Technology For Penalty Decisions?

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Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Wonderwall » Mon Nov 18, 2013 12:42 pm

Jeff Stelling has penned this piece on Skysports.com, I can imagine Ashley Young and Gollum having nightmares if this happens!

Jeff Stelling wrote:West Brom chairman Jeremy Peace has written to the Premier League to ask for video technology to be used for reviewing penalty decisions.

He says they've been happy enough to install goal-line technology at huge costs which will rarely be used, whereas the use of technology on penalty or non-penalty decisions would be far more beneficial to the game and I think he's got a point.

I've always thought the money spent on goal-line technology was a complete waste and so far this season it's proved to be precisely that.

I know people will fling their hands up in the air and say 'using technology to decide penalties?' To a degree they're right because if the game was being stopped constantly every time there's a brush in the penalty area and then being referred to a video referee, it would not be acceptable.

But I do think there's a lot of mileage in the idea. You might give each side two appeals in the course of the 90 minutes and it's up to them when they use them for instances within the penalty area - so if you thought you should have had a penalty and it hasn't been given you can appeal and refer it to the video referee; and if you've had a penalty given against you which shouldn't have been given, you can refer it to the video referee, but you only get two goes in the entire game.

The purists will argue that it undermines the referee's authority; but they do it in tennis and it doesn't undermine the umpire's authority there. They have the video referee in rugby league for tries and it doesn't undermine them.

I think referees would welcome the assistance and it would add a dramatic element. In cricket or rugby league when a decision is referred to the third umpire and you're waiting for the verdict to come up on the scoreboard it adds to the drama.

Points

I'm not sure Jeremy Peace is right when he says that there have been four occasions this season when penalties have been given against his side that weren't penalties. I think he's got a case for two of those, not four, but it is worth a significant amount of points to them.

With this system we probably wouldn't see a penalty given like we did last week in the last minute of the Swansea v Stoke game, when the Welsh side were winning 3-2 and Robert Madley gave an absolutely ludicrous penalty against them.

It would be interesting with this system how it would work, because Swansea may have used their two appeals before that last minute of the game. It would certainly give the manager something extra to think about.

In this day and age it is so hard to get decisions right for referees especially because the game is played at such a phenomenal pace and players go down at the brush of an arm.

Referees have assistants but they can't always see the incident and the additional referees in Europe don't work because they never move or give decisions.

It would be an interesting way forward if it could be experimented with in some way, maybe not in the Premier League immediately but perhaps in the Capital One Cup to see how effective it is.

I think it would be a far more beneficial use of technology and finance than goal-line technology is and at the end of the day the principal thing is to get decisions right and if it helps that then it would have to be a good thing.

So I'm backing the Baggies.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Beefymcfc » Mon Nov 18, 2013 12:55 pm

Not a chance mate. You cannot take the emphasis away from the controllers, the gatekeepers will just not allow it.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Twobob » Mon Nov 18, 2013 1:22 pm

Cant be implimented during a game, completly different thing from a ball going over the goal line.

I do believe that any dubious ones should be reviewed post game and if it was a dive then yellow/red cards and a fine should be handed out with point deductions for repeat offenders (scum) even if they didn't get a penalty from it
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby LookMumImOnMCF.net » Mon Nov 18, 2013 2:31 pm

Just have people playing FIFA '14 and have done with it once and for all.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Bridge'srightfoot » Tue Nov 19, 2013 5:42 pm

Definitely not. If we do that then we'll soon have replays for free kicks, throw ins, goal kicks and the game will last 3 hours.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Wonderwall » Tue Nov 19, 2013 6:21 pm

IMO video technology has improved Rugby, cricket and Tennis as they have got the technology and the process spot on. No reason why it cannot enhance the customer experience at football, I wouldnt mind it if it was done right.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby tc6828 » Tue Nov 19, 2013 6:47 pm

Wonder what the league positions would be now if this had been implemented at the beginning of the season. Rags would be fighting a relegation spot by now. Chelski would also be minus one or two points.

An interesting thought and having seen it work perfectly well in Rugby, I'm all for it, only for penalties though
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Pretty Boy Lee » Tue Nov 19, 2013 8:42 pm

I really don't want it. I think tougher punishment for diving would have a similar effect without changing the fundamentals if our game.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby budfox » Tue Nov 19, 2013 8:51 pm

Works in rugby because the game is very stop/start. Same with cricket and tennis. Footy, well the game flows freely, so how would that be dealt with? Blow a whistle for every appeal and then a drop ball if no pen?

What about reviewing at the next break in play? Great until the other team score, or someone picks up a red/yellow.

Personally I think that goal-line technology is far enough, because the ref knows instantly. Anything else would be ruin the world game.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Hutch's Shoulder » Tue Nov 19, 2013 9:09 pm

I don't want it either; the speed if the game is what first drew me to it (that and sky blue shirts). Also the years of festering resentment against unjust decisions is character building.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Tokyo Blue » Wed Nov 20, 2013 3:42 am

Hutch's Shoulder wrote:I don't want it either; the speed if the game is what first drew me to it (that and sky blue shirts). Also the years of festering resentment against unjust decisions is character building.

Ha ha. I see what you mean.

I wouldn't hate the filth quite as much if it were not for them being the consistent beneficiary of dodgy refereeing decisions. And everyone needs someone to hate. The current situation also allows me to let off steam by screaming at the ref rather than smacking the cat/kids/wife/glass door etc.

On the other hand, I want refs to get things right. Is that too much to ask? Anything that helps them do that and goes some way to eliminating the obvious corruption infesting the game is fine by me.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Wonderwall » Wed Nov 20, 2013 8:31 am

budfox wrote:Works in rugby because the game is very stop/start. Same with cricket and tennis. Footy, well the game flows freely, so how would that be dealt with? Blow a whistle for every appeal and then a drop ball if no pen?

What about reviewing at the next break in play? Great until the other team score, or someone picks up a red/yellow.

Personally I think that goal-line technology is far enough, because the ref knows instantly. Anything else would be ruin the world game.


I think its very much a myth that football flows freely:-
free kicks
Goal kicks
Corner kicks
penalty kicks
throw ins
Injury stoppages
substitutions
goals and celebrations

the ball is only in play on average for 63 mins per game! I dont think technology will hinder the free flowing game too much. Especially if we bring a rule in that the clock stops, it would add to the experience IF done correctly.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby sweenyuk » Wed Nov 20, 2013 8:42 am

I was always very much against technology but tennis has proved humans get decisions wrong and we can see an increase in errors with poor decisions. Why can't the video ref send a signal to the main ref after review if a decision is wrong.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Bridge'srightfoot » Wed Nov 20, 2013 12:22 pm

sweenyuk wrote:I was always very much against technology but tennis has proved humans get decisions wrong and we can see an increase in errors with poor decisions. Why can't the video ref send a signal to the main ref after review if a decision is wrong.

The difference is a decision in tennis is an absolute. The ball either hit the line or it didn't. There's no grey area. Same with goal line technology, the ball either crossed the line or it didn't.

But penalties are different, there are of course some stonewallers but also a hell of a lot which some would give, some wouldn't.
A replay may not always clear things up.
But once we allow replays, where do we draw the line? Replays for freekick decisions, corner kicks, throw ins? yellow cards?

It will create more problems than it solves imo.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby sandman » Wed Nov 20, 2013 12:31 pm

Wonderwall wrote:I think its very much a myth that football flows freely:-
free kicks
Goal kicks
Corner kicks
penalty kicks
throw ins
Injury stoppages
substitutions
goals and celebrations

the ball is only in play on average for 63 mins per game! I dont think technology will hinder the free flowing game too much. Especially if we bring a rule in that the clock stops, it would add to the experience IF done correctly.


The clock stopping works really well in Rugby, this would completely eradicate fergie time.

I would be interested in seeing how much time is spent by United and Chelsea players complaining to the ref that he is not bent enough for them, if you minus the current wasted time from stoppage to restart from the time it takes for a TV official to make a decision then I imagine there would not be much difference at all.

They could protect the speed of a game by invoking a rule that if a decision is not reached within 90 secs then an inconclusive decision would be announced and no foul given.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Wonderwall » Wed Nov 20, 2013 12:42 pm

Bridge'srightfoot wrote:
sweenyuk wrote:I was always very much against technology but tennis has proved humans get decisions wrong and we can see an increase in errors with poor decisions. Why can't the video ref send a signal to the main ref after review if a decision is wrong.

The difference is a decision in tennis is an absolute. The ball either hit the line or it didn't. There's no grey area. Same with goal line technology, the ball either crossed the line or it didn't.

But penalties are different, there are of course some stonewallers but also a hell of a lot which some would give, some wouldn't.
A replay may not always clear things up.
But once we allow replays, where do we draw the line? Replays for freekick decisions, corner kicks, throw ins? yellow cards?

It will create more problems than it solves imo.


the whole point of the review system in Cricket and Tennis is, it is restricted to a set amount, if you mess up, then its tough, you need to be sure to request a review and if you lose your review, then its your own fault. I can see many options and it may take a wile to get the right mix, but I think its certainly worth exploring..... especially to eradicate the penalty box divers!
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Ted Hughes » Wed Nov 20, 2013 12:43 pm

Slomo is not an effective method of adjudicating penality decisions, as most people (including ex footballers & refs) are incapable of judging how much an impact matters or doesn't matter when viewed in slomo.

A constant which comes up in Ashley Young type situations is the 'expert' saying 'no never a pen, no chance' as you clearly see a defender trying to avoid contact by pulling his foot away after a genuine attempt to play the ball & a huge exaggerated jump by the forward, then we see the slomo: 'oh now I've seen that, yes, there is contact, the ref was right to give a pen there, well done '

No he isn't right. It was a dive, as you saw in real time. The slomo has just given a bad dive credence by showing 'contact'.

It will never work & just lead to more resentment from people like us, as the rag/scouse machine sitting watching a tv screen gives them even more favourable decisions than the refs have been doing.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Wonderwall » Wed Nov 20, 2013 2:43 pm

Ted Hughes wrote:Slomo is not an effective method of adjudicating penality decisions, as most people (including ex footballers & refs) are incapable of judging how much an impact matters or doesn't matter when viewed in slomo.

A constant which comes up in Ashley Young type situations is the 'expert' saying 'no never a pen, no chance' as you clearly see a defender trying to avoid contact by pulling his foot away after a genuine attempt to play the ball & a huge exaggerated jump by the forward, then we see the slomo: 'oh now I've seen that, yes, there is contact, the ref was right to give a pen there, well done '

No he isn't right. It was a dive, as you saw in real time. The slomo has just given a bad dive credence by showing 'contact'.

It will never work & just lead to more resentment from people like us, as the rag/scouse machine sitting watching a tv screen gives them even more favourable decisions than the refs have been doing.


totally disagree Ted, the way things work now are unacceptable, we are crying out for consistency. Technology can give it. There is no rule in the game that said there is not allowed to be contact, the interpretation needs to be clear for ALL and followed through with consistency, this way everyone gets a clear message and we are all on an even playing field. Maybe where a penalty is not awarded following a review, it should follow up with a yellow card if the review has shown the player to be simulating.

I am all for it and it is only a matter of time before something comes along, the money in the game is getting too big to be done in by a cheat.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Bridge'srightfoot » Wed Nov 20, 2013 3:39 pm

Wonderwall wrote:
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:
sweenyuk wrote:I was always very much against technology but tennis has proved humans get decisions wrong and we can see an increase in errors with poor decisions. Why can't the video ref send a signal to the main ref after review if a decision is wrong.

The difference is a decision in tennis is an absolute. The ball either hit the line or it didn't. There's no grey area. Same with goal line technology, the ball either crossed the line or it didn't.

But penalties are different, there are of course some stonewallers but also a hell of a lot which some would give, some wouldn't.
A replay may not always clear things up.
But once we allow replays, where do we draw the line? Replays for freekick decisions, corner kicks, throw ins? yellow cards?

It will create more problems than it solves imo.


the whole point of the review system in Cricket and Tennis is, it is restricted to a set amount, if you mess up, then its tough, you need to be sure to request a review and if you lose your review, then its your own fault. I can see many options and it may take a wile to get the right mix, but I think its certainly worth exploring..... especially to eradicate the penalty box divers!


I see what you're saying but again in cricket, like tennis a decision is absolute. It was going to hit the wicket or it didn't. It did touch the ground before the fielder caught it or it didn't. There's no middle ground.

As Ted mentioned, with penalties it may not clear things up. I mean today we could still debate penalty decisions from years ago, there's a whole lot more subjectivity involved.
The best way to eradicate divers would be tough retrospective bans imo.
But how would the replay system work? Would they have to stop play immediately if the penalty wasn't given? I think it will break up the game more than necessary.
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Re: Technology For Penalty Decisions?

Postby Wonderwall » Wed Nov 20, 2013 3:47 pm

Bridge'srightfoot wrote:
Wonderwall wrote:
Bridge'srightfoot wrote:
sweenyuk wrote:I was always very much against technology but tennis has proved humans get decisions wrong and we can see an increase in errors with poor decisions. Why can't the video ref send a signal to the main ref after review if a decision is wrong.

The difference is a decision in tennis is an absolute. The ball either hit the line or it didn't. There's no grey area. Same with goal line technology, the ball either crossed the line or it didn't.

But penalties are different, there are of course some stonewallers but also a hell of a lot which some would give, some wouldn't.
A replay may not always clear things up.
But once we allow replays, where do we draw the line? Replays for freekick decisions, corner kicks, throw ins? yellow cards?

It will create more problems than it solves imo.


the whole point of the review system in Cricket and Tennis is, it is restricted to a set amount, if you mess up, then its tough, you need to be sure to request a review and if you lose your review, then its your own fault. I can see many options and it may take a wile to get the right mix, but I think its certainly worth exploring..... especially to eradicate the penalty box divers!


I see what you're saying but again in cricket, like tennis a decision is absolute. It was going to hit the wicket or it didn't. It did touch the ground before the fielder caught it or it didn't. There's no middle ground.

As Ted mentioned, with penalties it may not clear things up. I mean today we could still debate penalty decisions from years ago, there's a whole lot more subjectivity involved.
The best way to eradicate divers would be tough retrospective bans imo.
But how would the replay system work? Would they have to stop play immediately if the penalty wasn't given? I think it will break up the game more than necessary.


there are many decisions that are not absolute in cricket, outs given but hotspot didnt show anything but the the decisions still stands. LBW decisions that are clearly out but because it was going leg side by a fraction over 1/2 a ball then umpires decision stands. A catch that looks like it hits the ground the same time as the catcher holds it simultaneously. There are lots of doubts and nothing is perfect, but it will certainly enhance the process and cut out the clear cheating.

It will help the referees and take some pressure off, which can only help the fans get some justice on the field. I dont want Jon Moss making all the decisions, I want someone to help the useless twat. I dont want human error to always be the way, lets make use of the fantastic technology at our disposal, we are not in the betamax age anymore.
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