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NSAA · Rule Review · BLE-Only

Is HyperPulse™ legal in Nebraska?

Nebraska high school sports operate under Nebraska School Activities Association (NSAA), which follows NFHS rule baselines. HyperPulse is designed as a BLE-only sensor with no GPS, no cellular, and no athlete-facing communication, but competition use still requires sport, school, event, and official approval.
State Association
NSAA
Nebraska School Activities Association
NFHS Baseline
CHECK
Sport-specific rule review required
Competition Status
REVIEW
Sport, event, school, and official approval required
Sport Coverage
12
Rule-review resources by sport

NSAA rule alignment

Nebraska School Activities Association follows the National Federation of State High School Associations (NFHS) rule baseline for each sport, but each sport and event still needs its own review. HyperPulse keeps the hardware posture conservative: under-uniform placement, no GPS, no cellular, and no two-way athlete communication.

That does not mean automatic approval. It means coaches, parents, and administrators have a cleaner rule-review package to present before an athlete wears any device in competition.

Nebraska's top sports — all supported

Nebraska high school athletics are anchored in football, basketball, wrestling, volleyball. Major metro programs in Omaha, Lincoln, Bellevue have full HyperPulse compatibility. The metric stack is tuned per sport:

See all 12 supported sports →

NE Compliance Card

Every HyperPulse unit is planned to include a printable NSAA-formatted rule-review card citing the relevant sport-specific questions. Hand it to the head official before warmups. Pre-launch field feedback is still a validation milestone, not a guarantee of approval.

Frequently asked — Nebraska edition

Is HyperPulse legal in Nebraska?
Nebraska high school sports operate under Nebraska School Activities Association (NSAA), which follows sport-specific NFHS rule baselines. HyperPulse is BLE-only with no GPS or cellular hardware, but competition use is still subject to sport rules, event policy, school policy, state association guidance, and official discretion.
What sports in Nebraska can use HyperPulse?
HyperPulse is designed for rule review across its 12 supported sports in Nebraska: football, soccer, basketball, baseball, wrestling, volleyball, lacrosse, hockey, rugby, tennis, track and field, and cross country. Major sports in Nebraska include football, basketball, wrestling, volleyball.
Can a NE official ban HyperPulse at the field?
Individual officials retain discretion at the field of play. Each pilot unit is planned to include a printable NSAA-formatted rule-review card citing the relevant sport-specific questions. Coaches can present the card before warmups; approval is still not guaranteed.
Does NSAA have a specific rule about BLE wearables?
NSAA follows NFHS rule baselines for each sport. HyperPulse is designed around a no-GPS/no-cellular/no-two-way-communication review posture. Officials and event policies still control competition use.

Get HyperPulse for your NE program

$129 launch sensor pricing. School-direct + club-program tiers available.

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