Thought I start a thread to highlight about the "Refs call" terminology and the potential flaws that comes with it.
In the Man united Spurs game, the red card to Fernandes was not overturned because despite the VAR seeing the challenge wasn't with the studs, he just went with the "refs call" despite the referee never actually seen it and the assistant was the one who advised on the red card. I just feel this is the classic case of a VAR using "refs call" as a factor of overriding the LOTG and we see an error of judgement by the VAR as a result.
In the Newcastle City game, Webb says if the referee didn't give a penalty(and I assume would book Gordon for diving) then the VAR wouldn't intervene because of refs call yet VAR backs the referee decision of penalty because there seemed to be contact in his opinion which means you could have two similar situations in the same game resulting in two totally different sanctions all because of those two words of "refs call". This is what would drive pundits/fans mad because it can't be a penalty and a dive, it's either one or the other surely?
In the Forest/Fulham game, the referee waved played on after a potential Fulham penalty but he admitted he couldn't see any contact yet going by the audio of the VAR, he only intervened because the referee didn't see it and if the ref call was no penalty and thought there wasn't significant contact, he would stand by the refs call.
Personally I'm not a fan of this refs call, it's just a fancy way of how they did VAR in the very first season where they intervened on virtually nothing and the only difference is Howard Webb allows the usage of monitors. As for the arguement we don't want "re-refereeing" well we don't see that because the referee has the right to reject a VAR review. If a VAR thinks the original decision is wrong in law, then he should intervene and not justify referees call just because it might split opinion amongst pundits/fans or he can see why the referee made that decision.
In the Man united Spurs game, the red card to Fernandes was not overturned because despite the VAR seeing the challenge wasn't with the studs, he just went with the "refs call" despite the referee never actually seen it and the assistant was the one who advised on the red card. I just feel this is the classic case of a VAR using "refs call" as a factor of overriding the LOTG and we see an error of judgement by the VAR as a result.
In the Newcastle City game, Webb says if the referee didn't give a penalty(and I assume would book Gordon for diving) then the VAR wouldn't intervene because of refs call yet VAR backs the referee decision of penalty because there seemed to be contact in his opinion which means you could have two similar situations in the same game resulting in two totally different sanctions all because of those two words of "refs call". This is what would drive pundits/fans mad because it can't be a penalty and a dive, it's either one or the other surely?
In the Forest/Fulham game, the referee waved played on after a potential Fulham penalty but he admitted he couldn't see any contact yet going by the audio of the VAR, he only intervened because the referee didn't see it and if the ref call was no penalty and thought there wasn't significant contact, he would stand by the refs call.
Personally I'm not a fan of this refs call, it's just a fancy way of how they did VAR in the very first season where they intervened on virtually nothing and the only difference is Howard Webb allows the usage of monitors. As for the arguement we don't want "re-refereeing" well we don't see that because the referee has the right to reject a VAR review. If a VAR thinks the original decision is wrong in law, then he should intervene and not justify referees call just because it might split opinion amongst pundits/fans or he can see why the referee made that decision.