Neither still shows either of those conjectures.
The protocol is obviously wrong if the bar is exponentially higher.
And if the VAR doesn't know what is meant by "overall movement is towards the offender's goal" it's obvious this was an obvious mistake.
But missing the handball offence was a clear and obvious mistake - and "away from goal" was a subjective decision. It's actually a real mess, isn't it? The onfield referee couldn't make a subjective decision whether it was DOGSO because he'd made a clear and obvious mistake, but the VAR (perhaps...
We may have some younger refs on here who don't know how DOGSO law changed.
Originally the wording was "moving toward the player's goal" (the player committing the offence)
Then it was "an opponent moving towards the opponents’ goal" (commited by a player on an opponent)
Then it was "an...
My first "Referees' Chart and Players' Guide to the Laws of the Game" was a quarter the size of the LOTG now. More international football and more televised football are what's caused it - because what the game expects now is consistency. Refereeing "reinterpretations" haven't helped - e.g. for...
Perhaps your emotions seem to have read into that post stuff about City that was nothing to do with the daftness of the drafting of the law. If they start with a concept like "making the body unnaturally bigger", i.e. a physical impossibility, and then someone complains that "unnatural position"...
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