France lost 2-0 in Paris on Tuesday in a game in which the Spanish side benefitted twice from crucial video assistant referee decisions. A goal against the Spanish was disallowed after it was ruled off-side in consultation with the video and a Spanish goal disallowed by the referee for offside was validated by the video review.
For the French, who decided to trial video assistance for the first time at the friendly match, the outcome was galling, even though fans and players recognised the justice and potential benefits of the system.
Spanish counterpart Julen Lopetegui had no arguments with how the decisions played out for his team.
"The refereeing resolved the two actions in a fair manner," he said.
However, it was clear on the night that the video process quickly wore out its welcome when it took more than 10 minutes each time, throwing cold water on the spectacle itself.
It might be fair, admitted French captain and goalkeeper Hugo Lloris, "but is also kills off the joy of scoring a goal".
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"It is a pain because you have to wait before you can celebrate the goal," he said.
For team-mate Kevin Gameiro, the flow of the match is lost and the lengthy process "breaks the beauty of the game".
The 80,000 spectators at the stadium were left out of the process with no video slow-motion screen to view and saw only the hand gestures of the referee, framing the shape of a TV screen, to show that he wanted a video review.
"Football is about sentiments, including that of injustice. Video takes responsibility away from the assistant referees. If I was an assistant I wouldn't lift the flag to call offside anymore because you have video to decide all that."
Use of technology to assist referees favoured by FIFA head Gianni Infantino was first introduced in the 2014 World Cup to determine whether the ball had crossed the goal-line in scoring situations. The process was simple and uncontroversial, unlike the use of video assistance which can sometimes be tricky and require fine judgement.
"It is really necessary to have a large number of games before your judge," he said, saying it was not by chance that FIFA and IFAB, which oversees the rules of the game, have asked for a two-year trial period.
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