socal lurker
RefChat Addict
this is it true. The R is not at all obligated to agree with the VAR. The R is the sole decision maker and owns getting the call right at the screen. While it is true that if the C&O standard is being applied correctly, the R and VAR should almost always agree, it’s not because the R is obligated, but because the only time the R is going to disagree is if the VAR has made a mistake.But this is where the protocol lets referees down. The referee clearly and understandably hasn't seen that as an offence, but the VAR can't just pop it on the screen and tell the ref to make a call - he has to either let a clear orange foul slide with zero punishment, or find reasons to think it's a red in order to be able to ask for a review. And then once told it's a red, the ref is obliged to agree 99%+ of the time, because disagreements at the screen are supposed to be incredibly rare by design.
And I wholly disagree with expanding VAR for things like caution. probably the biggest problem with VAR is the disruption of flow in a game that is supposed to flow. If we start letting the VAR get involved on more, it will just add to that disruption.
I think flow is the other difficulty with a coach challenge system. The challenge systems I’m familiar with use time outs as the added control on challenges—if you lose the appeal, it costs you a time out. Soccer doesn’t have time outs. A challenge system could essentially create timeouts, which I don’t like. All that said, I wouldn’t be opposed to a trial of a challenge system where the team gets one challenge per game; and if they are successful they get a second. The fact there was only one would discourage using it unless they were very confident they would succeed (at least until late in the game). But that system has a slippery slope, too. When the hand of god occurs after a team has used their challenge, the pressure will come for more challenges. (both american football and basketball typically have a change that allows refs to go to review without challenges in the end game. The soccer end game isn’t the same and doesn’t lend itself to that type of shif.)