The VAR changed 18 decisions in 51 matches and the referee says that the VAR was right 100% of the time and the on-field official 93.5% of the time.
Roberto Rosetti says the penalty given to England versus Denmark was "correct" and that "he had never received so many positive comments" for the performances of referees. He also gave a special mention to Carlos Velasco Carballo of Spain who helped run the system.
Euro 2020 saw less 176 fouls than Euro 2016, 2 minutes 21 seconds more of effective playing time, 31 less yellow cards, but more red cards (6 instead of 3) and more penalties (17 instead of 12). Six of the penalties were given using the help of VAR.
The VAR checked 276 situations, an average of around five a game and they corrected a decision every 2.83 matches.
10 of the 18 changes were made directly from the VAR and 8 after an on-field review. All of them did not create debate.
The VAR took around 100 seconds to make a decision and only changed one decision from the quarter-finals onwards. Rosetti also defended the decision to give the England penalty.
"It wasn't a scandal, it was debatable. Makkelie saw the number 5 (Joakim Maelhe) not touch the ball, he saw clear contact between the legs. We can debate that, but that is what he saw. We can talk about the type of contact. We want the ref to be in the middle and the VAR has to be very careful," he said.