Skip to main content

Goal-line technology gets green light

The International Football Association Board (IFAB) approved the use of two different technology systems which FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke said would be used at the 2014 World Cup in Brazil.

"We have decided to use the system at the Club World Cup in Tokyo [in December], at the Confederations Cup [in 2013] and the 2014 World Cup," Valcke told reporters.

"The IFAB has been around since 1886, it's been the guardian of the laws of the game all that time, it has developed slowly, conservatively and carefully to try and improve the game on a worldwide basis," said Patrick Nelson, a board member from Northern Ireland.

"The decisions we made today are all ones which will be long-lasting and will resonate throughout the world and they have been taken very carefully."

"The IFAB has made some very good, fundamental and momentous decisions here today," added Jonathan Ford from Wales.

Pressure has been growing on football's governing body following a series of high-profile incidents over the years where teams have not been awarded goals even though the ball has clearly crossed the line.

The most prominent was at the 2010 World Cup when Frank Lampard's infamous phantom goal for England against Germany in the 2010 World Cup finals was disallowed when it was clearly over the line. Germany, leading 2-1 at the time, went on to win 4-1.

FIFA President Sepp Blatter told the BBC: "We didn't have accurate systems in the past, after what happened in South Africa, I have to say 'thank you Lampard', it took me a day to recover, I was really down and shocked."

He said that competition organisers would be free to use either system, the only two of ten initial candidates to pass FIFA's rigorous testings.

"We are not considering any more technological advances here, we are only looking at technology on the goal-line," said the English FA's Alex Horne.

"We do not think its appropriate for technology to creep out on to the field to interfere with other decisions, anything beyond goal-line technology decisions begins to undermine the authority of referees."

Gregg Davies is the Chief Sub Editor of FourFourTwo magazine, joining the team in January 2008 and spending seven years working on the website. He supports non-league behemoths Hereford and commentates on Bulls matches for Radio Hereford FC. His passions include chocolate hobnobs and attempting to shoehorn Ronnie Radford into any office conversation.