a video replay in a Fifa competition as they scored a penalty in their 3-0 Club World Cup semi-final win.

Referee Viktor Kassai stopped the game after being alerted to an incident by his assistant, then gave a penalty after viewing footage on a monitor.

NeverFeltBetter
15/12/2016, 2:18 PM
And again in the Real match today, for Ronaldo's injury time goal. That one was a messy affair, I think the opposition misheard the ref calling for it to be checked or something and took a quick free-kick for offside - it was the 93rd minute and they were down a goal, they wanted to get a move on - when the video ref confirmed it was legal, and the ref had to actually carry the ball himself to the halfway line.

Interesting to see it in practice anyway, and that it was called on so quickly in succession. Was watching the Crystal Palace/Man Utd game last night, there were at least five incidents that could have turned the game if a video ref was permitted another look.

holidaysong
17/12/2016, 5:57 PM
Was play stopped to check the penalty incident or they checked when the ball next went dead?

NeverFeltBetter
18/12/2016, 9:58 AM
Think it was after play continued for a while anyway, it was just a clip I was watching.