Early ABS challenges show MLB players' caution

Following Major League Baseball's introduction of the Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) challenge system this season—allowing teams two challenges per game on ball/strike calls with personalized strike zones—players and managers are approaching it cautiously. In the first 62 games, teams issued 227 challenges (3.7 per game), reflecting a learning curve as highlighted by early successes, misses, and reflections.

The first official challenge came Opening Night from New York Yankees' José Caballero against San Francisco Giants pitcher Logan Webb in the fourth inning—a called strike correctly upheld. Earlier, Aaron Judge passed on two high strikes. In the Yankees' next game, Judge successfully challenged a low ball, leading to a home run that broke a scoreless tie. In Seattle, the Yankees won all five challenges, with Caballero and Giancarlo Stanton overturning strikeouts, though they lost the game. Manager Aaron Boone noted the high-leverage impact. Some teams like Colorado and St. Louis had zero hitter challenges entering Tuesday; Atlanta lost both early ones. Seattle Mariners' Cal Raleigh regretted not challenging a borderline slider: “Looking back, yeah, I should’ve done it.” They didn't challenge at all in their 6-4 opener loss. Philadelphia's Brandon Marsh said, “We’re all still trying to get a good gauge for it.” San Diego's Craig Stammen wants more aggression: “I'd like to see us finish the game with no challenges left.” Oakland's Mark Kotsay discussed timing after passing on a key pitch to Nick Kurtz, who succeeded later. MLB data shows 55 ninth-inning and 12 full-count misses unchallenged. Successful challenges average +0.2 runs, with no direct loss cost.

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Brewers' Jacob Misiorowski strikes out a Red Sox batter at Fenway Park in a thrilling pitchers' duel.
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Brewers' Misiorowski strikes out 10 before faltering against Red Sox

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Jacob Misiorowski, coming off an 11-strikeout Opening Day, struck out 10 Red Sox batters in a strong start Tuesday at Fenway Park, matching Garrett Crochet in a pitchers' duel until command issues arose in the sixth inning. The Red Sox took a 3-1 lead after scoring three runs off Brewers reliever DL Hall following Misiorowski's exit. Meanwhile, second baseman Brice Turang sat out with a foot or ankle injury.

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.

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The Chicago Cubs defeated the San Diego Padres 5-4 on Wednesday afternoon at Petco Park, winning the three-game series. Pete Crow-Armstrong belted a two-run homer off starter Matt Waldron, his second straight day going deep. An automated ball-strike (ABS) challenge overturned a called ball on Waldron's knuckleball into a strike.

Willson Contreras, now with the Red Sox, took a lighthearted approach after getting hit by a pitch from Astros starter Mike Burrows. The incident occurred in the first inning of Friday night's game in Boston. Contreras retrieved the ball and flipped it back to the pitcher on his way to first base.

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Major League Baseball suspended Atlanta Braves pitcher Reynaldo López and Los Angeles Angels outfielder Jorge Soler for seven games each following a benches-clearing incident during Tuesday night's game at Angel Stadium. Both players received undisclosed fines, with López settling his appeal for a five-game ban effective immediately while Soler appeals his penalty. The clash stemmed from a high pitch after Soler homered and was hit by a pitch earlier.

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