Glossary of VAR & Officiating

Key terms used in refereeing and VAR analysis. Definitions are written in plain language for clarity and consistency.

Quick index

A · B · C · D · F · H ·
O · P · R · S · V

A

Advantage

Meaning: The referee allows play to continue after a foul if stopping would benefit the team that committed the foul.

Why it matters: Advantage can change the timing of cards and restarts, and it affects how incidents are judged in context.

B

Build-up (Attacking Phase)

Meaning: The attacking sequence leading to a goal-scoring outcome. Some competitions allow review of certain actions in the lead-up.

Why it matters: A foul or handball earlier in the move may lead to a goal being disallowed, depending on protocol.

C

Clear and Obvious

Meaning: A common standard for VAR intervention on subjective decisions. VAR is expected to intervene only when the on-field decision is clearly wrong.

Why it matters: Many debates come down to whether the threshold for intervention was met.

Check Complete

Meaning: VAR has checked an incident and confirms no review is needed.

Why it matters: “Check complete” does not automatically mean “correct” — it can also mean the threshold wasn’t met.

D

DOGSO

Meaning: Denying an Obvious Goal-Scoring Opportunity (usually a red-card situation).

Why it matters: DOGSO analysis often involves distance to goal, direction, control of the ball, and defenders’ positions.

F

Factual Decision

Meaning: An objective decision (for example, offside position using calibrated lines, or ball out of play if protocol allows).

Why it matters: Factual interventions can be treated differently from subjective fouls in VAR workflows.

H

Handball

Meaning: A ball-to-hand/hand-to-ball incident judged using law criteria such as arm position, movement, and proximity (interpretation varies by situation).

Why it matters: Handball is one of the most debated areas, and small details can change the decision.

O

OFR (On-Field Review)

Meaning: The referee reviews the incident on the pitch-side monitor before making the final decision.

Why it matters: The referee remains the final decision-maker; the monitor is used to reassess key evidence.

P

Penalty Area Offence

Meaning: A foul or handball committed by the defending team inside its own penalty area, potentially leading to a penalty kick.

Why it matters: Contact level, timing, and the attacker’s ability to play the ball are often crucial.

Protocol Limitation

Meaning: A situation where VAR cannot intervene (or is restricted) due to protocol scope, category of review, or intervention threshold.

Why it matters: This explains why “obvious” mistakes may not be corrected in some cases.

R

Reckless vs Serious Foul Play

Meaning: Reckless challenges are usually cautions; serious foul play involves excessive force/endangering safety and can be a red card.

Why it matters: This distinction often decides yellow vs red and whether VAR should recommend a review.

S

SPA

Meaning: Stopping a Promising Attack, typically a caution (yellow card).

Why it matters: SPA decisions often depend on speed, space, direction of play, and attacking options.

Second Yellow

Meaning: A player receives a second caution, leading to a red card. In many competitions, VAR does not review second cautions.

Why it matters: This is a common source of controversy because it can decide matches without VAR correction.

V

VAR

Meaning: Video Assistant Referee: a match official who supports the referee by reviewing certain incidents using video.

Why it matters: VAR is limited by protocol, categories of review, and intervention thresholds.


Tip: If you’re new, start with Selection Methodology and Editorial Policy.