Semi-automated offside know-how will likely be launched to Serie A subsequent month, the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) introduced on Monday.
In a press release FIGC stated that the know-how, developed by world governing physique FIFA and used on the World Cup, will likely be used from the twentieth spherical of matches on the final weekend of January after consultations with home refereeing affiliation AIA.
Those fixtures, which embrace Serie A frontrunner Napoli internet hosting fierce rival Roma, mark the second half of a league marketing campaign which will get underway once more in early January following the World Cup and winter break.
The know-how was trialled at February’s FIFA Club World Cup in Abu Dhabi and final 12 months’s Arab Cup earlier than getting used on the World Cup in Qatar and the group stage of this season’s Champions League.
It utilises broadcast cameras across the stadium to provide the precise place of gamers on the pitch, providing match officers exact data inside seconds.
The optical monitoring system has the goal of constructing offside calls sooner and extra correct.
Offside choices have continued to trigger controversy within the VAR period in Italy, with one significantly unusual case penalising Juventus in opposition to Salernitana again in September.
A VAR evaluation led to Arkadiusz Milik’s header deep in stoppage time, which might have given Juve a 3-2 win, being dominated out for Leonardo Bonucci being offside and interfering with play.
Footage revealed later confirmed that Salernitana’s Antonio Candreva had saved everybody onside however as he was stood by the nook flag he was not noticed by the VAR officers.
The determination prompted outrage not simply at Juventus however amongst soccer followers and pundits throughout Italy, incredulous as to how the choice may have been gotten flawed with so many cameras in place on the Allianz Stadium.
AIA stated on the time that the VAR officers didn’t have entry to cameras which might have proven that Milik’s objective ought to have stood.