This World Cup, You Can Watch the Game From a Refâs Point of View
When you tune in to the 2026 World Cup, youâll get a peek at something you probably havenât seen before: an up-close live feed at
When you tune in to the 2026 World Cup, youâll get a peek at something you probably havenât seen before: an up-close live feed at whatâs happening on the field from the refereeâs perspective. Broadcasts will incorporate a point-of-view captured feet away from the action by a tiny camera attached to the officialâs headset, sitting just near their temple. The images are be beamed wirelessly to the broadcast booth, where the video is digitally smoothed in real time and incorporated into the televised program. If youâve ever wanted to know what the game looks like from a refâs vantage pointâwhether you want to study your favorite playerâs footwork or just critique the refâs callsâyouâre getting your wish. Ref cameras have been used in broadcasts for a few years across major sports. âUmp viewâ is being used more and more often on MLB broadcasts to give viewers a true feel for the raw speed and movement of pitches. Both the NFL and NHL have dabbled in uses of ref cams to bring fans closer to the game, the former as early as 2018.
But when we get to zoom in to see plays from the officialâs perspective, what weâre seeing isnât typically live. Broadcasters will show snippets during an instant replay or during the postgame show, but rarely if ever as part of the live action. 2026 FIFA World Cup Hereâs WIREDâs complete guide to the 2026 FIFA World Cup. Soccer lends itself pretty naturally to the idea of a live ref cam. During a televised match, the main cameras are almost always set up in wide shots, so viewers spend most of the game far away from players. A ref cam offers a change of pace, bringing the viewer right onto the field. The earliest iterations of video feeds from refâs body cameras, both at the English developmental levels and in a 2024 trial in the German Bundesliga, were run on delays. They were mostly used for referee training and development. But in March 2025, the International Football Association Board (soccerâs worldwide governing body) approved the use of ref cam footage on live broadcasts, which happened for the first time at the 2025 Club World Cup.
And while it may seem like a small distinction, the technological lift required of FIFA and its partners to make that footage available for live broadcast was significant. The first challenge: reducing the latency in the video stream. It takes timeâless than a second, but still enough time to noticeâto beam glitch-free, broadcast quality footage from the refs on the field to the stadiumâs broadcast hubs. The cameras the refs wear arenât typical broadcast cameras with Ethernet connections. They have to transmit wirelessly across a stadium packed full of devices and brimming with wireless interference. Johannes HolzmĂźller, FIFAâs director of innovation, tells me his organization tested a handful of wireless data systems across multiple locations, including planned World Cup venues like Miamiâs Hard Rock Stadium. They settled on a specialized 5G solution that wireless provider Verizon says uses high-frequency wireless bands for data. Removing âjitter,â or the constant bouncing and sometimes motion-sickness-inducing effect created by a camera at the temple of a referee running, stopping, and spinning to follow the ball, was an even bigger puzzle.
