By SABC Sport
6th June 2024
Wolves - who last month called the vote to scrap VAR - were reportedly the only club to back its abolition.
The Black Country club were understood to be adamant, even the day before the Premier League's annual general meeting in Harrogate on Thursday, that they wanted a vote to take place, even though they anticipated a heavy defeat.
The Premier League, its clubs and referees' body Professional Game Match Officials Limited (PGMOL) acknowledged that improvements needed to be made for the benefit of the game and supporters.
Semi-automated offside technology is set to be introduced in the autumn, which top-flight sources say will reduce the length of time required for offside checks, while in-stadium announcements will be made where an on-field decision is changed following a VAR intervention.
The Premier League said the "high threshold" for intervention would also be maintained.
The Premier League also hopes to improve the fan experience of VAR by offering big screen replays of all VAR interventions where possible.
The league said it would work with PGMOL on "more robust" training for officials to improve consistency, including an emphasis on speed while preserving accuracy. The league also promised "expanded communications" on VAR from its match centre and through continuing with programmes like Match Officials Mic'd Up.
The league said it will also continue to lobby the International Football Association Board (IFAB), which sets the laws of the game, to allow live video and audio broadcast during VAR reviews.
Liverpool and Manchester United were among the clubs who were understood prior to Thursday's vote to be supporters of keeping and improving VAR. A survey of 16,000 United fans conducted by their supporters' trust found more than 50 per cent supported scrapping it regardless of any improvements that could be made.
Malcolm Clarke, the chairman of the Football Supporters' Association (FSA), said: "Support for VAR has collapsed since its introduction into English football - it's clear that in its current form it has made the match a less enjoyable experience. So much so that more than two-thirds of supporters now say they are against it.
"There's a growing feeling from fans that the increase in decision-making accuracy is not a price worth paying for the huge impact VAR has had on the match-going experience.
"Enormous changes to the current system are required to improve things, particularly for supporters in stadiums. We cannot carry on like this."
An FSA poll conducted last summer found only one in 20 who had experienced VAR in a stadium rated their experience of it as good or very good.