NBA-League to use AI for objective calls, Silver says


Feb 14, 2026; Los Angeles, CA, USA; NBA commissioner Adam Silver speaks to the media during a press conference before 2026 NBA All Star Saturday Night at Intuit Dome. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-Imagn Images

May 27 (Reuters) - ⁠NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said the league will use ⁠AI to automate a category of calls such as ‌out-of-bounds decisions to speed up games and reduce disputes over possession.

Silver compared the system to Hawk-Eye technology used in tennis, where electronic line-calling quickly determines whether ​a ball has landed in or out.

"We're ⁠going to move to ⁠a system like that where that whole category of calls will ⁠be ‌automatic," Silver said on ESPN's the Pat McAfee Show on Wednesday.

"It's going to be Laker ball, Knick ball, ⁠whatever it is. Those calls will be done ​by an AI, ‌automated system with cameras lined around the court."

The technology ⁠would make such ​decisions instantaneous and allow referees to focus on calls for contact and fouls.

"It will take all those so-called objective calls out of ⁠the hands of the referees," he said. "You ​won't have to deal with challenges on those calls."

Silver did not provide an exact timeline for the introduction of the system but ⁠said it would be "fairly quickly".

The NBA has increasingly leaned on replay review and centralized decision-making to improve officiating accuracy, though reviews can slow the pace of games.

Silver said referees would remain ​essential for interpreting physical contact, where judgment ⁠is required to determine whether a player has been impeded.

"There's often ​contact on every play, but that doesn't ‌mean there's a foul on every ​play," Silver said. "That's something that can't just be done on camera."

(Reporting by Rory Carroll; Editing by Peter Rutherford)

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