INDIANAPOLIS — College football is ready to put the signs away.

The NCAA’s playing rules oversight committee on Friday approved the use of coach-to-player helmet communications in games for the 2024 season. The move, in discussion for years, also follows a sign-stealing scandal that rocked the sport and hung over Michigan’s championship run in 2023.


What You Need To Know

  • NCAA approved the use of coach-to-player helmet communications for games in the 2024 s eason

  • The University of Louisville says it will use the new  rule this season

  • Division I teams are allowed, but not required, to use radio technology. It is similar to what NFL teams use

  • Teams can still choose to signal in plays

The football rules committee last month made a recommendation to allow — but not require — teams at the highest tier of Division I to use radio technology similar to what NFL teams use.

Only one player for each team may be in communication with coaches while on the field. A green dot on the back of the helmet will identify that player.

The communication from the coach to the player will be turned off with 15 seconds remaining on the play clock or when the ball is snapped, whichever comes first.

The rules committee had been moving toward coach-to-player communication in recent years, but it was slow to be implemented because of concerns that not every school could afford to do it in an equitable way.

Rocco Gasparro, director of media relations with the University of Louisville football team, confirmed with Spectrum News 1 that UofL will use coach-to-player helmet communication in its games. 

The University of Kentucky's director of athletics communications and public relations, Susan Lax, also confirmed UK will be using the helmet communication.

Spectrum News has also reached out to Western Kentucky University to see if they also plan to use the approved communication method.

During last year’s bowl season, teams could experiment with helmet communication if both sides agreed to it. But no team was forced to use it and that will be the case from now on.

Teams can still choose to signal in plays.

Sign stealing during games is not illegal under NCAA rules, unless it is done with the use of electronic technology.

The NCAA investigated Michigan for using an elaborate impermissible in-person scouting scheme to aid its sign-stealing operation. That case is ongoing, but the Big Ten punished the school by suspending then-head coach Jim Harbaugh for the final three games of the regular season. Michigan finished 15-0 and won the national championship.

The oversight committee also approved the use of computer tablets to view in-game video in coaching booths, on the sideline and in locker rooms. All team personnel will be allowed to view the tablets during the game.

The rules committee will continue to examine the use of wearable technology that would also allow coaches to send in play calls to the field through a small LED screen that could be wrapped on around a player’s wrist.

Proposals for experimental usage of wearable tech much be submitted to the oversight committee by June 15.

The oversight committee also approved implementation of an NFL-style two-minute warning at the end of the second and fourth quarters.