<P> Despite the rules that a play cannot be challenged if another play was run, it has happened on at least one occasion under the current rules . In 2001, the Cleveland Browns were driving toward the east end zone of Cleveland Browns Stadium against the Jacksonville Jaguars for what would have been the winning score . A controversial call on fourth down gave the Jaguars the ball . Browns' receiver Quincy Morgan had caught a pass for a first down on 4th and 1 . After Tim Couch spiked the ball on the next play, referee Terry McAulay reviewed Morgan's catch, claiming that the replay officials had buzzed him before Couch spiked the ball . Upon reviewing the play, McAulay determined that Morgan never had control of the ball, thus the pass was incomplete, and the Jaguars were awarded the ball via turnover on downs . Fans in the Dawg Pound began throwing plastic beer bottles and other objects on the field, in an incident dubbed "Bottlegate". McAulay declared the game over and sent the teams to the locker rooms . NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue then called to override the referee's decision to end the game, sending the players back onto the field, where the Jaguars ran out the last seconds under a hail of debris . The loss would have major playoff implications for the Browns, who dropped to 6 - 7, although the Browns would have still missed the playoffs had they won the game in any event . </P> <P> In 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 . </P> <P> 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 . Also, while the foul of pass interference is not reviewable, it can be overturned on review based on touching of the pass . By rule, pass interference cannot apply if a pass has been touched by any player before the foul occurs, and the touching of a pass is a reviewable 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: </P> <Ul> <Li> There is reasonable evidence to believe an error was made in the initial on - field ruling . </Li> <Li> The play is reviewable . </Li> <Li> Any reversal of the on - field ruling, which can only result from indisputable video evidence, would have a direct, competitive impact on the game . </Li> </Ul>

When can a play be reviewed in college football
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