Mr Gogolak
Sean Davis
We might as well give them the 3pts for that game now. There is no way we are getting anything that day, the officials will be primed (and hands greased) well before kick-off.
(For the film buffs- When our team coach arrives it will be like the scene from the Clint Eastwood film "The Gauntlet")
Six months is a long time in football. How many people will remember what happened last Saturday by then? There will be plenty of controversy and drama in-between and even if some people do remember it, they won't feel the same about it. That's human nature. When you lose someone close to you, it doesn't feel the same six months later and we're talking about a game of football. If they're three points off the top of the league, a couple of journos will stir the pot but otherwise, nobody will care.
As for VAR, what happened on Saturday only confirms that it was a poor idea from the get-go (pushed on by broadcasters, by the way) because it raised people's expectations too far. Objectivity is a concept: it doesn't exist in the real world. What's worse, technology makes you dependant. How many people can't find their way around their own block without a GPS? Now, you've got people who can't referee a game of football without VAR (with it either, it seems). Mistakes happen all the time and, what's more, you only remember the decision that went against you and never the ones that earned you a couple of points. Again, that's human nature. But if you tell people that you've found a way to eliminate mistakes from the game, don't be surprised if they feel something sinister is at work when you do make one.