MLB deploys T-Mobile ABS system to review strike calls

Major League Baseball introduced an automated ball-strike challenge system this season in partnership with T-Mobile. The technology allows players to review close pitches using high-speed cameras and instant animations displayed on stadium screens. In a May 1 game at T-Mobile Park, the system confirmed an umpire's strike call on a pitch from Kansas City Royals pitcher Cole Ragans to Seattle Mariners hitter Leo Rivas.

Twelve Hawk-Eye cameras track each pitch and feed data over a private T-Mobile 5G network. The system delivers an average review time of 15.4 seconds, with latency around 2.3 milliseconds. Fans, players, and umpires see the animated result simultaneously on the big screen.

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Seattle Mariners celebrate walk-off 5-4 win over Oakland Athletics at T-Mobile Park.
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Mariners secure 5-4 walk-off win over Athletics

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The Seattle Mariners defeated the Oakland Athletics 5-4 on Wednesday at T-Mobile Park, thanks to consecutive hits from Cal Raleigh, Julio Rodríguez and Josh Naylor in the bottom of the ninth. Oakland's Nick Kurtz had tied the game with a solo home run earlier in the top of the ninth off Andrés Muñoz. The victory allowed Seattle to avoid a sweep after the Athletics took the first two games of the series.

Major League Baseball will eliminate the timer from the T-Mobile Home Run Derby this year and return to a swing-based system. The change takes effect for the event scheduled at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia on July 13.

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Major League Baseball has officially changed the scoring on a play from Tuesday's game to a four-base error on Los Angeles Angels right fielder Jo Adell.

A new fan craze called Tarps Off has taken hold at Major League Baseball games this season. It began at Busch Stadium in St. Louis with a group of college players and quickly expanded to other ballparks. The St. Louis Cardinals have embraced the energetic shirtless displays in their right-field stands.

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