This 6 part series started with England v Germany and Geoff Hurst's controversial goal in the 1966 World Cup final. It now comes full circle - this time, the two European rivals meeting in the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.
England were 2-0 down before Matt Epson scored to pull the game back to 2-1. Then, Frank Lampard took aim from distance. His shot cannoned off the underside of the crossbar and crossed the goal by a full meter. Lampard wheeled away in celebration. The England bench, led by manager Fabio Capello, fist pumped the air to celebrate England's crucial equaliser.
Those celebrations quickly turned to despair as the referee continued play. No goal. FIFA President Sepp Blatter was in the stands watching proceedings. A staunch opponent of video technology, the Lampard incident was a watershed moment.
After this, the game would never be the same again.
When Diego Maradona scored the "Hand of God" goal in the QF of the 1986 World Cup against England, his role as villain was cemented in the eyes of the English public.
However, in Ireland, the role of villain is reserved for one of the poster boys of the PL era...Thierry Henry.
The cultured Frenchman mesmerised a generation of football lovers with his pace, power and finesse. But his actions, intentional or otherwise, in a crucial World Cup qualifier against the Republic of Ireland entered football infamy.
It also reignited the debate surrounding refereeing and video technology.
When Zinidine Zidane head butted Italy's Marco Materazzi in the 2006 World Cup Final, a glittering career came to an ignominious end.
As the elegant Frenchman, head bowed, walked past the gleaming World Cup trophy for the very last time, the actions taken that day would result in the greatest revolution the sport had ever seen. The actions taken, not by Zidane, but by the team of match officials charged with officiating the world's greatest sporting event.
***The Road to VAR has been shortlisted by the Sports Podcast Awards for two awards, Best Football Podcast and Best Sports Documentary Podcast. Please click on the links below to show your support for the series. Your vote will help us to bring you more quality content.
To vote for us as Best Football Podcast go here:
https://www.sportspodcastgroup.com/sports_category/best-football-podcast/
To vote for us as Best Sports Documentary Podcast go here:
https://www.sportspodcastgroup.com/sports_category/best-sports-documentary-podcast/
Thank you for your support! ***
It is hard to think of any one man that has dominated a World Cup in the way Diego Armando Maradona dominated the 1986 World Cup in Mexico.
In one monumental game against England in the Quarter Finals, Maradona displayed his full reportoire of skill and artistry, hand in hand with his devilry. The goal he scored to put Argentina 2-0 ahead has gone down as "The Goal of the Century", and who would argue with that?
However his first goal, his infamous "Hand of God" goal, at once revealed the lengths to which professional footballers would go to win matches.
It also demonstrated the limitations of match officials. An ever increasing global television audience, more in depth studio analysis of the game as well as better use of television technology, gave the television viewer a greater view of incidents on the field of play than even match officials.
As well as examining the "Hand of God" incident and its immediate aftermath, we also look at the roots of the England Argentina rivalry and how and why it continued to develop.
***The Road to VAR has been shortlisted by the Sports Podcast Awards for two awards, Best Football Podcast and Best Sports Documentary Podcast. Please click on the links below to show your support for the series. Your vote will help us to bring you more quality content.
To vote for us as Best Football Podcast go here:
https://www.sportspodcastgroup.com/sports_category/best-football-podcast/
To vote for us as Best Sports Documentary Podcast go here:
https://www.sportspodcastgroup.com/sports_category/best-sports-documentary-podcast/
Thank you for your support! ***
The 1982 World Cup finals in Spain promised to be one of the great World Cups. A galaxy of stars had gathered. Platini, Zico, Socrates, Keegan, Dalglish and an emerging Diego Maradona.
The Brazil team of 1982 is almost as fabled as their 1970 predecessors and have gone down as the greatest team to have never won the World Cup.
As well as the great football on offer, the 1982 World Cup also offered up its fair share of drama. There was the scandalous collusion between West Germany and Austria in the final group game that sent home minnows Algeria. But the starring role in infamy goes to German goalkeeper Harald Schumacher who's shocking challenge on Patrick Battiston left the Frenchman in a coma.
The referee and linesman were both unaware or unwilling to take the necessary action. Video replays showed the glaring error of the match officials to a global audience.
Once again, viewers at home had a better view of the incident than the officials on the field of play.
***The Road to VAR has been shortlisted by the Sports Podcast Awards for two awards, Best Football Podcast and Best Sports Documentary Podcast. Please click on the links below to show your support for the series. Your vote will help us to bring you more quality content.
To vote for us as Best Football Podcast go here:
https://www.sportspodcastgroup.com/sports_category/best-football-podcast/
To vote for us as Best Sports Documentary Podcast go here:
https://www.sportspodcastgroup.com/sports_category/best-sports-documentary-podcast/
Thank you for your support! ***
In episode 1 of our podcast series "The Road to VAR" we take a look at Geoff Hurst's controversial goal against West Germany in the 1966 World Cup Final.
Did it cross the line? More importantly, how did the officials come to their decision and what does modern technology have to say about this most famous (infamous depending on your allegiances!) of incidents.
It was arguably the first time in modern footballing history that video and photographic evidence was used to discuss the merits of the referee's decision that day. It would not be the last.
The 2018 FIFA World Cup introduced the Video Assisted Referee to the game of football for the very first time. However, the seeds for its introduction were laid years before.
In this first documentary series from The 4ThreeThree Global Football Podcast, we will look at some of the most controversial incidents in the history of the game and examine how these controversies laid the groundwork for the eventual introduction of VAR.
From Geoff Hurst's controversial extra-time goal at Wembley in 1966, Maradona's infamous "Hand of God" goal, to Frank Lampard's goal that never was in the 2010 World Cup, football is littered with controversies that changed the course of sporting history.
With each passing controversy, television technology was rapidly advancing and asking serious questions over the competency of match referees.
Forthcoming episodes:
Episode 1 - England v West Germany 1966 Word Cup Final
Epsode 2 - West Germany v France, 1982 World Cup SF
Episode 3 - Argentina v England, 1986 World Cup QF
Episode 4 - Italy v France, 2006 World Cup Final
Episode 5 - France v Rep. of Ireland, 2009 World Cup Qualifier
Episode 6 - Germany v England, 2010 World Cup Round of 16