Originally posted by Andy_Faber
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O/T - Worst thing ever in football?
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Clearly the law makers believe it is about right or wrong. I take your point about the adrenaline rush, but I don’t understand why cricket followers can cope with that loss - eg when a crucial decision is reversed because of a minuscule inside edge or no ball, or a magnificent six saving catch is disallowed because a millimetre of the fielder’s heel touched the rope - and football supporters can’t be expected to.Last edited by ramAnag; 04-09-2025, 06:26 PM.
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Two possible reasons - there's little 'human judgement' in drs and stilllots in VAR, and drs has a relatively short review period, VAR can go on seemingly for everOriginally posted by ramAnag View PostClearly the law makers believe it is about right or wrong. I take your point about the adrenaline rush, but I don’t understand why cricket followers can cope with that loss - eg when a crucial decision is reversed because of a minuscule inside edge or no ball, or a magnificent six saving catch is disallowed because a millimetre of the fielder’s heel touched the rope - and football supporters can’t be expected to.
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Possibly because the drs/hawkeye cricket review system has become part of the theatre of the game, and is pretty much guaranteed to be over in (Im guessing) a minute, whereas VAR is still a dark art and can take forever. Someone above mentioned a time limit/real time VAr reviewing, that would be good, but MA is correct it appears EPL have applied it badlyOriginally posted by ramAnag View PostClearly the law makers believe it is about right or wrong. I take your point about the adrenaline rush, but I dont understand why cricket followers can cope with that loss - eg when a crucial decision is reversed because of a minuscule inside edge or no ball, or a magnificent six saving catch is disallowed because a millimetre of the fielders heel touched the rope - and football supporters cant be expected to.
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In cricket, it's never about intent or interpretation, every decision is clear cut, or umpires call. The only drama you get is whether someone grounds the ball or not on a catch, which you get without the DRS, albeit with differing delay. Though in cricket, players get fined for slow play, wonder how it would go down in football if players were docked half their match fee for time wasting?
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Have to disagree. There’s more ‘human judgement’ in DRS because there is always the ‘umpire’s call’ option to fall back on and I’ve seen some astonishingly lengthy decision making, particularly where ‘clean’ catches are concerned.Originally posted by Andy_Faber View PostTwo possible reasons - there's little 'human judgement' in drs and stilllots in VAR, and drs has a relatively short review period, VAR can go on seemingly for everLast edited by ramAnag; 05-09-2025, 11:53 AM.
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Clean catches sI'll agree with. Youre wrong on umpires call, its a misnomer, it should be 'stick with your earlier decision', there's no FURTHER human interventionOriginally posted by ramAnag View PostHave to disagree. There’s more ‘human judgement’ in DRS because there is always the ‘umpire’s call’ option to fall back on and I’ve seen some astonishingly lengthy decision making, particularly where ‘clean’ catches are concerned.
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Completely agree. ‘Umpire’s call’ means ‘stick with your earlier decision’, i.e. the original HUMAN decision.Originally posted by Andy_Faber View PostClean catches sI'll agree with. Youre wrong on umpires call, its a misnomer, it should be 'stick with your earlier decision', there's no FURTHER human intervention
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Whatever, for me VAR has completely spoilt football, I sincerely hope its never introduced in the championship, though I fear it will. The goal line technology was fine to determine whether the ball had crossed the line, the rest is just a further diminution of what football used to be about.
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