Manchester: British Airways pilots have been enlisted to help improve the communication of English Premier League officials during VAR reviews, The Times, London, reported, after Liverpool wrongly had a goal disallowed earlier this season due to a blunder.
In a presentation to top-flight officials, pilots Chris Heaven and Pete Nataraj stressed the need for clarity and accuracy in communication, with minimal syllables and no informal language, The Times, London, said on Friday.
Liverpool's Luis Diaz had a goal wrongly disallowed for offside in a 2-1 loss to Tottenham in September after chaotic miscommunication between the VAR and assistant VAR Darren England and Dan Cook and the on-field referee Simon Hooper.
The audio of the incident was met with severe criticism of the decision-making process and the language used, with the officials using phrases such as "well done boys" and "cheers, mate".
The 45-minute presentation addressed the similarity of the roles, and the importance of filtering out the white noise in order to focus with complete clarity.
A full review of VAR procedures was ordered after the Diaz incident.
It is believed that the initiative was led by referees chief Howard Webb as he remains adamant to further educating VAR officials so that errors are minimised.
The effectiveness of the pilot-led communication session remains to be seen as VAR officials will be under intense scrutiny with the league resuming this weekend after the international break. Arsenal manager Mikel Arteta has already been charged by the FA after his "embarrassing" comments on VAR officials.
With inputs from Reuters