I've no problem with the goal being disallowed but is it a clear and obvious error by the assistant? In cricket, that would be classed as 'umpire's call' and the on field decision would have stood. But it's not cricket is it?
VAR experiment looks good on paper, but we simply don't have the proper technology (at least not in place) to support it.
I did my own offside line and while it show Mata to be offside by millimetres it is not conclusive to be certain that at this frame Young actually touched(passed) the ball yet. In the next frame Mata is definitely on side.
We need a higher frame rate and better resolution for this. And the graphics used (mine or the VAR's) are not relabel either. When in doubt the benefit should go with the attacking team.
And to give him his due, David Wagner (the Huddersfield manager) said more or less the same thing. Even though the call went in favour of his team, he said he would have been perfectly OK with the goal being given and he feels that using the VAR for things like this destroys the emotion and the passion in the game, which is one of its best features.Was the call technically correct, probably. But no one in their right mind would complain about the linesman not flagging that in that instance.
But that's not quite true, is it? It isn't totally black and white - it depends on the technology being used. A slight difference in frame rate and/or resolution can make the difference, especially when were talking about millimetres. It's not the same as goal line technology either - that uses a battery of dedicated cameras fixed on a specific location, with only one moving object to consider and computer algorithms written specifically for that one purpose.The same can't be said for offside, it is black and white and either the player is onside or he is offside. Offsides aren't any different to goal line decisions, just as the ball being just a millimetre over the goal line makes it a goal
And when we are talking about millimetres it also depends on whether you take the decision point as when the the player making the pass first makes contact with the ball or when the contact ends. The contact usually last only about a hundreth of a second but a player can have moved a centimtre in that time...I know this sounds stupidly pedantic but that is the madness that trying to use VAR to get this sort of decision 100% correct produces. It's just not black and white.But that's not quite true, is it? It isn't totally black and white - it depends on the technology being used. A slight difference in frame rate and/or resolution can make the difference, especially when were talking about millimetres.