TAMPA, Fla. – In an angry, divided world, there’s no greater unifier than major league umpires. Everyone hates them. The machines are coming to take their jobs. Couldn’t happen to a nicer group.
TAMPA, Fla. — In an angry, divided world, there’s no greater unifier than major league umpires. Everyone hates them. The machines are coming to take their jobs. Couldn’t happen to a nicer group.
MLB players, coaches and umpires are all adapting to the new system. But everybody is already looking beyond ABS.
Thomas Saggese stood in the batter’s box at Roger Dean Stadium on Friday morning and watched a fastball from teammate Richard Fitts zip through the vicinity of the outside corner of home plate. From ...
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For baseball's tallest hitters, robo-umps should bring consistency to a tricky strike zone
PHOENIX (AP) — San Francisco Giants rookie Bryce Eldridge was logged at 6-foot-7 “and some change,” he said. That was the measurement for the slugger for the major leagues' Automated Ball-Strike ...
Patrick Bailey was skeptical when Major League Baseball announced the implementation of the automated ball-strike system, or ABS, last September. Bailey, a two-time Gold Glove Award winner, is the ...
PHOENIX — San Francisco Giants rookie Bryce Eldridge was logged at 6-foot-7 “and some change,” he said. That was the measurement for the slugger for the major leagues’ Automated Ball-Strike System.
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