07/16/25 12:59:00
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07/16 00:58 CDT Cal Raleigh successful as 4 of 5 challenges reverse calls in
first All-Star use of robot umpire
Cal Raleigh successful as 4 of 5 challenges reverse calls in first All-Star use
of robot umpire
By RONALD BLUM
AP Baseball Writer
ATLANTA (AP) --- Cal Raleigh was just as successful with the first robot umpire
All-Star challenge as he was in the Home Run Derby.
Seattle's catcher signaled for an appeal to the Automated Ball-Strike System in
the first inning of the National League's win Tuesday night, getting a
strikeout for Detroit's Tarik Subal on San Diego's Manny Machado.
"You take ?em any way you can get 'em, boys," Skubal said on the mound.
Four of five challenges of plate umpire Dan Iassogna's calls were successful in
the first All-Star use of the ABS system, which could make its regular-season
debut next year.
Athletics rookie Jacob Wilson won as the first batter to call for a challenge,
reversing a 1-0 fastball from Washington's MacKenzie Gore in the fifth inning
that had been called a strike.
Miami's Kyle Stowers lost when ABS upheld a full-count Andrs Muoz fastball at
the bottom of the zone for an inning-ending strikeout in the eighth.
Mets closer Edwin Daz earned a three-pitch strikeout against Randy Arozarena
to end the top of the ninth on a pitch Iassogna thought was outside.
Blue Jays catcher Alejandro Kirk used ABS to get a first-pitch strike on a
100.1 mph Aroldis Chapman offering to Brendan Donovan with two outs in the
bottom half.
"The fans enjoy it. I thought the players had fun with it," NL manager Dave
Roberts of the Los Angeles Dodgers said. "There's a strategy to it, if it does
get to us during the season. But I like it. I think it's good for the game."
Skubal had given up Ketel Marte's two-run double and retired the Dodgers'
Freddie Freeman on a groundout for his first out when he got ahead of Machado
0-2 in the count. Skubal threw a 89.5 mph changeup, and Iassogna yelled" "Ball
down!"
Raleigh tapped his helmet just before Skubal tipped his cap, triggering a
review by the computer umpire that was tested in spring training this year and
could be adopted for regular-season use in 2026.
"Obviously, a strike like that it was, so I called for it and it helped us
out," Raleigh said.
An animation of the computer analysis was shown on the Truist Park scoreboard
and the broadcast. Roberts laughed in the dugout after the challenge.
"I knew it was a strike," Machado said.
Skubal doesn't intend to use challenges during regular-season games if the ABS
is put in place. He says he'll rely on his catchers.
"I was joking around that I was going to burn two of them on the first balls
just so that way we didn't have them the rest of the game," he said. "I'm just
going to assume that it's going to happen next year."
Before the game, baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred indicated the sport's 11-man
competition committee will consider the system for next season.
"I think the ability to correct a bad call in a high-leverage situation without
interfering with the time of game because it's so fast is something we ought to
continue to pursue," Manfred said.
ABS decisions may have an error of margin up to a half-inch.
"Our guys do have a concern with that half inch, what that might otherwise lead
to particularly as it relates to the number of challenges you may have, whether
you keep those challenges during the course of the game," union head Tony Clark
told the Baseball Writers Association of America. "Does there need to be some
type of buffer zone consideration? Or do we want to find ourselves in a world
where it's the most egregious misses that we want focus in on?"
Manfred sounded less concerned.
"I don't believe that technology supports the notion that you need a buffer
zone," he said. "To get into the idea that there's something that is not a
strike that you're going to call a strike in a review system, I don't know why
I would want to do that."
MLB sets the top of the automated strike zone at 53.5% of a batter's height and
the bottom at 27%, basing the decision on the midpoint of the plate, 8 1/2
inches from the front and 8 1/2 inches from the back. That contrasts with the
rule book zone called by umpires, which says the zone is a cube.
"We haven't even started talking about the strike zone itself, how that's going
to necessarily be measured, and whether or not there are tweaks that need to be
made there, too," Clark said. "So there's a lot of discussion that still needs
to be had, despite the fact that it seems more inevitable than not."
Manfred has tested ABS in the minor leagues since 2019, using it for all
pitches and then switching to a challenge system. Each team gets two challenges
and a successful challenge is retained. Only catchers, batters and pitchers can
call for a challenge.
"Where we are on ABS has been fundamentally influenced by player input," he
maintained. "If you had two years ago said to me: What do the owners want to
do? I think they would have called every pitch with ABS as soon as possible.
That's because there is a fundamental, very fundamental interest in getting it
right, right? We owe it to our fans to try to get it right because the players
as I talked to them over a couple of years really, expressed a very strong
interest or preference for the challenge system that we decided to test."
Skubal wondered is all contingencies had been planned for.
"If power goes out and we don't have ABS --- sometimes we don't have Hawk-Eye
data or Trackman data. So what's going to happen then?" he said. "Are we going
to expect umpires to call balls and strikes when it's an ABS zone?"
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AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB
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