Will instant replay be a part of college football permantly?

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I think so...it's had staying power in NFL football. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Instant_replayCollege footballIn 2006, the NCAA Football Rules Committee enacted instant replay guidelines and added them to the football playing rules. For games involving two schools from the same conference, league policy determines whether replay will be used.

For non-conference games, the home team makes the determination. Plays involving the sideline, goal line, end zone and end line, as well as other detectable situations, are reviewable (e.g. , fumble/no fumble, pass complete/incomplete, touchdown/no touchdown, runner down/not down, player or ball inbounds/out of bounds, clock adjustments). Most fouls (e.g. , holding, offside, pass interference) are not reviewable, except that in 2006, illegal forward passes, handoffs and punts from beyond the line of scrimmage, and too many players on the field are reviewable and the foul may be called after replay review.

When replay is used, a Replay Official (usually a former college, NFL or XFL game official) reviews every play at its conclusion from a secure booth in the press box. Most plays are routine and the game continues without interruption. If, however, the following criteria are met, the Replay Official may interrupt the contest by paging the game officials to stop the game before the next play starts.

The criteria are:1. There is reasonable evidence to believe an error was made in the initial on-field ruling. 2.

The play is reviewable.3. Any reversal of the on-field ruling, which can only result from indisputable video evidence, would have a direct, competitive impact on the game. Once per game, each head coach may also call a timeout and challenge the ruling on the previous play before the next play starts.

A coach must have at least one timeout remaining in order to challenge (teams receive three timeouts per half). If the challenge is successful and the on-field ruling is overturned, the team keeps its timeout. If not, the team loses its timeout.

In either event, the head coach may not challenge again during the game. After reviewing the play from available video angles, the Replay Official decides if the call should be upheld or overturned. If the call is overturned, the Replay Official provides the proper information to restart the game, such as the team in possession, the yardline where the ball should be placed, the correct down and distance, and the correct time on the stadium clock.

Football officials are now instructed not to stop the play on potential turnovers, but rather let the play develop and then allow the review to make the final decision. Since overturning on-field calls by review requires "irrefutable evidence," this new officials policy increases the number of turnovers. For example, as a runner is tackled, the ball comes loose and the defense recovers.

Officials believe the runner was downed but they follow the policy to allow the play to continue. Upon review, the fumble call can only be overturned with irrefutable evidence. Had the officials followed their initial beliefs and ruled the runner down, overturning the call would require evidence that the ball was fumbled before the runner was down.

Thus the presumption of the runner being downed is replaced under the new policy with a presumption that the ball was fumbled. Overcoming this presumption requires irrefutable evidence, so the presumption of a fumble is likely to withstand replay simply because it is not certain whether the runner was downed or not before the ball was fumbled. College football instant replay started in the 2004 season, when reviews were used experimentally in the Big Ten Conference only.

In the 2005 season, all conferences were allowed to use instant replay. Among Division I-A conferences, the Atlantic Coast Conference, Big East, Big Ten, Big 12, Conference USA, Mid-American Conference, Mountain West Conference, Pac-10, and Southeastern Conference used replay in 2005. The Sun Belt and Western Athletic did not.

In 2005, the Big 12 initially sought to provide field monitors which would allow the on-field referee to assist the replay official; however, by the first game of the season, they decided to only provide equipment to the instant replay booth. Conference USA used a similar system, but the on-field referee made the decision after viewing a TV monitor on the sideline. The Mountain West Conference was the only league to allow a head coach's challenge.

Each head coach got one challenge per half. If the call was overturned, the challenging coach kept his timeout and got a second challenge for that half. If not, the challenging coach lost one of his three timeouts for the half.

No more than two challenges per half per coach were allowed. There is not currently an Instant Replay equipment standard, each conference is must choose (and purchase) its own equipment. In 2005, the Big Ten, MAC, and SEC only allowed broadcast video (for games that are televised) to be used to determine the correct call.

The other conferences allowed broadcast video and scoreboard video. Most conferences provided video equipment for games that were not televised. Instant replay was first used in postseason games in the 2005 season.

It was used in all 28 bowl games as well as the Division I-AA, Division II and Division III national championship playoff games. Sources: My opinion .

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I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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