
Former Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger has proposed changes to the offside rule that is designed to restore the benefits set for the attackers.
Wenger, who is in charge of development for FIFA, believes the VAR has taken away the benefits from the game.
Currently, a player is considered offside if any part of his body is outside.
Wenger wants to see a change in which a player is considered a player if any part of his body fits with the last defense player.
He compared the proposal to the change of a law that was made after the 1990 World Cup.
The tournament has scored an average of 2.21 goals per game, the lowest in the history of competition, most of which has been a rule that a striker is offside if he fits the goalkeeper with the last defender.
“It was in 1990 after the World Cup when there was no goal,” Wenger told Bene Sport.
“We decided not to offside when it was in the same defensive line,” he said.
“In case of suspicion, the suspicion will benefit the striker,” he said. That means that when it has a small part, the attacker has benefited.
“With VAR, this benefit is gone and for many people it is annoying.
– That’s why I suggested that you’re not in offside until each part of your body is on the same defensive line.
“We’ll try it now. Within a year, the decision is made, by IFAB, not by me.
Wenger’s proposed change in Italian youth football has been tested. The International Football Federation (IFF) has agreed to further trial at its annual general meeting in March.
IFB said the purpose of the tests was to determine whether the proposed changes “which they attack football and encourage goal opportunities at the same time preserve the game’s attractive game.
The proposals can be made in