Mr Gogolak
Sean Davis
If var is only supposed to be for blatant mistakes it didn't work yesterday, few people think that's a penalty decision worth over turning and almost all think it should have been red card. It should be involved or not, this only if scenario is nothing but a cop out and refs protecting their arse.
Evidence would suggest that football fans do more than refs, the standard of reffing is appalling, some of these decisions are barely acceptable with the naked eye, with the technology involved it's scandalous.
What if nketia had scored the winning goal yesterday?
Apparently, he asked for a check on the penalty - although I'm not 100% sure. That's a different scenario. I disagree with the idea that football fans would know more than the average ref. There were very few Spurs fans where I grew up and throughout the 90s, I've had to watch games in pubs with a bunch of opposition fans (mostly ManU, Arsenal and Saudi Sportswashing Machine, at the time) and I can't remember how many times I've heard them shout 'Legal! Legal!' when Keane was snapping someone's ankle.
The guy on the pitch as more experience than any of us will ever have. Introducing the technology was a very poor idea, though, mostly because it raised people's expectations when, in truth, most of the time it comes down to the ref's interpretation of events. I have a friend who work as a director on rugby matches in France and we used to laugh at the number of times the 'video referee' would look at the pictures for 5 minutes, scratching his head, before asking my friend: 'Well, what do you think about it?'
That's the nature of the beast: fans will never agree with the decisions made on pitch. Look at Sheffield's manager last week - we all thought he was a muppet but he was genuinely unhappy about the refereeing.