The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

FIFA says review works, but needs improvemen­t

- By Simon Haydon

FIFA’s head of refereeing Massimo Busacca said video reviews haven’t always gone smoothly at the Confederat­ions Cup, but also noted that Video Assistant Referees have prevented major mistakes.

ST. PETERSBURG, RUSSIA » Refereeing at the Confederat­ions Cup in Russia may have been chaotic at times, but Video Assistant Referees have prevented major mistakes from being made, football’s governing body says.

FIFA’s head of refereeing Massimo Busacca says video reviews have not always looked good in tests at the tournament and admitted “many aspects should be improved” including faster, clearer communicat­ion after slow reviews have confused players, coaches and fans.

“We are certain that this can reduce refereeing errors,” Busacca said during a news conference. “We are convinced if used correct( ly), it can reduce many mistakes. But not eliminate. We are here only to reduce.”

The former internatio­nal referee said that communicat­ions between referees and the video assistants sitting in a darkened room outside the stadium needed serious improvemen­t.

Match of ficials have complained of video assistants shouting loudly and at the same time into the referee’s ear piece during games, a verbal assault that does not help clear decision making.

The former World Cup referee says he is positive about the new system being approved for use at next year’s tournament in Russia.

Busacca insists the most important point at the two-week rehearsal tournament is that technology helped referees avoid major errors in 12 games so far.

FIFA research cites video replays helping referees overturn six “game- changing decisions.” Referees’ judgment in a further 29 “major incidents” was confirmed correct on review.

Busacca says FIFA must convince more member federation­s to help by using video reviews in their national competitio­ns.

“We need our team, our referees, in member associatio­ns to do it every day.”

He expressed irritation that referees in Russia were being criticized when they had only had five days to prepare and member federation­s were hesitating to use the technology.

He said it was crucial that referees had deep exposure to working with VARs before next year’s World Cup in Russia, where the technology is expected to be used.

The change in refereeing, he said, was fundamenta­l, with science replacing emotion. “Up un- til now decision are made in the heat of the moment. This is a new way to decide, without emotion.”

Busa cc a re j e c t ed charges that weaker referees were being used at the Confederat­ions Cup and that they were less able to deal with more senior Video Assistants.

He said he was appalled by the behavior of Mexican and New Zealand players who became involved in a mass confrontat­ion toward the end of their game.

The referee could have sent several players off. “Don’t blame the referee. Blame the players. That is terrible behavior,” he said. Players were already learning how to abuse the video referee system by surroundin­g referees and putting pressure on them to consult the VAR.

“For now, it’s not good looking. But at the end the honesty is good.”

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