Croatia?s goal against Belgium was ruled out for this offside by VAR.
This technology is absurd? let the robots play the game instead.
In Qatar, many goals were disallowed as a result of this new rule and new technique being invented. But Qatar's rules are good enough for all teams to be thoroughly informed and scrutinized to make new decisions. But it will not contain any objectionable matter to any party.
VAR said that ball didn?t go out of the play? keeping the diameter of the ball in check maybe it?s touching the line. But oh boy that?s insane precision to millimeters.
Maybe not every decision with VAR is correct, mostly the penalty tackles have sometimes been questionable but I trust the line decisions are probably perfect with microchips in the balls etc.
I remember without VAR we had the disallowed goal of Lampard's England goal against Germany some years ago. VAR would have fixed that for sure.
No doubt this time this Al Rihla football is state of the art on its own. It have a sensors and need to be charged before game.
The official 'Al Rihla' footballs used for the World Cup in Qatar are so high-tech they don't just need to be pumped full of air - they need to be charged.
Manufactured by Adidas, the ball, which takes its name from the Arabic word for 'the journey', has a sensor inside that measures data like speed and direction and allows for ball-tracking and offside calls by the VAR.
An incredible photo posted on Reddit shows the fluro-coloured balls being charged, like a smartphone, from a power board before a game.
It's a long way from the days when people would hunt around for a bicycle pump and then put a bit of oil or butter on an attached small needle to simply put air in a football.
The sensor is powered by a small battery, which Adidas said can last for six hours of active use, or up to 18 days when not.
The sensor, which weighs just 14 grams, gives ball-tracking in real-time; with cameras positioned around the pitch helping referees to determine offside and other questionable decisions.
'Any time the ball is kicked, headed, thrown or even so much as tapped, the system picks it up at 500 frames per second,' Maximillian Schmidt, co-founder and managing director of KINEXON, who manufactured the sensor, said..
'Data is sent in real time from sensors to a local positioning system (LPS), which involves a setup of network antennas installed around the playing field that take in and store the data for immediate use.
'When a ball flies out of bounds during the course of play, and a new ball is thrown or kicked in to replace it, KINEXON?s backend system automatically switches to the new ball?s data input without the need for human intervention,' said Schmidt, giving fascinating insight into the incredible technology.
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