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Replay technology has been part of Major League Baseball for over 15 years ago now, but the league’s ball-strike challenge experiment is a step too far for one future Hall of Famer. Max Scherzer, making his Blue Jays spring training debut,
Max Scherzer is not a fan of the ABS System as he wishes to be judged by humans. Ex-Marlins president blashed the pitcher for his stance.
MLB is experimenting with an Automated Ball-Strike challenge system in roughly half of the games this spring training, and there have already been a few challenges that aged rather poorly, likely making the player who challenged the call wish they could go back in time and undo the decision.
Signing three-time Cy Young Award winner Max Scherzer to a one-year, $15.5 million contract in free agency, Toronto bolstered its starting pitching rotation. The 40-year-old Scher
After his first appearance of the spring on Tuesday for the Toronto Blue Jays, the newly signed Max Scherzer, who was unsuccessful in his two challenge attempts, left no doubts as
A player in the latter category was Max Scherzer of the Toronto Blue Jays. Scherzer is an old head, as he's over 40 years old and likely doesn't have many years left as a starting pitcher. For a player like Scherzer,
Max Scherzer made waves in his first spring training start for the Toronto Blue Jays, not because of his pitching but because of his reaction after losing a challenge in MLB's new automated ball-strike system.
Can technology replace humans? The post "Can We Just Be Judged By Humans?": Max Scherzer Sends Strong Message to MLB After His Robo-Ump Nightmare appeared first on EssentiallySports.