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Howard Webb breaks silence on Liverpool VAR error at Tottenham and steps taken




Howard Webb has spoken publicly for the first time about the shambolic VAR decision to disallow Luis Diaz's onside goal


Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL) chief Webb was joined by former Liverpool striker Michael Owen, with the incident at the Tottenham Hotspur Stadium on September 30 the big talking point.





Webb said:


"We took the unusual step of releasing the audio from this situation not long after it happened.


"We wanted to show everybody what was very quickly apparent to us that it was a significant human error and loss of concentration.


"We're all disappointed the VAR system didn't step in to rectify the clear error we'd seen on the field with the disallowing of the goal.


“Nobody is more disappointed than the officials themselves.



"They take pride in their work, they want to be a positive influence on the game, but in this situation it wasn't the case.


"Of course without VAR that disallowed goal would still have been a disallowed goal but VAR exists to step in when we make a wrong decision on the field.


"So of course we're disappointed. Our job then was to try to find out what happened and what we can do to prevent that sort of thing happening again in the future."



Asked how the incident happened, Webb said:


"You hear at the start of the clip, Darren England the VAR saying, 'checking offside'. You can hear Darren is going through the process pretty quickly.


"We sometimes gets criticism for being a bit slow sometimes. We do focus on efficiency but never at the sacrifice of accuracy. You can hear Darren is trying to be quick.


"He puts a line across on (Cristian) Romero (Tottenham defender) and that shows a very clear picture and I think at that point Darren loses sight of what the on-field decision was, sees the clear picture with Diaz in an onside picture, and quickly 'check completes it'.


"He communicates 'check complete' to the on-field referee Simon Hooper, Simon hears, assumes the 'check complete' is for the offside goal, and the game restarts.


“One of the things that has been brought into sharp focus is we want the on-field referee to communicate to the VAR what the on-field decision is very clearly and the VAR to go back to the referee and acknowledge they've heard that properly. Not just saying 'check complete' - because what are you 'check completing'?


"We have put a quite lot of steps in place to ensure the error we saw in that important game doesn't happen again."





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