Texas A&M baseball may soon have one less excuse when a borderline pitch changes a game.The NCAA baseball rules subcommittee has reportedly approved expanded use of the Automated Ball-Strike challenge system, pushing college baseball closer to a future in which players can challenge an umpire’s call and let technology settle the argument.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementMORE: Texas A&M’s Rebuilt Defensive Line May Wreak Havoc in the SEC in 2026The Aggies have already experienced the ABS system under tournament pressure, and it could become a regular part of their 2027 season.Baseball America reported that the technology may be used wherever the necessary equipment, including Trackman, is available.The NCAA baseball oversight committee must still approve the proposal before it can be implemented, but the sport’s strike-zone revolution appears to be accelerating.Texas A&M got its first taste of the system during the 2026 SEC Tournament in Hoover.The Aggies’ stay didn’t last long as they were eliminated by Auburn in the quarterfinals, but the event provided an early look at how computerized challenges could reshape college baseball.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementUnder the SEC Tournament format, each team received three challenges.A successful challenge was retained, while an unsuccessful attempt disappeared.Teams that reached extra innings without any remaining challenges received an additional one.The power to challenge didn’t belong to the dugout. Pitchers, catchers and hitters had roughly two or three seconds to signal that they wanted the call reviewed.That created a new layer of pressure, particularly for catchers deciding whether an apparent miss was bad enough to risk a challenge.It also created instant accountability.Hitters could no longer spend an entire at-bat screaming about a pitch they believed was outside.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementPitchers couldn’t stare down the umpire after a borderline ball. They had an option … challenge the call or keep playing.Major League Baseball’s version offers two challenges per team, with successful attempts retained.The NCAA could adopt that structure, preserve the SEC’s three-challenge model or introduce an entirely different format.Player-specific strike-zone measurements will also be critical, especially with college rosters featuring dramatic differences in height and stance.Vanderbilt coach Tim Corbin, a member of the baseball rules committee, characterized the experiment as encouraging and said feedback from coaches, players and umpires has been positive.AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementMORE: Marcel Reed’s Biggest Flaw Could Derail Texas A&M’s CFP Return AgainFor Texas A&M, ABS won’t eliminate bad pitches, costly strikeouts or missed opportunities. It will, however, make the most controversial calls harder to ignore.The human element isn’t disappearing. It’s simply getting a replay button.
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