Instant Replay Approved by CFB

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<TABLE class=tborder id=post251278 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=3 width="100%" align=center border=0><TBODY><TR vAlign=top><TD class=alt1 id=td_post_251278>May 30, 2006

INDIANAPOLIS (Ticker) - Instant replay will become a part of Division I-A football games after all.

More than two months after tabling the issue, the NCAA's Playing Rules Oversight Panel (PROP) on Tuesday approved a proposed video-replay system for games starting this fall.

On February 9, the NCAA on Thursday approved a standardized video-review system across all Division I-A conferences that would have a video official review all plays and allow each team one challenge per game.

However, the PROP decided on March 13 that it needed more feedback, particularly on coaches' challenges. The delay allowed the Football Rules Committee to receive input from the American Football Coaches Association and the Division I-A Collegiate Commissioners Association, which met in late April.

On Tuesday, the panel approved a revised proposal by the Football Rules Committee that calls for one challenge per team per game, provided the squad requesting the challenge has a timeout available.

If the challenge is successful, the team will keep its timeout, but that will be the only challenge allowed in the game for the squad. If the challenge fails, a timeout will be charged.

"This revised proposal achieves the intended result of the rules committee to incorporate a challenge into the video-replay system," panel chair and Iowa Intercollegiate Athletic Conference commissioner John Cochrane said.

Two seasons ago, the Big Ten Conference experimented with instant replay, allowing a video official to stop the game to inspect reviewable plays that had a direct, competitive impact on the game.

In 2005, the majority of conferences implemented the Big Ten's system, though the Mountain West Conference allowed one challenge per team. A total of 35 plays were challenged all season, with the call on the field reversed five times.

Also on Tuesday, the PROP recommended that halftime of college football games last 20 minutes, but the competing schools can shorten or lengthen the break by mutual consent.<!-- google_ad_section_end -->
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The BIG TEN instant replay the past two years has been fantastic and operated extremely well.
 

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I myself think they should have re-play on Every college football period. Just one play can change the outcome of the final score in many cases.
I guess the NFL re-play needs to be modified slighty for the college and they should just do it.
 

"It's great to be alive and ahead by seven" Mort o
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Will there still be a person in a booth that can call a replay review any time they think is necessary? I think the 2 coaches challenges are in addition to the replay judge's challenges. LT
 

Respect My Steez
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I wish the NFL would switch to a replay official in the booth that reviewed all of the plays rather than wasting time by having an on field ref run over to the peep show.

CFB definitely needs to have a standarized system for all conferences
 

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