The image above alongside Collum’s comments confirm that human judgement is used which throws the usefulness of VAR out the window. That incident could have been judged either way which explains the need for an automated system.
Since the match no evidence has been put forward by the SFA to justify the decision with Collum admitting tonight that he was in what he called the VAR hub for the match alongside recently appointed VAR specialist Jon Moss.
How they decide the moment that Callum McGregor strikes the ball and transfer that into the exact positions of Kuhn and Souttar is up for debate, the human element makes mistakes inevitable. A human error is a human error whether it is on the pitch or from a VAR room.
What isn’t beyond question is the two lines used in the image given to Sky Sports. The blue line from Souttar’s shoulder towards the pitch leans slightly towards the defender, the red line from Kuhn leans slightly away from him.
At half time Sky Sports barely covered the offside ‘goal’ there was no forensic analysis and no mention after the match.
Brendan Rodgers wasn’t convinced about the decision as he hinted at during some after-match interviews but with Celtic winning 3-0 that early decision hasn’t had anything like the scrutiny given to a disallowed goal at Ibrox last September following a foul on Gus Lagerbielke or a penalty claim against Alastair Johnston when Abdallah Sima was in an offside position.
Two weeks earlier the SFA contacted BBC Scotland during the match coverage to explain a decision made by Matthew MacDermid who u-turned on a foul awarded to St Johnstone to allow a goal by Cyriel Dessers to stand.
Dallas and Greg Aitken are the two full-time VAR officials employed by the SFA.
First incident in the video above.
If you are in the VAR room & this goal is scored & there is no call from the linesman who is up with play, why do you analyse the move to find out if it is offside? Why? If the linesman flags offside then yes have a look at it, but he didn’t. We need an explanation.@scottishfa
— Gentile (@Gentile_Rivera) September 2, 2024
Honestly, you don’t even need editing. Look at the pitch lines. Souttar is on the crease, Kuhn is behind it. Both run in same direction, similar leaning. But were to believe 5ft8 Kuhn would lean further than 6ft1 Souttar? Just pure biomechanics makes this an impossibility. pic.twitter.com/msYcWyOSLq
— Viewsfrom443 (@443Celtic) September 2, 2024
You’d think in 2024 these people would be too terrified to do things like this, with literally millions watching on TV. But no, it continues because it is never made enough of an issue.
— cowabunga1.2 (@2Cowabunga1) September 3, 2024
from that VAR angle Parallax Error will distort the true position of players ! We need more cameras , not a cheap subjective system, thankfully justice prevailed but Dallas & Beaton should never referee a Derby again !
— Sunny Bhoy (@Tenerifetim10) September 2, 2024
Whys he using Kuhn’s shoulder and Souttar’s armpit? pic.twitter.com/7WEQwX8hIf
— Ferriebhoy (@Ferriebhoy) September 3, 2024
RELATED READING:
Andrew Dallas awarded 10 penalties to Rangers in the last 14 games he reffed involving Rangers.
(Not including VAR appearances).He is the son of disgraced former head of refs in Scotland, Hugh Dallas.
Andrew now draws squinty lines with VAR.
I only post facts.
— Lint (@Zeshankenzo) September 3, 2024
1 Comment
by 57cupfinal
Let the on field officials officiate. VAR is only supposed to come into play for clear and obvious errors. There was nothing clear and obvious about the Var offside decision against Khun. The on field official did not call it as offside so why is var interfering. Var is supposed to be there to assist. The clue is in the name. Let the on field officials do their job ffs