Four steps PGMOL can take to save VAR

New measures need to be brought in by the referees’ body to ensure major errors such Luis Díaz’s disallowed goal at Spurs are not repeated
Four steps PGMOL can take to save VAR

IMPROVEMENTS NEEDED: Referee Costas Kapitanis watches the pitch side VAR monitor. Pic: Steven Paston/PA Wire

VAR was supposed to be a boon but it has turned into a curse. A logic-defying incident at the Tottenham Hotspur stadium on Saturday, in which the VAR, Darren England, thought he was confirming a goal while actually disallowing it, is likely the greatest calamity to be linked to the technology. But it is hardly the first.

Can anything be done to fix VAR’s problems? Some argue not, and suggest the technology should be disposed of, an unlikely outcome for a number of reasons; the time and money and reputation already invested being one, the fact refereeing would get demonstrably worse should it be removed, another. Others argue instead for substantial alterations, including the recruitment of referees from abroad and the training of VAR specialist officials. There are some simpler measures that could be taken too…

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