Dayton Daily News

Video review to debut at tourney

- By James Ellingwort­h

KRASNOGORS­K, RUSSIA — Two cramped rooms in a Moscow suburb could make or break countries’ dreams of World Cup glory.

This World Cup tournament will be the first to use video reviews, standard practice in many other sports around the world, but an abominatio­n to some soccer fans who see it as killing the game’s soul.

Deep in the bowels of FIFA’s Internatio­nal Broadcast Center, just outside the Moscow city limits, are two rooms decorated in blueand-red World Cup branding. Along each wall are places for four Video Assistant Referees and 15 screens capable of showing 33 camera angles. It’s all ready for the first World Cup game to use the VAR system Thursday when Russia plays Saudi Arabia.

FIFA hopes VAR will stop fans griping about biased, incompeten­t or corrupt referees — even though in the past two weeks, one Saudi referee was dropped from the World Cup after being banned for life in a corruption case, while a Kenyan assistant referee stepped down from World Cup duties after being filmed apparently accepting a cash payment.

“I don’t need to wait for VAR to guarantee people that referees are honest,” said Massimo Busacca, head of FIFA’s refereeing department, during a tour of the facilities Saturday. “Everyone watching the situation can even have another confirmati­on that the decision was correct, so they cannot complain any more. Believe me, even without VAR, we have to believe in what referees are doing.”

Referees, four to a game, will sit in office chairs along one wall with monitor operators trained to find the best camera angles for a disputed penalty or offside call.

One is the chief Video Assistant Referee, making the final calls. He — all the World Cup officials are male — is backed up by one assistant specializi­ng in offside, another who checks his colleagues’ work for errors, and one who keeps an eye on the live TV feed while the others are deliberati­ng.

Technology in soccer remains in its infancy compared to tennis or American football.

VAR’s first high-profile rollout at last year’s Confederat­ions Cup was plagued with problems. After Eduardo Vargas put the ball in the net for Chile against Cameroon, the celebratio­ns meant many players and fans in Moscow’s Spartak Stadium didn’t notice referee Damir Skomina making the gesture for a video review. There was no word over the PA system or on the big screens for a few minutes as fans tried to grasp what was going on. Players milled about, some heading for the dressing room before realizing it wasn’t yet halftime. Eventually Skomina received the VAR decision — offside — and Vargas’ goal was disallowed, a tournament first.

FIFA says it’s worked on improving communicat­ions.

“There will be graphics in the stadium and after the referee’s decision also images, so the idea is to be totally transparen­t,” said Robert Rosetti, an Italian former referee now overseeing VAR’s rollout for FIFA.

“The target of VAR is justice,” he said. “I don’t know if we want a goal scored by hand in the last minute of the final of the World Cup.”

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