I'm still trying to get my head around how VAR works.
I think, and I could be wrong, that any interventions towards the referee's decisions, or lack thereof, are all down to the four appointed and uniformed referees in the control room. No one else has any say.
What I would like to see, are players allowed to pressure the referee and make him have a look at the VAR.
In England's last match, Harry Kane was deliberately fouled and brought to the ground twice and in the penalty area. Pundits thought both fouls on Kane deserved a penalty - but one might have been an exception when, at the same time as one of these fouls on Kane, one of the England players also brought down a Tunisian opponent, thereby creating a 'tit for tat' and a foul neutralisation. IMHO, the England captain had two legitimate claims for a penalty with these but for some reason, the Colombian official Wilmar Roldan, waved them both away.
Here's a Tunisian, facing the wrong way and grappling Kane to the ground:
I would have hoped to see Kane make some sort of an appeal for a penalty himself. No doubt it's because he is a true and proper gentleman and doesn't even have ANY tattoos. :-)
I didn't know about 'foul neutralisations'. I always thought a foul is a foul and is always deservant of a free kick.
Please correct me if I've got this wrong.
Have a look at:
https://inews.co.uk/sport/football/world-cup/var-england-tunisia-harry-kane-foul-penalty/