Robot umpire software debuts at Atlantic League All-Star Game
Robot umpires have descended upon professional baseball.
The independent Atlantic League became the first American professional baseball league to use a computer to call balls and strikes at its All-Star Game on Wednesday night, Rob Maaddi of the Associated Press reports.
Plate umpire Brian deBrauwere wore an earpiece connected to an iPhone in his pocket that relayed the calls from a TrackMan computer system using Doppler radar.
"Until we can trust this system 100 percent, I still have to go back there with the intention of getting a pitch correct because if the system fails, it doesn't pick a pitch up. or if it registers a pitch that's a foot-and-a-half off the plate as a strike, I have to be prepared to correct that," deBrauwere said before the game.
MLB reportedly plans to test the Trackman software as part of a three-year partnership with the Atlantic League.
Baseball history has been made. The first pitch registered by the #TrackMan automated ball-strike system is a called strike in the #AtlanticLeague All-Star game. pic.twitter.com/o8oR6RxLnr
— Rob Rose (@RobRoseSports) July 10, 2019
HEADLINES
- Judge passes DiMaggio for 4th on Yankees' all-time HR list
- Skubal exits vs. Marlins with side tightness
- Every team in baseball is flawed this year. That makes things more exciting
- Cashman: Yankees view Volpe as starting SS beyond 2025
- Mets' McNeil ejected after called 3rd strike from former teammate deGrom