UEFA president
Michel Platini stood firm against the use of goal-line technology in
Europe despite FIFA tests of Hawk-Eye and GoalRef at the ongoing Club
World Cup in Japan.
The Frenchman said goal-line referees, used
in various UEFA competitions since 2009, were a cheaper way of
determining whether the ball had crossed the line and warned against
allowing technology to encroach on the game.
He said it would
cost 50 million euros ($65 million) to introduce goal-line technology to
UEFA's international and club competitions over five years.
"I
prefer to give 50 million (euros) to grassroots than goal-line
technology for perhaps one or two goals a year," he said at a press
conference in the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur.
"If the goal-line referee is one metre from the line and he has good glasses, he can see whether the ball is inside or not."
While
fans have called for years for football to embrace goal-line technology
to eliminate human error, Platini has repeatedly warned it will lead to
technology encroaching into other areas of the game.
The debate
came to the fore again at Euro 2012 -- where goal-line referees
patrolled the sidelines -- when Ukraine were denied a goal against
England, leading FIFA president Sepp Blatter to call for the new
technology.
But Platini pointed to an offside infringement in the
build-up and questioned where the line on introducing such technology
would be drawn.
Asian Football Confederation acting president
Zhang Jilong told the press conference the AFC would study the use of
the technology at the Club World Cup before making a decision.
"This
is something new. After the tests during the World Club Championships
in Tokyo, we will see whether it can be adopted by all the competitions
or not," he said.
The Club World Cup, involving the winners of
continental club competitions, is running both Hawk-Eye and GoalRef at a
cost of $1 million over the eight-game competition.
The Hawk-Eye
system uses between six and eight cameras while GoalRef uses magnetic
fields to determine whether a ball has crossed the line. Both systems
transmit their findings to devices that can be worn on officials'
wrists.
European champions Chelsea are the main draw at the
competition in Tokyo and play Monterrey of Mexico on Thursday for a
place in the final.
Platini also rejected any chance of Euro 2020
matches being played outside Europe after criticism over UEFA's green
light to hold tournament matches across the continent.
"I have
received requests from many national associations in Europe (to host
Euro 2020). And if I say, 'No, we don't play in our continent but we
play in some other continent,' they will kill me," he said.
Platini
has argued that a cross-continental competition would relieve pressures
on a single or joint host nation given the current financial climate,
but fans have complained the spread of games will ruin the atmosphere.
The
host cities bidding process begins in March, with decisions on venues
set to be made in early 2014. The next European championships in 2016
are to be held in France, with an increase in the number of teams from
the current 16 to 24.
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