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Barcelona spoke hard, the internal recording was exposed, the referee tried his best, and one person took the blame

Barcelona spoke hard, the internal recording was exposed, the referee tried his best, and one person took the blame

The "goal-line suspense" of Barcelona's Real Madrid derby is bigger than you think! The helmsman of Barcelona spoke out strongly, not ruling out asking for a rematch, and the internal recording was exposed, the referee did his best, and one person needs to take the blame. In the 28th minute of the national derby, Yamal took advantage of a corner kick opportunity and shot with his back to the outside of the goal. Barcelona believes that the goal was scored, and the goalkeeper Ter Stegen said angrily after the game: "This is a shame in the football world", and coach Xavi supported the views of the general, bluntly saying: "This is a shame! I was also asked about the referee before the game, and I said at that time that I hoped that the referee would not dominate the game and make accurate decisions, but these two wishes were not realized."

Barcelona spoke hard, the internal recording was exposed, the referee tried his best, and one person took the blame

In contrast, the Barcelona helmsman Laporta has been more tough, issuing a statement via video, asking the Spanish Football Federation and the refereeing committee to provide images and audio of the incident, and did not rule out the possibility of asking for a rematch. The Western Football Association, which was in the whirlpool of public opinion, chose to expose the recording of the referee at that time. The linesman immediately gave his own judgment that the goal was not scored, it was a corner. After VAR intervened, they signalled to the referee not to let the player take a corner first, they needed time to check.

Barcelona spoke hard, the internal recording was exposed, the referee tried his best, and one person took the blame

In the meantime, Barcelona striker Gundogan stepped forward to ask the referee for an explanation, who replied: "We are waiting, waiting for VAR to check it, maybe it's a goal, we are checking it", and also bluntly said: "Yes, there is no goal-line technology". Then there was a burst of voice from the VAR end, after the voice of the commander adjusting the angle of the picture, there was a voice of disappointment: "The goalkeeper's body blocked the ball picture, wait a minute, still looking for evidence, 360-degree search, this doesn't work, that doesn't work, this doesn't work, that doesn't work." After a painstaking search, unable to find a useful angle for the decision, VAR advised the referee to continue the game with a corner, as there was no evidence, no angle, to prove that the ball had gone in.

Barcelona spoke hard, the internal recording was exposed, the referee tried his best, and one person took the blame

It can be seen from this recording that the referees on duty tried their best, and they tried very hard to find the correct answer to the "goal-line case", but unfortunately there was no angle that could give direct evidence. So the referees shouldn't take the blame for this decision at all, they did everything they could. The real blame is La Liga president Tevas, because he refused to pay FIFA 3.5 million euros in royalties, resulting in La Liga not having goal-line technology this season, otherwise there would be no need for referees to search for evidence there. It is worth mentioning that Tevas proposed a salary increase of 2 million euros for himself last year, and he will receive an annual salary of about 5.5 million euros at most.

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