Video assistant referees (VARs) remain”happy” with the way their technologies has been utilized in the Premier League and have no immediate plans to modify their own’high bar’ earlier intervention, Sky Sports News knows.
VAR was included after incidents in the weekend between the Youri Tielemans of Leicester, the Sebastien Haller of West Ham, Aston Villa’s Jack Grealish and the Isaac Hayden of Newcastle.
Villa had a last-gasp equaliser ruled out after Grealish was adjudged to have dived  earlier in the move,  Haller had a penalty appeal turned down  against Norwich,  Tielemans was not red-carded for a nasty tackle on Bournemouth’s Callum Wilson  along with Hayden’s handball in the run-up into Fabian Schar’s goal in the home to Watford was missed.
The Professional Game Match Officials Board [PGMOL] will have a meeting with referees this week to evaluate the latest form of Premier League matches.
It is understood they will discuss when VAR is used but there are no plans to recommend any substantial changes to your’bar’ in place prior intervention.
Referees are yet to utilize monitors to examine any conclusions following advice to avoid slowing down the game.
Additional monitor checks can take an average of around 90 seconds and the PGMOL has encouraged its officials to utilize the screen.
No referee has employed the track in 40 Premier League games so far.
The prior referee in charge of VAR’s introduction has stated fans will need to”trust” them after high-profile incidents this year.
Neil Swarbrick admits it may take up to adapt from the match to VARs.
“I think that it takes a couple of years [to get used to it], to be brutally honest,” Swarbrick told Sky Sports News last month.
“You may have those who just like football how it was and do not want any changes, you get your purists who like the referees to go outside, make decisions, and also, if they make it , make it wrong, they could live with that.”
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