The Scotsman

Postecoglo­u calls for VAR in Scotland ‘to protect players’ after Alloa clash

- By ANDREW SMITH

Celtic manager Ange Postecoglo­u has added his voice to those believing Scotland is being sold short as it seeks to showcase itself through the time taken to introduce some sort of VAR system.

Ahead of his side’s confrontat­ion with Hearts at Tynecastle, the Australian remains exasperate­d over losing Yosuke Ideguch if or several weeks to a dangerous challenge from Mou ni ang during saturday’ s Scottish Cup win at Alloa. The follow-through in a challenge that resulted in the midfielder crudely studding the ankle of the Celtic debutant earned only a caution from refereed on robertson.however, it is now being assessed by the sf a compliance officer in appearing to meet the threshold for a red card offence – which Postecoglo­u believes is how the rules state “reckless”, even if not premeditat­ed, endangerin­g of an opponent should be sanctioned.

The Celtic manager, inet, believes that Robertson did not take “control” before the 60th minute incident amid an aggressive approach from Barry Ferguson’s team, Callum Mcgregor also lost long-term to a facial injury sustained in an accidental clash. And he considers the encounter might have unfolded differentl­y had an video assistant review system been in place to support the officials.

“Most countries have VAR now and those kind of things [the Niang tackle] don’t escape punishment anymore,” said the Celtic manager .“that’ s the right way to go about it. I don’t think anybody wants to see that, and at the same time we want to sell this game and keep increasing the attention the game here in Scotland gets. we want to showcase it. We’ve signed players from the other side of the world, Hearts have signed a couple of Aussies. The game here is getting a global reach here now, and I don’t think people want to tune in and see people getting hurt. They want to tune in and see exciting football, so it falls on everyone to protect the image of the game. If you have VAR, those sorts of incidents are dealt with pretty quickly now, and what you see is less and less of them because players know they can’t escape that anymore.

"It’s not just referees, because they can sometimes miss things,” added Postecoglo­u .

" There are linesmen, fourth officials who are also part of the game, and their role is to protect that environmen­t so we all see what we want to see, and that is football being played."

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