The NCAA Rules Subcommittee has approved the use of the ABS challenge system in college baseball following its implementation by the SEC during the league’s conference tournament this season. The decision marks a major change to the sport’s officiating process.
Baseball America’s Jacob Rudner first reported the approval, citing sources who confirmed that the system may be used in any game where the technology is available, including Trackman setups.
Although the subcommittee has granted approval, the Baseball Oversight Committee must still give final authorization before the system officially goes into effect. According to the report, implementation “is expected to be implemented in 2027.”
The SEC championed the introduction of the ABS challenge system at its recent conference tournament in Hoover. Reports described the implementation as having gone remarkably well.
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SEC commissioner Greg Sankey said, “The introduction of this challenge system at the SEC Tournament reflects our continued commitment to innovation.” He added, “This addition represents a continued step forward for our game, aligns more closely with the professional level and supports the development of our student-athletes as they prepare for success at the next level.”
Kendall Rogers of D1 Baseball previously reported that the NCAA Rules Committee had approved the SEC’s proposal to use experimental ABS challenges in the upcoming conference tournament. His report also outlined the mechanics of how the system would function.
“The NCAA Baseball Rules Committee has approved the SEC’s proposal to use experimental ABS (Automated Ball-Strike) Challenges in the upcoming conference tournament, I’m told,” Rogers wrote before the start of the event. “Coaches will have (3) specific ABS challenges per game in Hoover.”
Rogers later followed up with additional details, clarifying that challenges would not come from coaches but from players on the field. He wrote that only three positions — pitcher, catcher, and current batter — are allowed to request a challenge by tapping their head, which must occur quickly after a pitch.
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“Three ABS challenges (if you win the challenge, you retain),” Rogers stated. “You get a bonus challenge in extra innings if you don’t have any left. ONLY a pitcher, catcher, hitter can request ABS challenge (within 2-3 seconds). Untimely challenges will NOT be granted.”
This rule specification became an important distinction in understanding how the SEC’s experimental setup operated. Allowing only the on-field participants to initiate challenges mirrored other forms of game management familiar to fans of the professional level.
The subcommittee’s decision now puts the technology one step closer to being part of the broader college baseball framework. It remains unclear what additional stipulations or structures the NCAA may require before implementation across member institutions.
However, according to the report, the framework used by the SEC during its tournament in Hoover is expected to serve as a model for any membership-wide rollout. The process and rules established there will likely inform the system’s final design once national approval is secured.
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