VAR – Let’s Press Pause on Boxing Day and Check If We Want to Rewind Technology

 Graham Scott receives the VAR decision to disallow a goal scored by Sheffield United’s David McGoldrick against Tottenham on Saturday. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/Reuters
Graham Scott receives the VAR decision to disallow a goal scored by Sheffield United’s David McGoldrick against Tottenham on Saturday. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/Reuters
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VAR – Let’s Press Pause on Boxing Day and Check If We Want to Rewind Technology

 Graham Scott receives the VAR decision to disallow a goal scored by Sheffield United’s David McGoldrick against Tottenham on Saturday. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/Reuters
Graham Scott receives the VAR decision to disallow a goal scored by Sheffield United’s David McGoldrick against Tottenham on Saturday. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/Reuters

Three minutes and 47 seconds is a long time in football. An awful lot can happen. Twenty years ago in the Nou Camp it was long enough to enable Manchester United to recover from a position of defeat at the end of 90 minutes against Bayern Munich and, with the German club’s ribbons already on the trophy, to use added time first to draw level and then to win the Champions League final. Those three minutes contained as much drama and emotion as some entire seasons.

At Tottenham Hotspur’s new stadium on Saturday three minutes and 47 seconds was the length of time in which no football took place at all. On the hour, two minutes after Son Heung-min had put the home side ahead, Sheffield United celebrated an equaliser when David McGoldrick applied the finish to Enda Stevens’ cross from the left. But then the referee, Graham Scott, passed the decision over to the VAR room at Stockley Park. Twenty-two players stood around waiting as, 20 miles away in west London, it took almost four minutes of deliberation to conclude that John Lundstram had been offside by the length of his big toe when he received the ball on the right wing before sending in a cross that was half-cleared to John Fleck, who fed the ball to Stevens before it was turned across to McGoldrick.

Several objections were raised against the decision. First, if Lundstram was offside, it was immaterial because so much else had taken place before the move reached its conclusion. That’s hard to defend because his part in the action was intrinsic to its outcome. Second, it was a marginal decision made by a system whose terms of reference are supposedly confined to identifying “clear and obvious” errors by the officials on the pitch. That one holds a little more water. Third, how can we be sure the VAR technology is capable of operating to such fine margins? Answer: we can’t, and decisions as close as this will continue to be subject to the officials’ interpretation.

And so Lundstram’s big toe takes its place alongside Roberto Firmino’s armpit, the piece of the Brazilian’s anatomy judged offside a week earlier when he scored a disallowed equaliser against Aston Villa. Subsequent arguments concentrated on whether Tyrone Mings’ knee had played Firmino’s armpit onside. That is what we have come to.

At this point in the argument it is customary to try and disclaim Luddite tendencies. Not here, however. This column believes that an experienced rugby referee’s intuitive judgment on whether a touchdown has been made amid a pile of bodies will almost always be more reliable than the examination of seven different angles provided by slo-mo TV cameras while the players stand around getting cold. It believes that cricket’s ball-tracker is inherently suspect because it attempts to predict the behaviour of something whose unpredictability is one of the fundamental features of the game. It thinks that installing sensors to ensure that grand prix drivers stay within track limits is an insult to the memory of those whose limits were defined by brick walls.

Straightforward in/out decisions – adjudicated by HawkEye in tennis or football’s goal-line technology – are one thing. Any decision involving a judgment call is another matter altogether. And, as we are now painfully aware, some decisions in football will always be a matter of judgment rather than fact. Would Pep Guardiola have gone into such paroxysms of rage on Sunday had the referee on the pitch been the sole arbiter of the double handball incident that directly preceded Liverpool’s opening goal at Anfield on Sunday? The implication that VAR has made adjudication infallible might just be exacerbating anger at justice supposedly denied.

Human fallibility is removed from sport only at the risk of destroying the precious flow and expression of spontaneous emotion that makes it different from, say, the opera. The remoteness of the VAR decision-making process is in itself an alienating factor; it might be mitigated by greater use of a pitchside screen, but to have the referee dashing back and forth is simply another form of interruption.

VAR is like Brexit. Whatever sensible arguments are to be made in good faith on either side they are swamped by the damage it has caused, by the expense and the bother and the division it has created, as well as by the lurking suspicion that its existence serves somebody else’s interests, in this case the people who supply the technology and the broadcasters who welcome another source of debate for their celebrity pundits.

So here is a constructive suggestion. Wait until Boxing Day, when half the Premier League season will be over, and press pause on VAR. Run the remaining 19 games without it. Monitor them very carefully. See how many marginal decisions are made and examine the outcomes and the reaction. Then compare them with a very careful analysis of the first half of the season.

The comparison cannot be exact but it might tell us something. More importantly, perhaps, it might give spectators as well as players a chance to think about what kind of football they want to see.

Perhaps the result will be a discovery that people preferred the old, pre-VAR atmosphere of hurling vain abuse at allegedly blind refs to the new world of having to wait to unleash their joy in a process of gaudium reservatum. Or maybe it will become obvious that the technology is, in fact, getting nearer to the point where it can clear away all doubts over potentially contentious decisions and thereby make the game a better, more contemporary spectacle. Either way, given the state we’re in, it’s got to be worth a try.

The Guardian Sport



Struggling Australia and Saudi Arabia Play a Crucial Asian World Cup Qualifier

Players from the Australian team participate in a training session at the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium in Melbourne on November 13 2024, ahead of the 2026 World Cup Asian qualification football match against Saudi Arabia on November 14. (AFP)
Players from the Australian team participate in a training session at the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium in Melbourne on November 13 2024, ahead of the 2026 World Cup Asian qualification football match against Saudi Arabia on November 14. (AFP)
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Struggling Australia and Saudi Arabia Play a Crucial Asian World Cup Qualifier

Players from the Australian team participate in a training session at the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium in Melbourne on November 13 2024, ahead of the 2026 World Cup Asian qualification football match against Saudi Arabia on November 14. (AFP)
Players from the Australian team participate in a training session at the Melbourne Rectangular Stadium in Melbourne on November 13 2024, ahead of the 2026 World Cup Asian qualification football match against Saudi Arabia on November 14. (AFP)

Australia hosts Saudi Arabia in a crucial World Cup qualifier at Melbourne on Thursday while Japan and South Korea can take a big step towards North America in 2026 when the third round of Asian qualifying reaches the halfway stage.

With only the top two teams from each of the three groups of six progressing automatically to the expanded 48-team tournament, Australia and Saudi Arabia both have only five points from four Group C games, five behind leaders Japan.

The sputtering form of the two teams has already resulted in coaching changes since the third round began. Graham Arnold stepped down as Socceroos head coach in September and was replaced by Tony Popovic while Saudi Arabia fired Roberto Mancini in October after a 0-0 draw with Bahrain in Jeddah.

Renard returns to Riyadh

Herve Renard is back in Riyadh to take over the Saudi team for a second spell.

"I believe we can qualify; otherwise, I wouldn’t be here," Renard, who left Riyadh in March 2023 to take over the French women’s national team, told local media. "I know the players well. We’re not in an ideal situation, but it’s far from hopeless. We still have six games remaining, four of them away."

Renard led Saudi Arabia to qualify for the 2022 World Cup, topping a qualification group above Japan and Australia. It then sensationally defeated eventual champion Argentina 2-1 in its opening game in Qatar before losing its next two games and finishing last in its group, failing to qualify for the knockout rounds.

"Many of these players were part of the squad that qualified for the 2022 World Cup," Renard said. "They must draw on that experience, keep their spirit high, and do everything necessary to reach the 2026 World Cup."

Saudi Arabia is hoping that a coaching change can produce the same upturn in results that Popovic delivered for Australia in his first two games in October, with a win over China at home followed by a 1-1 draw in Japan.

Japan favored in two away matches in Indonesia, China

Those were the first points that Japan, which has appeared in every World Cup since 1998, dropped in qualification. The Samurai Blue is expected to beat Indonesia despite playing in front of an expected 78,000 fans in Jakarta, before traveling to China.

"If you look at the FIFA rankings and the games in the World Cup qualifiers so far, you might think that the advantage is with Japan," said coach Hajime Moriyasu. "But we are playing both games away and I think it will be tough."

South Korea to be cautious with Son Heung-min

In Group B, leaders South Korea has recovered from a disappointing opening-game draw with the Palestinian team to win three consecutive games. Victory in Kuwait will see the South Koreans go five or six points clear of third place.

Captain and star Son Heung-min missed the victories over Jordan and Iraq due to a hamstring injury and has been short of minutes for English Premier League club Tottenham Hotspur.

"At this point, I have absolutely zero plans to push him hard," South Korea coach Hong Myung-bo said. "I will figure out ways to use him efficiently. As soon as he joins the team, I will sit down with him and discuss his playing time. It’s really important for us to see a healthy version of Son Heung-min."

Iraq and Jordan are level in second place in Group B — three points behind — and meet in Basra.

In Group A, Iran and Uzbekistan are six points clear of the rest of the group and face respective away games against North Korea and Qatar.