
Players
will be given the benefit of the doubt this season as goals won't be ruled
out for offside due to toenails and noses, Premier League referee chief Mike
Riley has said.
After coming under heavy criticism over the last two seasons, the
Professional Game Match Officials Board (PGMOL) are to introduce subtle
changes to an official's use of VAR this campaign.
The dreaded lines used to work out marginal offside decisions are now being
made thicker in order to give the advantage back to the attacking side.
According to Riley, the move away from 'forensic scrutiny' will eradicate
goals being ruled out when a player's toe or nose was in an offside position
and see around 20 goals more scored throughout the season.
"Fundamentally, we want the approach to be one that allows players to go out
and express themselves and let the game flow," Riley said.
"It means the VAR teams will not intervene for trivial offences and the
threshold for referee and VAR intervention will be slightly higher than it
was last season.
"We've introduced the benefit of the doubt for the attacking player so where
we have a really close offside situation, we will follow the same process as
last year but now apply thicker broadcast lines.
"Effectively what we have done is given back 20 goals to the game that were
deemed offside last season by using quite forensic scrutiny.
"So it's the toenails, the noses of players that were offside - they won't
be offside now."
There were a raft of other decisions where goals did not stand due to
players' armpits being offside, but FIFA has now stated the armpit is the
part of the body where offsides will be measured from.
There will also be a tweak in the approach toward penalties after a record
high of 125 were awarded last season.
This season, the referee should not only establish whether there is clear
contact but whether it had enough of a consequence in order to award a
penalty and whether the player used the contact to try to win a foul or a
penalty.
"It's not sufficient to just say there was contact," Riley added. "Contact
on its own is only one element the referee should look for.
"If you have clear contact, that has a consequence, it's a foul but if you
have any doubts, in these elements they are unlikely to be penalised.
"You also want it to be a proper foul and not the slightest contact that
someone has used to go over to get a penalty."
There is also a change in the much-maligned handball rules, which will now
see goals that had an accidental handball by a team-mate in the build-up
stand.
Furthermore, in the first two years of VAR, viewers not in the stadium were
able to see the working out process and it led to screenshots of borderline
decisions being shared and creating more negativity for the decision-review
system.
As a result, all decisions will be made off-screen from now on.