This link will describe the football rule changes more accurately than I ever could. In a nutshell, the NCAA is now allowing football coaches to challenge an official's ruling on the field once a game.
Link
For basketball the NCAA is requiring that game clocks display tenths of a second and requiring shot clocks to be mounted on the backboards for all Division II and Division III schools. Also, if a player is falling out of bounds or falling into the backcourt they cannot call a timeout to save possession. (I think most of this is old news to everybody, but it's all new to me.)
I have mixed feelings about instant replay in college football. Everybody wants the right calls, but do we really need coaches throwing challenge flags? I liked the way instant replay was handled last year. If the officials on the field messed up, the official in the booth caught it and most of the time, it was corrected. What was wrong with the way everything ran last year?
Also, I like the new rule for basketball and I was just wondering what everybody else thought of the minor changes.
Link
For basketball the NCAA is requiring that game clocks display tenths of a second and requiring shot clocks to be mounted on the backboards for all Division II and Division III schools. Also, if a player is falling out of bounds or falling into the backcourt they cannot call a timeout to save possession. (I think most of this is old news to everybody, but it's all new to me.)
I have mixed feelings about instant replay in college football. Everybody wants the right calls, but do we really need coaches throwing challenge flags? I liked the way instant replay was handled last year. If the officials on the field messed up, the official in the booth caught it and most of the time, it was corrected. What was wrong with the way everything ran last year?
Also, I like the new rule for basketball and I was just wondering what everybody else thought of the minor changes.