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AI Robotics

'Robot' Umpires Come to Major League Baseball (Spring Training) Games (apnews.com) 23

An anonymous reader shared this report from the Associated Press: A computerized system that calls balls and strikes is being tested during Major League Baseball spring training exhibition games starting Thursday after four years of experiments in the minor leagues. Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred is an advocate of the Automated Ball-Strike System, which potentially as early as 2026 could be used to aid MLB home plate umpires, but not replace them...

Stadiums are outfitted with cameras that track each pitch and judge whether it crossed home plate within the strike zone. In early testing, umpires wore ear buds and would hear "ball" or "strike," then relay that to players and fans with traditional hand signals. The challenge system adds a wrinkle. During spring training, human umps will call every pitch, but each team will have the ability to challenge two calls per game, with no additions for extra innings. A team retains its challenge if successful, similar to the regulations for big league teams with video reviews, which were first used for home run calls in August 2008 and widely expanded to many calls for the 2014 season.

Only a batter, pitcher or catcher may challenge a call, signaling with the tap of a helmet or cap; and assistance from the dugout is not allowed. A challenge must be made within 2 seconds... MLB has installed the system in 13 spring training ballparks that are home to 19 teams.

After a full season of testing in the Triple-A minor league, roughly 51% of the challenges were successful. Interestingly, the system makes its call exactly halfway across home plate> , where human umpires consider the strike zone to cover the whole 17 inches from the front to the back of home plate.

'Robot' Umpires Come to Major League Baseball (Spring Training) Games

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  • by Valgrus Thunderaxe ( 8769977 ) on Sunday February 23, 2025 @05:01PM (#65189897)
    In the same way as instant replay was rejected years ago, but even more so.
    • by wiggles ( 30088 ) on Sunday February 23, 2025 @05:47PM (#65189977)

      Wait and see. The challenge system implemented a couple of years ago really did help the game. Challenging tag calls and such seems to be working well.

      Hopefully the ball/strike calls help in the same way, and don't simply provide fodder for people to complain when they don't like their calls.

    • No, it won't. The technology is being tested to ~replace~ human umpires, not assist them. The average salary of an MLB umpire is $300K per year. That is a very large incentive to MBL team owners to reduce costs. Cut 4 umpires, and ownership pockets $1M+ per year. Never underestimate the greed of the oligarchy.
      • No, it won't. The technology is being tested to ~replace~ human umpires, not assist them. The average salary of an MLB umpire is $300K per year. That is a very large incentive to MBL team owners to reduce costs. Cut 4 umpires, and ownership pockets $1M+ per year. Never underestimate the greed of the oligarchy.

        What is more, it is foolish to think that the endless whining and bitching about bad calls will ever stop. If the umpires are replaced, the next complaint will be that some programmer is cheating, perhaps even claims that AI will be "moving the ball" into or out of the strike zone . This will be interesting, and the whining will never stop.

      • by BigFire ( 13822 )
        Ángel Hernández [wikipedia.org] thanks you for your contribution.
    • In the same way as instant replay was rejected years ago, but even more so.

      Current instant replay for many sports can be criticized for (1) taking too long for reviews and (2) arriving at the wrong conclusions. This particular ball-strike challenge avoids both of these criticisms. Reviews don't require humans in the loop because the computer decides the result of the appeal, so the replay is almost instantaneous. Also, the conclusions are based on sensors and algorithms, so there is no human judgment involvement. It is often fickle and inconsistent human judgment in reviews th

  • ...I suspect that part of the social aspect of sports is arguing about bad calls. If the officiating was perfect, fans would have less to talk about

    • by opus ( 543 ) *

      Yeah, they should blow calls on purpose. Then we'd have even more to talk about.

      • by mssymrvn ( 15684 )

        They already do. His name is Angel Hernandez.

        I hate baseball and even I know about this twat.

    • Fans will find something else to argue about. I think that the rate of argument is a universal constant and only the subject of the arguments change. We'd merely shift from the individual umpire being biased, corrupt, etc. to MLB itself rigging calls, etc. Never underestimate humanity's capacity to complain.
    • by zawarski ( 1381571 ) on Sunday February 23, 2025 @05:52PM (#65189983)
      You might try following Philly baseball, if you like booing. We boo when they announce the other team. We boo when they announce the other team player at bat. We boo when the Phillies are losing. We boo when the Phillies are not winning by enoughâ¦
  • by kackle ( 910159 ) on Sunday February 23, 2025 @05:18PM (#65189929)
    If there are Cylons walking the field, (in a gravelly voice) "Strike one", I may tune in more often.
    • by PJ6 ( 1151747 )
      I was just going to comment that while I know they're not going to be humanoid robots, the first thing I thought of was that horrifying scene in the remake where the robot casually backhanded that dude so violently it instantly killed him.

      Wouldn't be many arguments at the plate.
  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Sunday February 23, 2025 @05:20PM (#65189937)

    kill -9 `pidof umpire`

  • just make it so bad that umps or players go on strike!

  • by opus ( 543 ) * on Sunday February 23, 2025 @05:31PM (#65189955)

    I never understood how MLB defended missed balls and strikes as an important part of the game. Even if the umpire is consistent, a very different strike zone can favor one pitcher over the other. I think the umpire's union had a lot to do with it.

    They've already invalidated the "tradition" argument with their extra innings rules changes and the NL designated hitter. This should go online ASAP. Until then, we'll watch the superimposed strike zone on TV and know exactly when the home plate umpire screwed up, again.

    • by schwit1 ( 797399 )

      This.

      If the umpires get every call correct they haven't made the game better. All they can do is hurt the game.

    • I never understood how MLB defended missed balls and strikes as an important part of the game. Even if the umpire is consistent, a very different strike zone can favor one pitcher over the other. I think the umpire's union had a lot to do with it.

      They've already invalidated the "tradition" argument with their extra innings rules changes and the NL designated hitter. This should go online ASAP. Until then, we'll watch the superimposed strike zone on TV and know exactly when the home plate umpire screwed up, again.

      We replace the umpires because they are not perfect. Next we replace the players, AI baseball, at least achieves the perfection the fans demand!

  • This system has already been used in Spring training. Yu Darvish thought he pitched a strike but the umpire, a human umpire, called a ball. Yu challenged it and the system concurred it was a strike, overturning the human umpire's call [fanrecap.com].

    • by BigFire ( 13822 )
      This technology have been in used in the minor league for a couple of years. Some team's manager have strictly forbid their pitcher from issuing challenges, leaving that up to the catcher who have better view. They don't want to waste their 2 challenges on heat of the moment decision by the pitchers.
  • Interestingly, the system makes its call exactly halfway across home plate> , where human umpires consider the strike zone to cover the whole 17 inches from the front to the back of home plate.

    How do major league rules define the strike zone with respect to the depth of the plate? And if it's not defined front-to-back, when will the rules committee get to work on this?

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