Tony Scholes, the Premier League’s chief football officer, recently provided an update on the development of the new technology and emphasized that the league had chosen what it believes to be the most advanced and reliable system available.
"We believe it to be the most accurate and the most future-proof system as well," he said. "I have to confess, given the difficulties that we had over the first few months of the season, I had severe doubts about this but the progress made over the last four to six weeks has been significant."
Some critics have raised concerns about the mid-season introduction of the new technology, fearing it could impact the consistency of decision-making. However, Scholes was quick to dismiss such worries, stating that the core principles of offside rulings remain unchanged.
"The operation of semi-automated offside technology does not change the integrity of the offside law and doesn't change the integrity of decision-making," he insisted.
"We have got 100 per cent accuracy (on offside after VAR checks) this season, so it won't improve the accuracy. What it does is make the process more efficient."