Late Tackle Football Magazine

SAVE US FROM VAR

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Luke Phelps has his say

WE USED to watch the Premier League in awe. We’d stay up for Match of the Day on a Saturday night and go to sleep visualisin­g our own football match the next morning, before stepping foot onto a near-waterlogge­d pitch to try and replicate what we’d seen the night before.

But now we watch the supposed ‘best league in the world’ with our hands over our eyes, deliberati­ng the latest and most drastic change introducti­on of the Video Assistant Referee.

As if fans didn’t already to lament, there’s now another, watching over our football like a remote hawk and stimulatin­g more debate than the most controvers­ial footballer ever could.

Yes, we used to talk about players, managers and transfers - but now all we seem to talk about is VAR.

Its birthplace was actually in the Netherland­s, starting off as a part-time project cooked up by the Royal Netherland­s

Football Associatio­n, or the KNVB.

After tests as early as 2012, it wasn’t fully incorporat­ed into a profession­al match until 2016.

Yet within two years, VAR completed its rapid rise into the highest echelons of football, when the 2018 World Cup tournament to adopt it.

Later VAR, a lightly tested and relatively unproven product, was released into the Premier League and the 4.7 billion people who consume it without much of a second thought.

genuinely hopeful that it would make the Premier League a better place for all, but we soon discovered that the

From the time it takes to judge decisions that go to VAR, to the eerie silence it leaves on watching fans when a ‘goal’ goes in, VAR in its embryonic stages, for most, has tainted the game. It can be quite entertaini­ng for the neutral fan, but how many of us watch a Premier League game without subconscio­usly or consciousl­y taking sides?

This 2019/20 Premier League season will no doubt go down in the annals of English football as one of the worst. It’ll be remembered by the farce that was VAR on its maiden voyage, the coronaviru­s and perhaps Jurgen Klopp’s Liverpool. The impatience for world of remote refereeing upon us and now we’re playing catch-up with our own technology.

But the hastiness in which it’s all come about has pushed the game’s credibilit­y back by several years at least.

The way it’s going, it’ll soon be on its way to the Championsh­ip.

The second tier is drawing more viewers and fans from all

corners of the globe and it’s soon

Several managers have already called for VAR to be introduced to the Championsh­ip, most notably West Brom’s Slaven Bilic.

The Croat, like many of his competitor­s, has been tortured by the state of tier, highlighti­ng the need for an extra pair of eyes watching over the games.

But having seen the mess it’s made of the Premier League, players, managers and fans of the Championsh­ip should be hand. English football as a whole needs to recognise the mistakes that have been made this season and learn not to make them again.

In the Championsh­ip we have a fascinatin­g league which is above some of Europe’s best in terms of popularity, and even quality.

VAR, in its current state, would choke

the charm of the Championsh­ip, and set to beset the game for many years to come.

This summer will be a huge one in terms of reviewing the footage, seeing where VAR has and hasn’t been useful, and trying to overhaul the system in time for the start of the next domestic football season, whenever that is.

If and when VAR is ever perfected, then great, install it in every league possible.

But for now, let the Premier League carry the burden of being VAR’s test dummy.

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 ??  ?? Backing: Slaven Bilic
Backing: Slaven Bilic
 ??  ?? Waiting around: VAR checks for a possible penalty in the Premier League match between Burnley and Bournemout­h and, Inset, Wolves fans make their point
Waiting around: VAR checks for a possible penalty in the Premier League match between Burnley and Bournemout­h and, Inset, Wolves fans make their point
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