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Slow motion makes soccer referees more likely to give a red card

Date:
June 27, 2017
Source:
KU Leuven
Summary:
Video assistant refereeing in soccer has to be used with caution. Researchers have shown that refs are more likely to give red when they see a foul committed in slow motion, even when a yellow card is more justifiable. This is because fouls viewed in slow motion appear to be more serious.
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Video assistant refereeing in soccer has to be used with caution. Researchers at KU Leuven (University of Leuven), Belgium, have shown that refs are more likely to give red when they see a foul committed in slow motion, even when a yellow card is more justifiable. This is because fouls viewed in slow motion appear to be more serious.

soccer referees and the decisions they make are the subject of very heated debates in the canteen, at the kitchen table, and in the TV studio. soccer fans keep a vigilant eye on their every move and decision. These high demands have led to professionalization: more and more elite referees are full-time professionals and follow specific training programmes. Another consequence are the experiments with video assistant refereeing, whereby video assistant referees (VARs) support the referees and check the accuracy of decisions by replaying game situations in real time and in slow motion.

Under the supervision of Professor Wim Helsen, sport scientist at KU Leuven and referee training expert, Jochim Spitz wrote a PhD on the impact of slow motion videos on soccer referees' perception and decision-making process. He found that the effect of slow motion greatly depends on the type of decision that the referee has to make, as well as on the situation.

For technical decisions on whether or not a foul was committed, watching slow motion videos only improved the accuracy in corner kick situations. "Corner kicks always involve many players, so slow motion may help spot the right fouls in the commotion," Spitz explains.

But for disciplinary sanctions on whether or not to give a card -- and if so, which one -- slow motion had a significant impact on the decision-making process. "We asked 88 European referees to take a disciplinary sanction for 60 game situations -- yellow, red, or no card at all. They had to assess half of the situations after watching a video in real time and the other half based on slow motion videos. For each of these situations, a panel of UEFA experts had given us a benchmark decision. We found that referees judge more harshly when they are exposed to fouls in slow motion. In situations for which the benchmark decision was a yellow card, 20% percent of the referees gave red after watching the video in slow motion. In real time this was only 10%."

"The reason is that fouls viewed in slow motion appear to be more serious" Professor Werner Helsen explains. "This has major implications for the adequate use of video technology in soccer. Based on the results of this study, the International soccer Association Board (IFAB) has already issued guidelines for the use of slow motion videos: they can only be used to determine whether a foul was committed inside or outside the penalty area, or to locate the impact of a tackle on the opponent's body."


Story Source:

Materials provided by KU Leuven. Note: Content may be edited for style and length.


Journal Reference:

  1. Jochim Spitz, Koen Put, Johan Wagemans, A. Mark Williams, Werner F. Helsen. Does slow motion impact on the perception of foul play in football? European Journal of Sport Science, 2017; 17 (6): 748 DOI: 10.1080/17461391.2017.1304580

Cite This Page:

KU Leuven. "Slow motion makes soccer referees more likely to give a red card." ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 27 June 2017. <www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/06/170627114829.htm>.
KU Leuven. (2017, June 27). Slow motion makes soccer referees more likely to give a red card. ScienceDaily. Retrieved December 25, 2024 from www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/06/170627114829.htm
KU Leuven. "Slow motion makes soccer referees more likely to give a red card." ScienceDaily. www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2017/06/170627114829.htm (accessed December 25, 2024).

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