Post: Referee shots are well received, but most teams do not accept locker room shots & coach microphones
This year's Club World Cup uses a number of new regulations and new technologies, and the referee's perspective lens is refreshing. The Daily Mail said that although the referee's footage was widely praised, the club did not fully recognize other innovative ideas from FIFA.
Chelsea's victory over Los Angeles FC, through the referee's camera, Jackson assisted Neto to score a wonderful goal, which we hope to see in the Premier League.
When FIFA experimented with this technology, the International Football Association Council (IFAB) was also paying close attention. FIFA will submit their test results to IFAB after the game, and what we have learned now is that this technology has proven to be successful. FIFA is considering extending some experiments to other events, possibly including football in England, but when asked about the specific schedule, they did not give a clear answer. In fact, some other FIFA ideas have not been widely recognized by the 32 teams in the Club World Cup.
It is understood that FIFA has been privately pushing the club to allow them to wear microphones on their coaches and install cameras in the locker room to record the team's speeches during the intermission. These requirements were not fully accepted, which of course was expected.
We have also privately consulted 32 Club World Cup teams, who believe that this event should be the heaviest trophy in club football, with a (total) bonus of up to 1 billion euros and should not be regarded as a preseason.
If you want to experiment with new technologies, they can do it in the Premier League Summer Series, where they have used referee cameras before. But asking the club to accept that unprecedented transparency, and even let the head coach disclose his internal instructions? This is seen as an overdo.
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