UEFA President Alexander Severin has expressed dissatisfaction with the video-assisted arbitration technology (FAR) and called for a review of the rules for calculating infiltration trap cases.

Severin, in an interview with the British newspaper Mirror, criticized the way the mouse worked, especially with regard to infiltration cases.

He explained that he would make a proposal to adopt a distance of grace between 10 and 20 centimeters for the attackers, and not to count cases of infiltration unless exceeded that distance.

Severin pointed out that the European Union has recently gathered a number of the most prominent coaches in the world, and presented to them one of the cases of touching the hand, divided opinion between those who see the need to be calculated and others refuse to do so.

He spoke of the lack of clear criteria for calculating the cases of touching the hand, and criticized the talk about cases of deliberate, and said that the referee is not a psychiatrist to know if the player deliberately touch the ball with his hand.

He criticized UEFA's "chaos" in European stadiums for not adopting clear standards to deal with mouse technology. In England, the referee is not allowed to watch the footage, while referees in Italy spend a lot of time reviewing the cases.

He pointed out that the technique affected the excitement in the games, and the players are not celebrating until the validation of the goal.