
Robot umpires to make All-Star Game debut, another step toward possible regular-season use in 2026
'I have this thing where I think everything is a strike until the umpire calls it a ball,' Detroit 's AL Cy Young Award winner said ahead of his start for the American League in Tuesday night's All-Star Game.
MLB has been experimenting with the automated ball-strike system in the minor leagues since 2019 and will use it in an All-Star Game for the first time this summer. Each team gets two challenges and retains the challenge if it is successful.
'Pitchers think everything is a strike. Then you go back and look at it, and it's two, three balls off,' Pittsburgh 's Paul Skenes, starting his second straight All-Star Game for the National League, said Monday. 'We should not be the ones that are challenging it.'
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.
'I did a few rehabs starts with it. I'm OK with it. I think it works,' said three-time Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw of the Dodgers. 'Aaron Judge and Jose Altuve should have different sized boxes. They've obviously thought about that. As long as that gets figured out, I think it'll be fine.'
Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred anticipates the system will be considered by the sport's 11-man competition committee, which includes six management representatives.
Many pitchers have gravitated to letting their catchers and managers trigger ball/strike appeals. Teams won 52.2% of their challenges during the spring training test. Batters won exactly 50% of their 596 challenges and the defense 54%, with catchers successful 56% of the time and pitchers 41%.
Hall of Famer Joe Torre, an honorary AL coach, favors the system. After his managing career, he worked for MLB and helped supervised expanded video review in 2014.
'You couldn't ignore it with all the technology out there,' he said. "You couldn't sit and make an excuse for, 'Look at what really happened' the next day.'
Now 84, Torre recalled how his Yankees teams benefitted at least twice from blown calls in the postseason, including one involving the strike zone.
With the 1998 World Series opener tied and the bases loaded with two outs in the seventh inning, Tino Martinez took a 2-2 pitch from San Diego's Mark Langston that appeared to be a strike but was called a ball by Richie Garcia. Martinez hit a grand slam on the next pitch for a 9-5 lead, and the Yankees went on to a four-game sweep.
Asked whether he was happy there was no robot umpire then, Torre grinned and said: 'Possibly.'
Then he added without a prompt: 'Well, not to mention the home run that Jeter hit."
His reference was to Derek Jeter's home run in the 1996 AL Championship Series opener, when 12-year-old fan Jeffrey Maier reached over the wall to snatch the ball above the glove over Baltimore right fielder Tony Tarasco.
___
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Astros, Tigers start pitchers with something to prove in series opener
August 18 - American League division leaders meet up for what could turn into a preview of a playoff series, as Houston visits Detroit for a three-game series that begins Monday. The Astros hold a slim lead in the West, while the Tigers are in control of the Central. Detroit eliminated Houston during the wild-card round last season. Spencer Arrighetti (1-3, 6.38 ERA) will start the series opener for the Astros. Arrighetti will be making his third start since recovering from a broken thumb, an injury that sidelined him for about four months. Arrighetti's return to action didn't go well. He surrendered five runs and 11 hits to host Miami in 3 2/3 innings on Aug. 6. The right-hander lasted five innings against Boston last Tuesday but was hampered by control issues. He gave up just one hit but walked five while allowing two runs. "It kind of felt like a step forward and a step back in a way," Arrighetti said. "I was really competitive in the zone in Miami and I gave up a lot of hits there. I was less competitive in the zone (Tuesday) and I walked more people than I would ever care to again. So results-wise, I would say it was a step in the right direction and that's encouraging. But at the same time, I've just got to command it a little better." Manager Joe Espada saw some good things in Arrighetti's latest outing. "He pitched out of trouble, which was encouraging to see," Espada said. "For me, it's just more the command, the high pitch count because of the walks. But besides that his stuff is pretty good. His breaking ball was much better (on Tuesday). I thought his fastball played really good. Just got to pitch ahead in the count more and get some quicker outs." Right-hander Jack Flaherty (6-12, 4.76), the Tigers' starter, will look to bounce back from two subpar outings. He gave up six runs (five earned) and eight hits in 4 2/3 innings in a 9-4 home loss against Minnesota on Aug. 6. Flaherty allowed five runs and eight hits in 4 1/3 innings in a 9-6 loss to the host Chicago White Sox on Tuesday. All of the runs came in the fifth inning. "Kind of freaking hard at this point to chalk (it) up to bad luck," Flaherty said. "Call it what you want, but you execute pitches and balls fall in. You can say (it) is bad luck, but it's frustrating at this point." The Tigers continue to anticipate Flaherty will deliver quality performances down the stretch. "Any given time that we put him out there, we know he can help us win," Detroit manager A.J. Hinch said. "We know he's got the ability to dominate and the stuff to match, and we expect him to go out and do it." Arrighetti faced the Tigers once last year and was shelled for seven runs in 1 1/3 innings. Flaherty is 1-3 with a 3.64 ERA in 29 2/3 innings over six career outings (five starts) against the Astros. Both teams will be looking to shake off lopsided losses. Houston was clobbered by visiting Baltimore 12-0 on Sunday while Detroit was thumped 8-1 at Minnesota. --Field Level Media


Daily Mail
10 hours ago
- Daily Mail
College football star arrested days before start of the season as embarrassed coach admits: 'We're thankful nobody was hurt'
Clemson tight end Ian Schieffelin was arrested over the weekend on a suspicion of driving under the influence, days before the start of the Tigers ' season. Details of Schieffelin's arrest were not immediately available, nor how long he will be removed from competition. Schieffelin is in his first season on the Tiger football team after using his final year of collegiate eligibility to try his hand at the gridiron after four seasons with Clemson's men's basketball team. Schieffelin switched teams, playing for Clemson on the hardwood as recently as this year's NCAA Tournament. Now, his new head coach, Dabo Swinney, has released a statement on the arrest. 'We are aware of Ian Schieffelin's arrest on suspicion of DUI,' Swinney said. 'Clemson Athletics has a clear policy by which we will abide, so Ian will miss some competition to start this season as a consequence.' 'We're obviously very disappointed by the situation, but we are very thankful no others were involved and no one was hurt.' Swinney first made his interest in adding Schieffelin to the football roster last fall, with a spot opening up on this year's roster. Originally, Schieffelin entered the transfer portal, to find another school for his fifth year for basketball alone. He then had a change of heart and accepted Swinney's offer. Swinney wanted Schieffelin on his roster due to a lack of depth at tight end, leaving a void for however long he will be out of action. The Tigers now only have three tight ends with a collegiate catch on their roster. It is unclear the last time Schieffelin played organized football, as he focused on basketball in high school and college. Even with Schieffelin's absence, Clemson is expected to be a national-title contender and win the Atlantic Coast Conference.


Daily Mail
10 hours ago
- Daily Mail
Bama Rush girls celebrate in the streets as they learn which sororities they got accepted into
The newest members of the University of Alabama 's sororities have officially been chosen, marking the end of this year's Bama Rush. Back in 2021, a series of women who were trying to join the University of Alabama's Panhellenic community documented their road to being accepted into one of the 18 different sororities at the school, and uploaded it all to TikTok under the hashtag #BamaRush. Their videos quickly exploded, and many people on the web became enthralled with watching the lengthy process play out. Since then, every time August rolls around, #BamaRush goes viral once again, as a whole new set of freshmen hopefuls at the University of Alabama and other Southern schools put their best foot forward to vie for the chance to get accepted into the sororities on campus. This year was no different... and after nine days of battling it out to see who would earn a spot in the coveted sororities, the recruitment period concluded on Sunday, August 17. Known as Bid Day, about 2,400 women finally found out which sorority they'd be joining - if any - during a ceremony at UA's Bryant-Denny Stadium. It's tradition for the chosen women to run through the campus to Sorority Row, and photos obtained by the Daily Mail showed the newest recruits excitedly bolting to their new homes. The women were seen celebrating all over the campus, hugging, and cheering moments after learning their fates. It's tradition for the chosen women to run through the campus to Sorority Row It's certainly an exciting time for the students as it marks the beginning of a new era for them. One day earlier, during the final recruitment day, known as Preference, there was a terrifying moment when one of the women needed medical assistance. Dramatic images showed the student, who looked distressed, being taken into an ambulance via stretcher surrounded by EMTs. It's unclear what caused the incident, but it was certainly a possibility that she had gotten overheated. Temperature soared to the mid-90s this weekend, with a heat advisory in affect in Alabama. Trisha Addicks, the first official nation-wide recruitment coach, recently lifted a lid on the lengthy Bama Rush process exclusively with the Daily Mail. For a fee of $4,500, potential new members (known as PNMs) can receive comprehensive coaching, conversation prep, and styling from Addicks. She also offers advice on securing recommendations, networking, and even fine-tuning clients' social media presence. Some moms try to hire Addicks, a University of Georgia alumna based in Atlanta, as early as junior year of high school, before they even know where their daughter will be attending for school. And with the boom of 'RushTok' Addicks has seen in surge in clients from other corners of the country. 'They are coming in droves from the North, Midwest and West because they want a part of that,' she said. She noted that recruitment can be 'isolating and hard,' especially when PNMs see their friends getting bids to the houses they want and were dropped from. And, in the cases where mothers are heavily involved in the process, some parents will 'spiral' when their daughters' options dwindle during rush, causing panic. 'I had a woman reach out to me this week, and she was very distraught because her daughter had been dropped from all but one,' Addicks revealed. It's a longstanding tradition for them to run through the campus after learning their fates While she can't know for sure what went wrong, she would have to guess it's because the client doesn't have 'much of a social media presence.' PNMs need to be Google-able, she said, though they shouldn't be posting thirst traps aplenty, she noted. 'It may not hurt you at some sororities, but why risk it?' she said. 'Because it's not going to help.' Still, not everyone who goes through recruitment will get a bid. 'My phone will ring off the hook next week for people who did not have successful rush,' she admitted.