
Dankan, retired English Premier League chief, says the game officials are not a different game in addition to the “safet network” of video assistant referees.
The 56-year-old has retired as an assistant referee this month after more than 1,000 appearances, including 579 in the Premier League.
VAR was launched in the Premier League at the beginning of the 2019-20 season.
There is often a suggestion that the referees do not decide on the pitch because they know the VAR must create one.
” not everyone likes the reference and I accept that opinion,” Kan told the BBC Sport.
“But from the point of view of an official of the game, it is really a valuable tool.
“I like to relieve a legend. People think we referee in a different way because there is a VAR, but nothing is far from the truth.
“My thinking is to eradicate the VAR of those 90 minutes by taking my decisions correctly. Our thinking is to make the right decisions.
“If we make a clear mistake, we have the VAR safety network.
Kane has welcomed the semi-automatic offside, which came to the Premier League at the final of the final.
This technology uses artificial intelligence and special cameras to make the jurisdiction of strict offside relationships faster and easier.
“In previous seasons, it can take up to 50 seconds just to draw the lines before they reach a decision.
“With offsides, the automatic lines are automatically drawn at the point where the ball is hit. That accelerates the checks.
“It won’t affect the assistant referees on the pitch. They are still calling. But it is speeding up.
The biggest two games were in 2010 – the Champions League final and the World Cup final.
“Before the Var in a Premier League game, I missed the offside, which is still attacking me to this day,” Kan said.
“It was just half a yard and one of those who cut off a striker and a defender very quickly.
“I lost my focus. That is, 20 years ago and still hurt.