VIDEO ASSISTANT REFEREE TECHNOLOGY (VAR) SET FOR 2018 WORLD CUP APPROVAL
Football's law-making body
on Saturday was set to approve the use of video
assistant referee technology (VAR) at this summer's World Cup, overriding
purists concerned about technology disrupting the game.
The International
Football Association Board (IFAB) meeting in Zurich is widely expected to
rubber-stamp the move already backed by FIFA's top brass, including president
Gianni Infantino.
VAR can only be used
when there is doubt surrounding any of four key game-changing situations: after
a goal, penalty decisions, after a straight red card or in cases of mistaken
identity.
It has already been
implemented in top European leagues including the German Bundesliga and Italy's
Serie A -- along with tests in multiple other leagues -- but opinion is still
divided.
UEFA president
Aleksander Ceferin said this week that European football's governing body would
not introduce VAR in next season's Champions League due to ongoing
"confusion" surrounding its use.
Others have voiced
concern about video assistance being used too often, slowing down the game and
possibly breaking a team's momentum.
That is an issue
confronting major North American sports like baseball and American football,
where different forms of video replay have been in use for several years and
where calls to shorten match length have risen.
ACCESS TO INFORMATION
But the desire to
avoid ferociously disputed calls -- especially in high-profile moments --
appears to have tipped FIFA to support using VAR at this summer's World Cup in
Russia.
One iconic example
that VAR could theoretically have prevented is Diego Maradona's "Hand of
God" goal that saw Argentina beat England in the 1986 World Cup.
For Infantino, who
will be on hand Saturday for the IFAB announcement, international football
cannot allow anyone with a smart-phone having access to better information than
a World Cup referee.
"In 2018 we
cannot anymore afford that everyone in the stadium and everyone in front of a
TV screen can see within a few minutes on his phone whether the referee has
made a big mistake or not, and the only one who cannot see it is the
referee", he said last month.
"So if we can
help the referee then we should do it," he added.
Representatives of
the 32 teams that have qualified for the World Cup meeting in the Black Sea
resort of Sochi this week voiced confidence that the expected VAR rollout would
be a positive for the tournament.
"This is the
new life. This is modern life," said Iran head coach Carlos Queiroz.
"It is obvious
that football cannot go on with its eyes closed to the modern world."
SOURCE: AFP
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