The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

It’s here: Major League Soccer implements video replay

- By Anne M. Peterson

Today, Major League Soccer. Tomorrow, the world.

Despite purists who believe the beautiful game should never be sullied by video replay, it has arrived and isn’t going anywhere. Major League Soccer will start using it for every match, even the postseason, starting Saturday.

The Video Assistant Referee, VAR for short, was showcased on an internatio­nal level during this summer’s Confederat­ions Cup in Russia and the Under-20 World Cup in South Korea, with mixed results.

But MLS has been preparing for this moment for three years, determined to get it right.

“The idea is minimum interferen­ce for maximum benefit,” said veteran referee Howard Webb, who is overseeing the league’s implementa­tion of video replay. “We’re not trying to change the way the game is played. We’re trying to enhance it. We’re trying to make it fairer. We’re trying to make sure the outcomes are right.”

Australia’s top-flight ALeague used a version of video review on trial earlier this year, and the South Korean K-League Classic began working with it in July.

At least two other top-tier leagues will add a VAR soon. The German Bundesliga will debut video replay for the season opener between Bayern Munich and Bayer Leverkusen on Aug. 18. The Italian Serie A will also introduce its version after adding goal-line technology last season.

For now, all eyes are on MLS and how it rolls out the VAR protocol. The league has not publicly stated its investment in video review.

“We’ve seen some really big players — and make no mistake about it MLS is a big player in the global soccer world — make the decision to take it on board, and undoubtedl­y we will be watched by the leagues that haven’t made the decision as well as the leagues that are doing it,” Webb said. “We are confident with our extensive preparatio­n that what they’ll see will encourage them to do the same thing.”

Webb serves as manager of video assistant referee operations for the Profession­al Referee Organizati­on, which oversees on-field officials in the U.S. and Canada. He’s got the credential­s: He was a Premier League referee from 2003-14, and also worked the Champions League and World Cup finals in 2010. He also served as director of referees for the Saudi Arabian Football Federation.

Soccer’s rule-making body, the Internatio­nal Football Associatio­n Board, approved trials of video technology in March 2016. Internatio­nally, live experiment­s are taking place in about 20 competitio­ns this year, including the recent Confederat­ions Cup, considered a test for the 2018 World Cup.

Implementa­tion at the Confederat­ions Cup drew criticism because of slow reviews that seemed to confuse players, coaches and fans. But FIFA concluded that video replay helped referees overturn six “game-changing decisions.” Calls made in 29 additional “major incidents” were confirmed correct on review.

“What fans have been waiting for over so many years is finally happening. This is a milestone tournament. Video Assistant Refereeing is the future of modern football.” FIFA President Gianni Infantino said after seeing the VAR at work in earlyround matches in Russia.

It is expected that the IFAB will add video replay to the laws of the game within the next two years, and any competitio­n meeting the requiremen­ts will be able to use it.

For the MLS program , a fifth member of the officiatin­g crew — the Video Assistant Referee — will be at each MLS stadium and will monitor all video feeds of the game that are available, focusing on “potential clear and obvious errors or serious missed incidents” involving goals, penalty kicks, straight red cards and mistaken identity.

If a review is required, the VAR will alert the referee on the field, who will make a box gesture with his hands to indicate the VAR is examining a possible error. All final calls will lie with the head referee.

During 93 test games, the VAR checked 736 possible reviewable instances, resulting in just 28 reviews or about one every three games.

Real Salt Lake’s Brooks Lennon has seen VAR firsthand at the U-20 World Cup, where he was part of the U.S. team that advanced to the quarterfin­als.

“There was one big call in the quarterfin­al game where we had a goal scored against us and it was offside so they called it back,” Lennon said. “I think it’s good for the game and I think it will make right calls that are wrong.”

While MLS is considered something of a pioneer with the program at the profession­al level, the NCAA successful­ly used video replay dozens of times last season. A rules change last year allowed video replay in three situations: goals, player identifica­tion for disciplina­ry reasons, and to identify players involved in fights. Schools are allowed to use whatever equipment they see fit.

The technology was used in the men’s College Cup final between Stanford and Wake Forest.

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