By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
BigPaulSportsBigPaulSports
Notification Show More
Latest News
'We Do Miss Jude': Declan Rice Backs Bellingham for World Cup Campaign
‘We Do Miss Jude’: Declan Rice Backs Bellingham for World Cup Campaign
Game Analysis Sports News Sports Talk
Back on Spain's Radar for World Cup? Ansu Fati's Form Could Boost Hopes
Back on Spain’s Radar for World Cup? Ansu Fati’s Form Could Boost Hopes
Game Analysis Sports News Sports Talk
2025 College Football Week 7 Odds: Chris 'The Bear' Fallica's Expert Picks, Best Bets
2025 College Football Week 7 Odds: Chris ‘The Bear’ Fallica’s Expert Picks, Best Bets
Game Analysis Sports News Sports Talk
'Just a Thud:’ Chaos and Heartbreak for the Phillies -- Now Uncertainty Looms
‘Just a Thud:’ Chaos and Heartbreak for the Phillies — Now Uncertainty Looms
Game Analysis Sports News Sports Talk
Yankees OF Cody Bellinger Reportedly Expected to Opt Out of Contract
Yankees OF Cody Bellinger Reportedly Expected to Opt Out of Contract
Game Analysis Sports News Sports Talk
Aa
  • Big Paul Sports
  • Game Analysis
  • Registration
  • Member Login
Reading: Robot Umps Challenge System Approved For MLB in 2026
Share
Aa
BigPaulSportsBigPaulSports
  • Big Paul Sports
  • Game Analysis
  • Registration
  • Member Login
Search
  • Big Paul Sports
  • Game Analysis
  • Registration
  • Member Login
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
BigPaulSports > Blog > Game Analysis > Robot Umps Challenge System Approved For MLB in 2026
Game Analysis

Robot Umps Challenge System Approved For MLB in 2026

BigP
Last updated: 2025/09/23 at 6:05 PM
BigP Published September 23, 2025
Share
Robot Umps Challenge System Approved For MLB in 2026
SHARE

Robot umpires are getting called up to the big leagues next season.

Major League Baseball’s 11-man competition committee on Tuesday approved use of the Automated Ball/Strike System in the major leagues in 2026.

Human plate umpires will still call balls and strikes, but teams can challenge two calls per game and get additional appeals in extra innings. Challenges must be made by a pitcher, catcher or batter — signaled by tapping their helmet or cap — and a team retains its challenge if successful. Reviews will be shown as digital graphics on outfield videoboards.

Adding the robot umps is likely to cut down on ejections. MLB said 61.5% of ejections among players, managers and coaches last year were related to balls and strikes, as were 60.3% this season through Sunday. The figures include ejections for derogatory comments, throwing equipment while protesting calls and inappropriate conduct.

Big league umpires call roughly 94% of pitches correctly, according to UmpScorecards.

ABS, which utilizes Hawk-Eye cameras, has been tested in the minor leagues since 2019. The independent Atlantic League trialed the system at its 2019 All-Star Game and MLB installed the technology for that’s year Arizona Fall League of top prospects. The ABS was tried at eight of nine ballparks of the Low-A Southeast League in 2021, then moved up to Triple-A in 2022.

At Triple-A at the start of the 2023 season, half the games used the robots for ball/strike calls and half had a human making decisions subject to appeals by teams to the ABS.

ADVERTISEMENT

MLB switched Triple-A to an all-challenge system on June 26, 2024, then used the challenge system this year at 13 spring training ballparks hosting 19 teams for a total of 288 exhibition games. Teams won 52.2% of their ball/strike challenges (617 of 1,182) challenges.

At Triple-A this season, the average challenges per game increased to 4.2 from 3.9 through Sunday and the success rate dropped to 49.5% from 50.6%. Defenses were successful in 53.7% of challenges this year and offenses in 45%.

In the first test at the big League All-Star Game, four of five challenges of plate umpire Dan Iassogna’s calls were successful in July.

Teams in Triple-A do not get additional challenges in extra innings. The proposal approved Tuesday included a provision granting teams one additional challenge each inning if they don’t have challenges remaining.

MLB has experimented with different shapes and interpretations of the strike zone with ABS, including versions that were three-dimensional. Currently, it calls strikes solely based on where the ball crosses the midpoint of the plate, 8.5 inches from the front and the back. The top of the strike zone is 53.5% of batter height and the bottom 27%.

This will be MLB’s first major rule change since sweeping adjustments in 2024. Those included a pitch clock, restrictions on defensive shifts, pitcher disengagements such as pickoff attempts and larger bases.

The challenge system introduces ABS without eliminating pitch framing, a subtle art where catchers use their body and glove to try making borderline pitches look like strikes. Framing has become a critical skill for big league catchers, and there was concern that full-blown ABS would make some strong defensive catchers obsolete. Not that everyone loves it.

“The idea that people get paid for cheating, for stealing strikes, for moving a pitch that’s not a strike into the zone to fool the official and make it a strike is beyond my comprehension,” former manager Bobby Valentine said.

Texas manager Bruce Bochy, a big league catcher from 1978-87, maintained old-school umpires such as Bruce Froemming and Billy Williams never would have accepted pitch framing. He said they would have told him: “‘If you do that again, you’ll never get a strike.’ I’m cutting out some words.”

Management officials on the competition committee include Seattle chairman John Stanton, St. Louis CEO Bill DeWitt Jr., San Francisco chairman Greg Johnson, Colorado CEO Dick Monfort, Toronto CEO Mark Shapiro and Boston chairman Tom Werner.

Players include Arizona’s Corbin Burnes and Zac Gallen, Detroit’s Casey Mize, Seattle’s Cal Raleigh and the New York Yankees‘ Austin Slater, with the Chicago Cubs‘ Ian Happ at Detroit’s Casey Mize as alternates. The union representatives make their decisions based on input from players on the 30 teams.

Bill Miller is the umpire representative.

Reporting by The Associated Press.

Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!

What did you think of this story?


recommended

Item 1 of 3


Major League Baseball

Get more from the Major League Baseball Follow your favorites to get information about games, news and more


in this topic

You Might Also Like

‘We Do Miss Jude’: Declan Rice Backs Bellingham for World Cup Campaign

Back on Spain’s Radar for World Cup? Ansu Fati’s Form Could Boost Hopes

2025 College Football Week 7 Odds: Chris ‘The Bear’ Fallica’s Expert Picks, Best Bets

‘Just a Thud:’ Chaos and Heartbreak for the Phillies — Now Uncertainty Looms

TAGGED: mlb
BigP September 23, 2025
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Email Print

Follow US

Find US on Social Medias
Facebook Like
Twitter Follow
Youtube Subscribe
Telegram Follow
newsletter featurednewsletter featured

Weekly Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

    Popular News
    Best highlights by top college football recruits: Georgia QB commit Raiola stars in defeat
    NCAASports News

    Best highlights by top college football recruits: Georgia QB commit Raiola stars in defeat

    BigP BigP October 14, 2023
    NFL refs under scrutiny over multiple non-PI calls
    Betting tips for Dallas Cowboys-San Francisco 49ers
    Oregon St., Wazzu home games on CW, Fox in ’24
    Bills’ Allen: Diggs trade ‘hard’ but thankful for WR
    - Advertisement -
    Ad imageAd image
    [wpadinserter id="3"]

    Categories

    • Sports

    About US

    We offer information and tips on US Sports and evernts all over the world.
    Top Categories
    • Game Analysis
    • Services
    • Premium Content

    Subscribe US

    Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!

      © Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.

      Removed from reading list

      Undo
      Welcome Back!

      Sign in to your account

      Lost your password?