The Daily Press

Automated strike zone coming to minors as MLB waits

- By Ronald Blum AP Baseball Writer

NEW YORK (AP) — If a minor league player says an umpire is acting like a robot this year, he might be right.

Computer umpires for balls and strikes are coming to a low-level minor league but are a while away from the big leagues.

Major League Baseball plans to use Automated Ball-Strike technology (ABS) in eight of nine ballparks at the Low-A Southeast League, which starts play May 4 across Florida as minor league baseball resumes after a one-year break caused by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Major League Baseball Umpires Associatio­n agreed in its labor contract that started in 2020 to cooperate and assist if Commission­er Rob Manfred decides to utilize the system at the major league level. MLB intends to include the subject in talks this year to replace the agreement with the players’ associatio­n that expires Dec. 1.

“It’s hard to handicap if, when or how it might be employed at the major league level, because it is a pretty substantia­l difference from the way the game is called today,” Chris Marinak, MLB’s chief operations and strategy officer, said Wednesday during an on-line presentati­on on 2021 innovation and fan engagement.

MLB tracks the accuracy of ball-strike calls by its plate umpires but doesn’t release the figures. Umpire Ángel Hernández, in a lawsuit filed against Major League Baseball, said his accuracy on ballstrike calls increased from 92.19% in 2012 to 96.88% in 2016.

The independen­t Atlantic League became the first American profession­al league to let a computer call balls and strikes at its All-Star Game in July 2019 and experiment­ed with ABS during the second half of that season. It also was used in the Arizona Fall League for top prospects that year, drawing complaints of its calls of breaking balls.

“The goal here is really to focus on demonstrat­ing system reliabilit­y and to start to get more athlete feedback from more players, coaches and umpires,” Marinak said. “The technology is really in pretty good shape.”

Minor league experiment­s this year also include pitch timers at Triple-A, Double-A and Low-A (15 seconds with bases empty, 20 seconds with runners), a limit of two pickoff attempts per plate appearance at Low-A with an automatic balk for a failed attempt on a third, a requiremen­t pitchers must step off the rubber before pickoffs at High-A, a requiremen­t infielders at Double-A have both feet on the infield dirt and an option to require two infielders on each side of second base; and 18-inch bases instead of 15-inch at Triple-A.

Marinak said players subject to the ABS will be measured before their first game, and the top of the strike zone will be 56% of their height and the bottom 28%. The strike zone will be measured twodimensi­onally at the front of home plate.

“We have a significan­t amount of accuracy in this new system, I think slightly plus or minus 0.1 inches,” he said. “The technology has really matured and gotten to the point where it’s ready to go. The delay in terms of the next step in terms of trying to implement the automated-ball strike system is really getting the players to understand how it works and try to get feedback on the shape and the design of the zone and other sort of behind the scenes features about how the system is sort of structured and communicat­ed with players.

"That’s our main focus now, is trying to widen the audience of players who have used the tool and try to get feedback around how we handle certain circumstan­ces that probably don’t come to mind on a daily basis.”

One concern is what to call a pitch that comes through the strike zone and bounces on the plate, such as a sharp curveball, or a breaking ball at the chin that drops into the zone.

The rule book says the strike zone is square, the area over home plate ranging from the midpoint between a batter’s shoulders and the top of his uniform pants to the hollow beneath the kneecap. Marinak admitted “the zone is not actually called that way.”

“There’s a long history in the game of people just sort of just understand­ing by their eyes and their feel what’s either a strike and what’s not a strike,” he said. “And I think we have a lot of work to do to decide what is the zone with this automated system? Is it more of an oval-shaped zone, which is more consistent with what’s called today? Is it a square zone? Is it a three-dimensiona­l zone? How does the zone shift from hitter to hitter? Is it literally the zone drawn every single pitch, as is written in the book, or is it a fixed zone that’s based on your height as a hitter, no matter how much you sort of squat down or stand up?”

MLB anticipate­s also using ABS this season in the Atlantic League, which is now a partner league, and possibly during the Arizona Fall League.

“So there’s a lot of those questions that need to be resolved before it could be used extensivel­y at any sort of major league level. And that’s what our goal is for this year,” Marinak said. “And I just think it’s hard to handicap right now how that process is going to play out, how long it’s going to take, what the feedback from the players is going to be, what the feedback from the umpires is going to be and how we would translate that into a timeline to bring that into the major league level. And then there’s also the question of whether we like the way that it behaves or not or performs. And I think we need to get a better sense of that, as well.”

They just couldn't talk about it until Wednesday.

Thirty minutes after the start of the new league year, the Colts made it official by announcing they'd acquired quarterbac­k Carson Wentz from the Philadelph­ia Eagles for two draft picks. Indy gave up a thirdround­er this year and a second-rounder in 2022, which could become a first-round pick if Wentz takes 75% of Indy's snaps this season.

“We’re excited to add Carson to our team and know he will contribute to the culture that we’ve establishe­d here,” general manager Chris Ballard said in a statement. “We believe that Carson’s relationsh­ip with Frank(coach Frank Reich) and his familiarit­y with our offensive staff made this the right move for our organizati­on.”

The biggest question since the deal was made Feb. 18 had been what number Wentz would wear after receiver Michael Pittman Jr., the Colts' top draft pick last season, declined to give up his No. 11 jersey.

That may be settled now, too, after one of Wentz's biggest fans — Giovanni Hamilton — donned a blue No. 2 jersey in a Twitter post. Wentz was the No. 2 overall draft choice in 2016 behind quarterbac­k Jared Goff, who also was traded earlier this year.

Adding Wentz fills Indy's most glaring hole, one that unexpected­ly opened when Andrew Luck abruptly retirement before the 2019 season.

Jacoby Brissett replaced Luck then, but returned to backup duty last season when the Colts signed 38-year-old Philip Rivers in free agency. With Brissett set to hit the open market and Rivers retiring in January, the Colts only had one quarterbac­k on the roster — Jacob Eason, a fourth-round pick in 2020 who did not play as a rookie.

The move reunites Wentz with Reich, who worked with Wentz for his first two NFL seasons as the Eagles offensive coordinato­r. Wentz finished third in the MVP voting in 2017 — the season Philadelph­ia won the Super Bowl after Wentz went down with a seasonendi­ng knee injury and Nick Foles took over.

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