FIFA World Cup 2018: Referee chief Happy With Impact of VAR

FIFA refereeing bosses celebrated what they described as a scandal-free World Cup for match officials on Friday, saying that the video replay system had helped achieve an accuracy rate of 99.3 percent for decisions in the group stage.

“After 48 games, we haven’t had a single scandal, and that’s very important,” FIFA’s director of refereeing, Massimo Busacca, told reporters.

The World Cup in Russia is the first to use Video Assistant Referees (VARs) who monitor the game on television screens and communicate with the pitch official.

The VARs check decisions which could potentially change the outcome of a game and, if they feel the pitch referee has made the wrong call, suggest he review the incident on a pitchside monitor.

Pierluigi Collina, head of FIFA’s referee committee, said that 95 per cent of the decisions taken initially by referees had been correct, and this had been raised to 99.3 percent thanks to the intervention of VAR.

He said that 335 decisions had been checked in the 48 group stage matches and there had been 17 VAR reviews — 14 on the field and three by the VAR assistants.

However, the Italian former World Cup referee would not comment on individual decisions, such as failure to award Serbia a penalty against Switerland when Aleksandar Mitrovic appeared to be held down by a defender.

“It is interesting that you are interested in the 0.7 per cent (of wrong decisions) and not the 99.3 percent,” he said in answer to one question
“I think that 99.3 percent (accuracy) is an acceptable figure after these 48 matches.”

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