Robo umps reach Triple-A, but MLB rollout still uncertain

FILE - In this June 3, 1998, file photo, Boston Red Sox manager Jimy Williams, second from right, gets between home plate umpire Tim Welke, right, and batter John Valentin, while teammate Mo Vaugh restrains Valentin, who was arguing two called strikes from Baltimore Orioles pitcher Doug Johns in the fourth inning of a baseball game at Fenway Park in Boston. Valentin and Williams were ejected from the game. Automatic balls and strikes could soon be coming to the major leagues. Disappearing with that are the complaints that an umpire鈥檚 strike zone was too wide or a pitcher was getting squeezed, followed by the helmet-slamming, dirt-kicking dustups that are practically as old as the sport itself. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa, File)

WORCESTER, Mass. (AP) 鈥 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.

鈥淣obody complains about anything anymore with the strike zone because there鈥檚 nothing to complain about,鈥 Saints manager Toby Gardenhire said after his first series with the so-called 鈥漴obo-ump." 鈥淵ou take that as good and bad. It鈥檚 kind of entertaining to watch a guy argue.鈥

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.

鈥淭here鈥檚 no arguing. Guys get rung up and they think that maybe that wouldn鈥檛 have been called with a human calling it, but there鈥檚 no yelling about it,鈥 Worcester Red Sox manager Chad Tracy said after his team played a pair of games umped by the ABS system this month.

鈥淏ut you鈥檙e 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,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t just becomes just this game.鈥

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.

鈥淭here are several important questions about how best to deploy this powerful technology that remain unanswered at this point,鈥 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. 鈥淲e hope to use this season鈥檚 test at Triple-A to make progress on those questions.鈥

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

鈥淲hat they want to achieve is consistency,鈥 said Shelley Duncan, the manager of the Triple-A Scranton-Wilkes Barre RailRiders. 鈥淭hey want every pitcher, every player to know what the strike zone is. They want every fan to have a good understanding that they weren鈥檛 screwed. It鈥檚 going to be the talent on the field that wins games, not umpires calls.鈥

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鈥檛.

鈥淚t鈥檚 so minuscule. The naked eye probably won鈥檛 even notice it,鈥 said Cody Oakes, the crew chief in Worcester. 鈥淚t's only noticeable to us.鈥

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鈥檚 seeing with his eyes. For example, the ABS system will still shout 鈥淏ALL鈥 even if a player swings.

鈥淵ou鈥檙e always checking the count a lot more,鈥 Oakes said. 鈥淵ou might have heard three balls in a row, but the count鈥檚 1-2 because he鈥檚 fouled off a couple pitches."

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

鈥淚 don鈥檛 want to say,鈥 Oakes said. 鈥淚 just don鈥檛 want to get into that one when it鈥檚 not me calling it.鈥

Players have mixed opinions on the robo-umps 鈥 just like their human predecessors 鈥 often colored by whether the most recent call went with them or not. , the skill of presenting borderline pitches to make it look like they caught the strike zone.

鈥淚t鈥檚 an art form, and it鈥檚 taking away people鈥檚 strengths,鈥 WooSox catcher Caleb Hamilton said.

Of course, all those catchers are also batters who will benefit from a more consistent strike zone when at the plate. And pitchers who lose the strike that just missed the edge of the plate might get it back elsewhere.

鈥淚t鈥檚 going to be a love-hate relationship,鈥 Saints right-hander Randy Dobnak said.

RailRiders reliever Aaron McGarity said he threw a fastball that was supposed to be up and away and wound up high and inside. His catcher had to reach across his body to get it, which often triggers a human umpire to call a ball; all the robo-ump saw was the ball nipping a part of the plate.

鈥淒idn鈥檛 look very good, but ended up getting a strike call,鈥 McGarity said. 鈥淪o I got a plus-one on the ABS.鈥

The batter didn鈥檛 complain, but the Worcester crowd moaned.

鈥淵eah," McGarity said with a smile, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 care about their opinion, anyway.鈥

Tracy said after that one game, when the WooSox made a late-inning rally, that knowing the balls and strikes would be consistent gave him a sense of calm when the team was rallying from a big deficit in the late innings.

鈥淚 was kind of relaxed, knowing 鈥極K, we鈥檙e either going to lose or win, but it鈥檚 not going to be because somebody gets a bad call against them,鈥欌 he said. 鈥淭hat was refreshing.鈥

But Worcester hitting coach Rich Gedman, a longtime major league catcher, said that tension isn't necessarily a bad thing. Fans and players yelling at umpires has a long history, with arguments often making the highlight reels alongside tape-measure home runs.

鈥淚t kind of takes a little emotion out of it,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 think human beings live on the controversy.鈥

___

AP Sports Writer Dave Campbell in St. Paul, Minnesota and AP Baseball Writer Ronald Blum in New York contributed to this story.

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