Football | Refs use video replay to award penalty at Club World Cup

Atletico Nacional’s Miguel Borja, left, takes the ball past Kashima Antlers’ Shuhei Akasak

Referee Viktor Kassai made some soccer history yesterday, using video replay to award a penalty kick during the Club World Cup semifinals.

Kashima Antlers midfielder Gaku Shibasaki sent in a free kick in the 31st minute, and teammate Daigo Nishi was then fouled inside the box by Atletico Nacional forward Orlando Berrio.

After receiving information about a missed incident from video assistant referee Danny Makkelie, Kassai drew an imaginary square with his hands to indicate that he would conduct a review of the footage via a monitor on the sidelines. Kassai then pointed to the penalty spot, ruling from the replay that Nishi was tripped inside the penalty area by Berrio.

Shoma Doi took the penalty and scored Kashima’s first goal in the 3-0 win, calmly putting a right-footed shot into the lower left corner of the net.

“The communication between the referee and the video assistant referee was clear, the technology worked well, and ultimately the final decision was taken by the referee, which will always be the case since the VARs are only there to support,” FIFA head of refereeing Massimo Busacca said in a statement.

Prior to Kassai’s penalty decision, the assistant referee called for the “wait and see” rule with regard to a player possibly being offside on the play. FIFA said the player was cleared because he was “unable to challenge the opponent for the ball.”

The replay system allows referees to halt games to review footage of “game-changing decisions.” They can also rely on information being fed by video assistant referees (VARs) watching broadcast feeds away from the field.

The South American champions dominated the first half but the momentum shifted to Kashima with the history-making call.

Live tests are set to be expanded globally in 2017 with a decision anticipated by the following year on VARs becoming a permanent feature. FIFA President Gianni Infantino, who has observed recent off-line trials with VARs at Italy games, wants video replays in use at the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

The system was introduced last week at the start of the Club World Cup but wasn’t used until Wednesday’s game.

In the final on Sunday, Kashima will play either Real Madrid or Club America. Jim Armstrong, Suita, AP

FuboTV muscling into mainstream Internet TV

The online-cable market is getting a little more crowded.

FuboTV, a small soccer-focused streaming site, is adding dozens of TV networks, mainly focused on sports, to its service. It’s upping the price to USD35, from $10.

That would make it more of a competitor to both traditional cable and live-streaming services like Sony’s PlayStation Vue, Dish Network’s Sling TV and AT&T’s DirecTV Now, with another internet TV package coming from Hulu next year.

Coming in January are sports channels like FS1, NBA TV, NBCSN, and regional sports networks and a few dozen non-sports channels like Lifetime, Bravo, Fox News, A&E and Hallmark. Some customers can get Fox, NBC and Telemundo. Fubo CEO David Gandler says the price will likely rise to $50 as more sports video is added.

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