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UEFA

Ceferin: "When technology makes a mistake, we have a problem"

Football needs uncertainty, the head of European football Ceferin stated as he criticised the way VAR technology had changed the character of the sport.

UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin walks past a sign with the UEFA logo after attending a press conference following a meeting of the executive committee at the UEFA headquarters, in Nyon, Switzerland on December 4, 2019. (Photo by Fabrice COFFRINI / AFP)
FABRICE COFFRINIAFP

Football needs uncertainty, the head of European soccer body UEFA said on Wednesday, as he criticised the way VAR technology had changed the character of football matches.
Aleksander Ceferin said that UEFA would propose soccer's rule-making IFAB make changes to the way the VAR system, officially introduced in 2018, was being implemented, though he did not want to give more details.

The use of VAR, where match officials use video replays to check decisions by the referee on the pitch and flag possible mistakes, has been surrounded by controversy over the last few months.

Critics say the system goes far beyond its original remit and that decisions are taking too long.

UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin gestures during a press conference following a meeting of the executive committee at the UEFA headquarters, in Nyon, Switzerland on December 4, 2019.
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UEFA president Aleksander Ceferin gestures during a press conference following a meeting of the executive committee at the UEFA headquarters, in Nyon, Switzerland on December 4, 2019.FABRICE COFFRINIAFP

Changing too much

"The game is changing and we are afraid that it is changing too much," Ceferin told reporters following a UEFA executive committee meeting, adding that the search for refereeing perfection was futile.

"Football needs uncertainty because the players make mistakes and the referees on the pitch have to take responsibility, not some people hidden in a van or a building 500 kilometres from the venue," he said.

"I can live with the fact that referees are human beings who make mistakes but now when technology makes a mistake, that is a problem," he said.

Ceferin said he was not against VAR in principle but said that "we have to make it clearer, we have to make it faster, we have to make it less invasive -- but it will stay."

General view as a big screen displays a pending VAR decision
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General view as a big screen displays a pending VAR decisionAndrew BoyersAction Images via Reuters

One of the biggest sources of controversy has involved offside decisions where VAR officials use gridlines superimposed on the screen, leading to goals being disallowed because a player's toe or armpit was offside.

"The line is very thin and it's drawn by the VAR so it's the subjective line of an objective fact which is a bit strange," said Ceferin.

Other sources of confusion include the new handball rule and how far back in a move VAR officials should go when checking for infringements.

"Do we check five minutes, do we check 15 minutes?" he said. "The referee never said in the past that we had to go back to a foul seven minutes ago." We still don't know which handball is handball, who is drawing the lines, how thick the lines are.....there are many questions ahead."