Premier League announce VAR 'clamp down' that will affect Leeds United this season - YEP 3/8/21
The Premier League will look to clamp down on soft penalties in the season ahead, while attackers are set to benefit from the scrapping of so-called ‘toenail’ offsides.
By Joe Urquhart
Referees’ chief Mike Riley says the bar for awarding fouls
and spot-kicks for lower-body contact will be raised, following feedback from
players, coaches and chief executives gathered in a March survey.
On-field officials and VARs will be told to establish clear
contact, whether it has a consequence and whether an attacking player has tried
to use that contact to win a penalty.
It is understood challenges such as the ones on England’s
Raheem Sterling in the Euro 2020 matches against Scotland and Denmark, for
example, would not be given under the Premier League approach, and that a
Premier League VAR would have intervened to overturn the spot-kick England were
awarded in the semi-final against Denmark.
“It’s not sufficient just to say ‘yes, there was contact’,”
Riley, the general manager of Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL)
said.
“Contact on its own is only part of what referees should
look for. If you’ve got clear contact that has a consequence, then that’s what
you have got to penalise.”
While the change of emphasis should mean that attackers who
initiate or exaggerate contact will not be rewarded, referees will be on the
lookout to award penalties where there is clear, meaningful contact but players
stay on their feet.
“That should always be the case, otherwise the balance is
unequal,” Riley said.
Citing the example of Manchester City’s Phil Foden staying
on his feet despite clear contact from Southampton goalkeeper Alex McCarthy,
Riley said: “We made a mistake. There was clear contact and the player stayed
on his feet, went wide and lost the ball.
“We should have gone back and given the penalty. I think had
we done so that would have reassured players, and that’s our approach (this
season).”
The likely result of this change will be a drop in the
number of penalties awarded. There were 125 given last season, 92 in 2019-20,
103 in 2018-19 and 80 in 2017-18.
The assessment of marginal offsides will also change next
season, Riley said.
One-pixel lines will still be used in the working-out
process, but this will no longer be broadcast. Instead, the final, thicker
broadcast lines will be used, and when these thicker lines drawn for the
attacker and defender overlap, the attacker will be deemed onside.
“Effectively what we give back to the game is 20 goals that
would have been disallowed last season by using quite forensic scrutiny,” he
said.
“So it’s the toenails, the noses being given offside. They
might have been given offside last season, next season they won’t be.”
In effect, there will have to be daylight between the lines
for offside to be given.
It is understood the Premier League is expecting there could
be the possibility to trial semi-automated offside technology in the 2022-23
season. FIFA president Gianni Infantino has already expressed his hope that the
technology can be used at the 2022 World Cup midway through that season.
The technology provides a response in four to five seconds,
compared to the average human check in the Premier League of 34 seconds.
Fan feedback was also sought by the Premier League, with
many supporters disenchanted with aspects of VAR.
It is understood the league is considering a number of
options to make the VAR process more transparent, ranging from video explainers
on the league’s social media channels to a PGMOL representative appearing on
programmes such as Sky Sports’ Monday Night Football.
The light-touch approach to VAR seen at the Euros drew
widespread praise, but it is expected there will be a higher level of
intervention than was seen in the summer tournament.
However, Riley says there will be a concerted effort to
keeping the game flowing.
“The Euros were really good in a lot of respects, there was
a greater acceptance of referees not intervening for small contacts and that
allowed the game to flow,” he said.
“One of the encouraging things is that we’re going into next
season with people expecting that threshold to be in a higher place than last
year.”
Asked whether fans should expect the Premier League to be
refereed like the Euros, Riley added: “Tournament football is different to
domestic football. We referee in the best way that suits the Premier League.
But raising that bar for intervention is a good thing, and making sure that
VARs intervene only where we have got clear and obvious evidence.”
