APurpleChair
New Member
There was an incident in yesterday's TH v CHE game where a player ran through and was fouled just on the edge of the penalty area.
The player had run from an offside position but this was NOT flagged by the assistant.
The referee awarded a free kick.
This was then reviewed by VAR to check if the foul was inside or outside the penalty area.
Once it was decided that it was outside, play continued with a free kick.
If the foul had been inside the box, VAR would then have rewound and discovered that the player was offside, and would have awarded an indirect free-kick for this to the defending side.
In this situation, it would actually have been beneficial for the defender to concede a penalty rather than a free kick!
I know that defenders cannot deliberately use this to their advantage (as they cannot be sure of the offside) but it seems like a strange anomoly introduced by the current VAR rules.
The player had run from an offside position but this was NOT flagged by the assistant.
The referee awarded a free kick.
This was then reviewed by VAR to check if the foul was inside or outside the penalty area.
Once it was decided that it was outside, play continued with a free kick.
If the foul had been inside the box, VAR would then have rewound and discovered that the player was offside, and would have awarded an indirect free-kick for this to the defending side.
In this situation, it would actually have been beneficial for the defender to concede a penalty rather than a free kick!
I know that defenders cannot deliberately use this to their advantage (as they cannot be sure of the offside) but it seems like a strange anomoly introduced by the current VAR rules.