The IFAB has ruled out making Arsene Wenger's proposed changes to the offside law in time for this summer's European Championships.
The former Arsenal manager's proposals would mean a player would be deemed onside if any part of their body is level or behind the last defender.
However, IFAB general secretary Lukas Brud told Sky Sports News on Wednesday: "There will be no law change regarding offside at this month's annual general meeting,"
"We welcome Mr Wenger's views and look forward to discussing it, as a group.
"But our AGM is a point of discussion on offside and any law change will follow only after further dialogue in the game over the coming months."
Wenger, FIFA's head of global development, said: "You will not be offside if any part of the body that can score a goal is in line with the last defender, even if other parts of the attacker's body are in front.
"That will sort it out and you will no longer have decisions about millimetres and a fraction of the attacker being in front of the defensive line."
VAR continued to cause controversy in the Premier League last week when Wolves had a goal ruled out after Pedro Neto was adjudged to have been offside by the narrowest of margins in their 0-0 draw with Leicester on Friday night.
After the match, Wolves boss Nuno Espirito Santo said: "You can be on both sides of the decision. It is not about Wolves, it is about the game, it is about football. It is about what we had and what we have. It is about where we want to go and what kind of game we want to see, how the fans are going to react to it. It is all of these things.
"I want things to improve. I am not a specialist on referees. I respect them a lot. We are not judging the work of the referees here. I am frustrated with the situation and all that is involved. We should not be sitting here and talking about this. So let's hope things improve."
What happens next?
The offside law is due to be discussed by the game's lawmakers IFAB at their AGM in Belfast on February 29.
There is no guarantee this issue will come to a vote at that meeting. If it does it will need six votes to pass.
The IFAB board comprises eight votes, each of the four Home Nations (England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland) has one, with FIFA holding the other four.
Were a vote to be called and Wenger's proposal passed, there is still no guarantee the new offside law would be implemented in time for this summer's Euros.
Souness calls for offside VAR change
Wolves were also denied a goal in December against Liverpool by a marginal offside decision ruling out a Neto strike. Sky Sports' Graeme Souness called for a change to the offside law.
"We're in the entertainment business. What we're doing is denying the people the enjoyment of goals. What we should do is say that if any part of an attacker is in an onside position they can't be given offside.
"We cannot go on like this. There's too much frustration going on."
Neville: Criticism of offside 'bizarre'
However, Sky Sports pundit Gary Neville feels the criticism of the use of offside by VAR is bizarre, and believes suggestions to alter the line for offside will not change anything.
"I don't understand the issue with offside. There has to be a point from which an offside is measured, every single time. The line comes down, and you're either on or off. People ask: 'How can you be so accurate?' When the same methodology and principle is being used each time, you have consistency.
"All referees have been asked to do is give consistency. We've got the most consistent application of offside that we've ever had before, and people are complaining. I see experts, pundits, fans shouting about it. I don't get it. I find it bizarre."
The existing ruling states that a "player is in an offside position if: any part of the head, body or feet is in the opponents' half (excluding the halfway line) and any part of the head, body or feet is nearer to the opponents' goal line than both the ball and the second-last opponent."
VAR survey: Stats, views and solutions
Two-thirds of football fans believe Video Assistant Referees [VARs] have made the game less enjoyable, according to a YouGov poll.
The survey, published earlier in February, claims 60 per cent of fans believe VAR, introduced at the start of the season in the Premier League, has worked badly, with supporters giving the technology an average rating of just 4/10.
The poll found:
Here, we look at the stats and in-depth analysis of the survey, and what the pundits think...
Navyd
418
Wenger is right...If the goal line technology says that until the whole ball goes beyond the line it is considered a goal. That should be applied in the case of offside...a player should be considered offside when all body parts allowed to play the ball should are ahead of the opponent...or what do you guys suggest?
Moabeiklo
238
Wenger is right...If the goal line technology says that until the whole ball goes beyond the line it is considered a goal. That should be applied in the case of offside...a player should be considered offside when all body parts allowed to play the ball should are ahead of the opponent...or what do you guys suggest?