Saskatoon StarPhoenix

World Cup coaches get video review briefing

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FIFA briefed coaches on Wednesday on how video assistant referees should operate at this year’s World Cup.

All that’s required now is official approval of VARs for the June 14July 15 tournament in Russia.

Although some trials have created additional confusion in recent European club games, soccer’s most significan­t adoption of technology is set to be formally voted into the laws of the game by a FIFA-led body on Saturday.

Even ahead of the vote by the Internatio­nal Football Associatio­n Board, FIFA President Gianni Infantino has already said VARs must be at the World Cup to eradicate errors on the game’s biggest stage. FIFA has also been searching for a sponsor whose branding could appear when the video reviews are in action.

The governing body spent time during a pre-World Cup workshop in Sochi this week to inform the 32 coaches how the procedure will work when referees seek guidance from the VAR or check replays pitch-side.

“They have discussion­s (for VAR) to be approved in a couple of days, but it is obvious football cannot keep going with its eyes closed to the modern world and what is going on around us,” Iran coach Carlos Quieroz said. “VAR is just a baby. Football has more than 100 years (old). VAR was born five years ago.

“In 10 years, 15 years everything will be much better. Look at tennis and other sports, nobody is arguing about a couple decisions in the game. The main thing for football is simplicity and credibilit­y.”

Unease over the technology has largely centred on the lack of clarity for fans, coaches and television audiences over when and how decisions are reached using video review.

“Making the correct decisions for everybody is something we all want,” England assistant manager Steve Holland said.

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