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It's the moment the passing player touches the ball to make the pass, not when it leaves them. The cameras are all in sync so they just go back and forward to find the frame that shows before the touch and then move to the one that is touching. However this still isn't perfect as mentioned above given in that 1 frame, players can move far more than the small distance they are using to call offside!And that they have got the exact moment the ball left the passing players foot
But it isn’t the precision I have a problem with. It’s the fact that being 1mm offside by that method shows you are probably (let’s be generous) 51% likely to be offside, whereas being 1 foot and 1mm offside would show you are probably 90% likely to be offside (making numbers up). Therefore at least you can say that the correct decision is likely to be made instead of basically guessing
I liked Roy Hodgsons analogy on SSN just now. Compared it to setting a speed camera to fine people at 31mph in a 30 zone, even though the camera isn’t 100% accurate, so you will ticket people who’ve done 28mph in a 30. At least when the police do the 10% +2 rule, therefore ticketing at 36mph, its only those who have done more than 30 who get tickets, even if some speeders get away with it
All this suggestion of being daylight, a foot leeway either way etc etc is going to solve fuck all. What if it's 1mm from being daylight or not or 1 foot 1mm leeway?
The linesman have been told not to flag offside unless they're 100% certain. How many times this season has a linesman flagged offside but the player has been miles quite a bit onside like has happened many times in previous seasons? I don't think there's been as many this season. Missing close offside decisions that don't lead to a goal isn't normally a major fuckup if play continues. So this is why you see very few 'close' offsides called by the linesman (with no VAR) if there's no goal and everyone just gets on with it. That's because the linesman is giving more advantage to the attacker by trying to guess when which of the many moving players are exactly where at the precise moment the ball (which is normally a different point of view) is kicked.
This is why VAR is ruling them out to the mm as the linesman who may have flagged offside previously (normally by guessing given how f***ing hard it is to call), now doesn't flag as often as he did and call offside when in fact it was onside.
Saying that, what the fuck the linesman was playing at here is baffling! It's as if Maguire didn't exist
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It's still shit how it's implemented as the VAR fella is picking a point where he thinks is the furthest position of the player. I've seen them do this incorrectly and this can mean the line moves between onside and offside. Also as 1 frame of video is 0.03 seconds and as I've said previously this could mean a player moves anywhere from a few cm to 20cm in that frame, especially if the defender is moving against the attacker's direction. Moght as well just have a coin toss when it's that close as the VAR ref could quite easily choose 1 frame and then pick a pixel on the screen to draw the lines which then changes the offside line. In fact, I'm sure they did that earlier this season as they showed the VAR showing the player onside but then they picked another starting pixrl point, drew the lines again and made him offside (or vice versa)
It's the moment the passing player touches the ball to make the pass, not when it leaves them. The cameras are all in sync so they just go back and forward to find the frame that shows before the touch and then move to the one that is touching. However this still isn't perfect as mentioned above given in that 1 frame, players can move far more than the small distance they are using to call offside!
Okay, but by that method if you're between 1mm and 1mm short of a foot offside, you're going to be given as onside. Which is simply the wrong decision, and you're advocating the wrong decision sometimes being made.
It's not like in cricket where you can justify the decision by saying some of the ball would have hit/missed the stumps.
So again, you're knowingly getting some decisions wrong. Which is just a bit bonkers if you ask me.
Spot on as usual mate.
You don’t get them wrong though as you don’t know whether they are wrong. You cannot prove the onfield decision is wrong therefore you stick with the onfield decision. It’s about letting the linesman referee the game and correcting howlers, not correcting every single thing
We're talking about a foot, of course you can tell!
Just keep goalline technology and then let someone just talk to the ref if he’s made a howler or missed a huge issue in the game via a microphone. Crowd dont even need to know. However we are in the hands of the corporate greed machine and maybe the next generation coming through will love all this technology and ruling things in or out by thousandths of millimetres because it’s technically correct.Var for goal line technology and that's all....but bellends like Sky like to stir shit
Except that you still don't know that VAR is making the correct decision. To me, by supporting VAR, you are supporting the risk of incorrect decisions while at the same time saying that decisions need to be precise. 1mm offside is not necessarily 1mm offside when you are using a flawed tool.Okay, but by that method if you're between 1mm and 1mm short of a foot offside, you're going to be given as onside. Which is simply the wrong decision, and you're advocating the wrong decision sometimes being made.
So again, you're knowingly getting some decisions wrong. Which is just a bit bonkers if you ask me.
It isn’t whether you can tell it’s about whether you can prove it. Just because he’s say 8 inches offside in a random freeze frame doesn’t mean he’s actually offside. How do you know you’ve paused it in the right place? Have you factored for parallax and distortion and foreshortening? That’s the exact problem.
Except that you still don't know that VAR is making the correct decision. To me, by supporting VAR, you are supporting the risk of incorrect decisions while at the same time saying that decisions need to be precise. 1mm offside is not necessarily 1mm offside when you are using a flawed tool.
Not necessarily true. If you make a, let's say 20 cm margin of error, that would possibly mean a number of positives.But you're going to have the same arguments - wherever you draw the line, you're still going to have to measure based on that line. The same problems exist, you've just shifted them along a bit.
I know all this, I'm the biggest VAR critic going and have been for several years with regards technology.
My point is, all these different arguments that could be implemented are simply shifting the goalposts, not solving the problem.
Not necessarily true. If you make a, let's say 20 cm margin of error, that would possibly mean a number of positives.
We know that the FPS causes the offside lines to be inaccurate. A margin of error would bring the benefit of the doubt to the striker.
Decisions within the first 10-15 cms would be easy to call and in that sense be the same as being 10-15 cms onside with the current calls, so no changes there, which means there are only the close calls really in question, which they already are.
Except that we are only talking about margin of error for VAR decisions. This does not go for the linesman who is still to wave the flag if he is certain the striker is offside. And that could very well lead to less VAR calls in total. And possibly even reinstall some trust in the linesman and refs.
If VAR can draw a line showing that a player is 1mm offside, then surely can make a line showing that the player is 20.1 cm offsideAnd who decides whether it's 19.9cm or 20.01cm?
Here's a wacky idea: scrap technology, let the referee make the call and just accept that they will get some things wrong.
I don't think it should be used for offside at all.If VAR can draw a line showing that a player is 1mm offside, then surely can make a line showing that the player is 20.1 cm offside