It's as if I was right all along...
easy tiger!
It's as if I was right all along...
At least it’s getting the important decisions right

Did man u get a pen for committing a foul on the villa player? Seriously var, wtf!
Agree that the United one was worse but I thought ours was obviously not a penalty too, he fell into him! As clear a dive as you'll see. Fail to see how anyone doesn't see that it clearly wasn't a penalty tbh. Pathetic from Prowsey and the officials.
Guaranteed everyone on here would be saying exactly the same if it had been Richarlison winning a penalty for Everton.
I think it maybe more comes down to where I would like to see the threshold for VAR being able to overturn. (And I appreciate that my own personal view doesn't dictate how the PL use it!)
I've said on here a number of times that I only want the total, absolute howlers being overturned. And for me, the Utd penalty falls into that category, but our one doesn't (as illustrated by all three of us saying that the Utd one was worse).
Doesn't change the fact that the on-field referee got it wrong.
I'll also throw in my other wish: that the on-field referee makes the final decision for goals and penalties too, rather than just red cards. The monitor is there - use it. Look at the Arsenal red card this week - it took the referee no time at all to check out the monitor and make a (new) decision.
The VAR should be there to advise the referee as to whether he might want to have a second look. Not to re-referee the game (or just sit back, and nod through his mates decision!).
) as I have to start work.I'd say that goes against your previous post though. If you only want it to be used for absolute howlers then the ref shouldn't need to look at it, it should be obvious on first or second viewing from var.
If the guy in the booth thinks it's close enough that the ref needs to look himself, then surely by definition it's not clear and obvious, or an absolute howler as you put?
A valid point actually is before it was down to luck with the ref, now it is down to luck with who is in the VAR room. So no different.
You would like to think that, yes. But as yesterday arguably illustrates, the VAR isn't always choosing to overturn even when the decisions are horrendous. Are they too afraid to call out their colleague as wrong? Are they trying to be too sympathetic? Put the responsibility on the guy in the middle.
A valid point actually is before it was down to luck with the ref, now it is down to luck with who is in the VAR room. So no different.