Why are there so many incorrect review calls?

Ghost of Murph

Registered User
Dec 23, 2023
1,134
1,849
They get the vast majority of calls after watching replay correct. When in doubt they normally defer to the call on ice and roll with that. It's definitely frustrating when the replay people mess up. I doubt there is anything nefarious going on, just human error. The replay room knows a lot more than fans know.

Signed,

Dave Jackson
 

MadLuke

Registered User
Jan 18, 2011
10,667
6,173
What you wrote is a common misconception about pretty much everything. It is exactly the point of objectivity vs subjectivity.
that example has an objective answer, same for puck did go in, or offside, was it goaltender interference, that can become quickly subjective, without an actual answer that exist to be found by a scientific process.

The replay room knows a lot more than fans know.

And angle available can be different, broadcast truck team do a really good job thought, so not necessarily always in an advantage Toronto way, but can be.
 

Chet Manley

Registered User
Apr 15, 2007
3,640
1,822
Regina, SK
It's pretty crazy that our current technology hasn't resolved some of the measurement type stuff. Like three different camera views of the puck at any time should be enough to get height. Or the holy grail of a practical transmitting puck and a gazillion sensors around the parts of the ice that matter. Could be soon.
 

tarheelhockey

Offside Review Specialist
Feb 12, 2010
86,503
143,451
Bojangles Parking Lot
Even sitting at board height it looks high to me. Neutral fan, I don't have anything against either team. It's amazing that this day and age that they don't have cameras set up at opposing angles to review high stick goals.

The issue with this is that the point of contact between puck and stick will always be at different points on the rink. Sometimes it’s inside the crease, sometimes it’s 15 feet away. And then the same issue with elevation. So there’s no particular place where you can put a camera that it won’t have this issue with trying to triangulate between the crossbar and the point of contact. Given that the margin for error is often miniscule with these high-stick calls, it would take a comical number of cameras to cover all the potential angles without creating a misleading effect.

It would be more practical for them to solve for the issues that currently prevent effective use of puck-chip technology.
 

Hint1k

Registered User
Oct 27, 2017
4,140
2,545
that example has an objective answer, same for puck did go in, or offside, was it goaltender interference, that can become quickly subjective, without an actual answer that exist to be found by a scientific process.
Please go back to school and learn about objectivity and how it can be achieved. You would be surprised. It is not what you think it is.
 
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