Las Vegas Review-Journal

Robo-umps getting minor test

MLB has no timetable when automatic balls and strikes might be arriving

- By Jimmy Golen

WORCESTER, Mass. — Trailing Nashville with two outs in the bottom of the ninth, St. Paul Saints first baseman Alex Kirilloff watched the 3-2 pitch go by for strike three. He thought it might have missed the high and inside corner.

There was no point in arguing.

The game was being umped by the Automatic Ball-strike system that Major League Baseball is testing in Triple-a this season, which means the strike was called by a computer and merely relayed to Kirilloff and the crowd by home plate umpire Brock Ballou.

“Nobody complains about anything anymore with the strike zone because there’s nothing to complain about,” Saints manager Toby Gardenhire said after his first series with the “robo-ump.” “You take that as good and bad. It’s kind of entertaini­ng to watch a guy argue.”

Much like the pitch clock that had purists panicking, only to quickly and quietly blend into the flow of the game, automatic balls and strikes could soon be coming to the major leagues.

And much like the players themselves, the robo-umps are working their way up through the minors on their way to the show.

The goal: Eliminate the individual and sometimes inconsiste­nt strike zones that vary from umpire to umpire, and with it the possibilit­y that a game can turn on a bad ball/strike call. And disappeari­ng with that are the stink-eye from batters or pitchers and the helmet-slamming, dirt-kicking dustups that are practicall­y as old as the sport itself.

“There’s no arguing. Guys get rung up and they think that maybe that wouldn’t have been called with a human calling it, but there’s no yelling about it,” Worcester Red Sox manager Chad Tracy said after his team played a pair of games umped by the ABS system this month.

“But you’re also losing some of the human emotion of the game, and the excitement of it. You know, coaches chirping from the dugout, whatever. You lose that,” he said. “It just becomes just this game.”

MLB officials say say there is no timetable for a potential robo-ump callup. The league has been testing the technology in games since introducin­g it at the independen­t Atlantic League in 2019. Another system being tested in Triple-a this season would rely on the human umpires for calling pitches, with the ABS as a backup for a limited number of challenges by each team.

“There are several important questions about how best to deploy this powerful technology that remain unanswered at this point,” said Morgan Sword, an MLB executive vice president of baseball operations who was the point person on the pitch clock and is now working on robo-umps. “We hope to use this season’s test at Triple-a to make progress on those questions.”

Among the issues: In transition­ing from the differing strike zones of the individual human umpires, someone needs to decide what the new, uniform strike zone should be. The official rule book definition of the strike zone is laughably ignored, and interprete­d by each umpire in his own way.

“What they want to achieve is consistenc­y,” said Shelley Duncan, the manager of the Triple-a Scranton-wilkes Barre Railriders. “They want every pitcher, every player to know what the strike zone is. They want every fan to have a good understand­ing that they weren’t screwed. It’s going to be the talent on the field that wins games, not umpires calls.”

At a recent game between the Woosox and Railriders, the top farm clubs of the Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees, there was an announceme­nt before first pitch informing fans that the system was being used. Otherwise, the system worked out of the crowd’s consciousn­ess, with the unseen cameras deployed around the ballpark scanning the home plate area to determine pitch location.

The ruling was relayed to home plate umpire Matt Bates through an earpiece; he announced it as if he were calling it himself. The delay was short enough to leave no hint that he wasn’t.

“It’s so minuscule. The naked eye probably won’t even notice it,” said Cody Oakes, the crew chief in Worcester.

Oakes said most of the umpires gained experience with the ABS system while it made its way up the lower minors or when it was tested in the Pacific Coast League last season. The hardest part, he said, is reconcilin­g what he hears in his ear with what he’s seeing with his eyes. For example, the ABS system will still shout “BALL” even if a player swings.

“You’re always checking the count a lot more,” Oakes said. “You might have heard three balls in a row, but the count’s 1-2 because he’s fouled off a couple pitches.”

Other times, the catcher may ask the umpire if a ball was too wide or too low — part of the normal and usually respectful interactio­n between the players and the umpiring crew.

“I don’t want to say,”

Oakes said. “I just don’t want to get into that one when it’s not me calling it.”

 ?? Abbie Parr The Associated Press ?? An umpire signals for a strikeout after being told the call through an earpiece during a minor league game between the St. Paul Saints and the Nashville Sounds.
Abbie Parr The Associated Press An umpire signals for a strikeout after being told the call through an earpiece during a minor league game between the St. Paul Saints and the Nashville Sounds.

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