Shearer: VAR making refereeing worse in Premier League
VAR Debate Explodes: Is Refereeing Getting Worse?
The VAR debate has reignited — and this time, criticism is coming from one of England’s biggest voices.
Alan Shearer believes refereeing standards are “the worst we’ve seen for a long time”, blaming the increasing reliance on VAR.
Shearer’s Core Argument
Shearer’s concern is simple:
Referees are no longer trusting their own decisions
“They are too reliant on it… and it’s affecting the standard of refereeing.”
What he’s suggesting:
- Referees hesitate more
- Decisions feel less confident
- VAR becomes a “crutch”
The Flashpoint: Bournemouth vs Man United
Manchester United were furious after a chaotic 2-2 draw with AFC Bournemouth.
Key incidents:
- Amad Diallo denied a penalty
- Penalty given for foul on Matheus Cunha
- Harry Maguire sent off for similar incident
Manager Michael Carrick called it:
“Baffling… how you give one and not the other.”
Shearer agreed — highlighting inconsistency as the biggest problem.
“VAR Has Ruined It” – Stronger Criticism
Former Liverpool defender Stephen Warnock went even further:
“It’s the worst thing introduced to the game… it’s ruined the enjoyment.”
Key complaints:
- Delays kill stadium atmosphere
- Decisions still subjective
- Fans left confused
But What Do the Stats Say?
Interestingly, the numbers tell a more balanced story:
- VAR accuracy: 94%
- On-field decisions accuracy: 86% (stable)
- Premier League = lowest VAR intervention rate in Europe
So statistically:
- Refereeing isn’t worse
- But perception feels worse
The Real Problem: Inconsistency & Expectations
There’s a deeper issue:
Football doesn’t agree on what it wants
- Fans complain VAR interferes too much
- Then complain when it doesn’t intervene
As analysts point out:
“Clubs have selective memory.”
UEFA Steps In
The controversy has reached governing bodies.
UEFA is calling a summer summit with Europe’s top leagues to:
- Reduce “microscopic” VAR calls
- Restore focus on “clear and obvious errors”
- Standardise interpretation across leagues
Final Verdict
The debate isn’t really about technology — it’s about trust and consistency.
Two realities exist:
- Data says accuracy is high
- Fans feel decisions are worse than ever
VAR hasn’t removed controversy — it has changed its shape
And as Shearer suggests, the biggest risk may be this:
Referees are losing confidence… and the game is losing clarity.














































































There are no comments yet. Be the first to comment!