I replied to the lad who put a picture up which still shows JOC onside but that was still not in sync with the moment the ball was hit in the first picture.
Let's be right.
It's still an incredibly tight decsion, and we are talking split seconds here. The Lino can't see the ball being struck and can't look in two places at once.
As it is it's been found to be an error this time, and he keeps his flag down and he would have been lauded for a great bit of officiating.
This happens in football, you generally win some and lose some. The human element is part of the game.
The question is, do we want more technology controlled matches?
On sky's "evidence" it seems to me that the technology needs to be ramped up a bit to make sure it's fit for purpose....or that the person responsible for providing the footage isn't either a cheating prick or a fucking incompetent.
But for crucial decisions like these there has to be a justification for getting the decision right at all costs. 30 seconds out to review the footage would have made no difference to the game. The ball was dead.
Even if it's so close it's difficult to be 100% certain the law states the decision should go with the attacking side.
If this was the way it worked then everyone would accept it, no reason to doubt, no point of argument.
In Cricket, they can track a small ball travelling at 90 mph, take into account its flight and movement off the pitch to accurately predict where the ball will travel if it hadn't been deflected/stopped by the batsmen.
You can't tell me that they can't develop a system to definitively tell if a man has wandered beyond the last defender.