The robo-umps are coming, and the players have concerns. Commissioner Rob Manfred announced last week that the automated ball-strike system (ABS) could be implemented in Major League Baseball as early as next season. Manfred is planning a proposal to employ the challenge system previously used in the minor leagues and in spring training. Advertisement Major […]
The robo-umps are coming, and the players have concerns.
Commissioner Rob Manfred announced last week that the automated ball-strike system (ABS) could be implemented in Major League Baseball as early as next season. Manfred is planning a proposal to employ the challenge system previously used in the minor leagues and in spring training.
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Major League players are conflicted — at best — about the potential change.
“Taking away the human element would ruin baseball,” one pitcher said.
The Athletic’s anonymous MLB player poll, conducted this spring, found that 63.4 percent of players were against robo-umps calling balls and strikes. Only 17.1 percent were in favor, while 19.4 percent were unsure.
“I hate it,” one player said.
“Absolutely not,” said another.
“It has proven ineffective in Triple A and everywhere they tested it,” one National League pitcher explained. “Why would you remove the human element? The game will fundamentally change in a way that fans are definitely not going to like. It will make injuries and the competitive nature of the game worse. There would be fewer balls in play and the games take longer. All proven.”
The pitcher then laughed.
“I haven’t thought about that at all, huh?” he said.
To be clear, it’s highly unlikely that robo-umps are actually coming — at least not in the way some players fear. What appears to be on its way is an ABS challenge system — as opposed to ABS calling every pitch — and that seemed a worthwhile middle ground to many players. Some who said they were against ABS in general said they were open to it as part of a challenge system.
“I think there’s a fine line,” an NL position player said. “I think the biggest thing is just trying to get those big calls. … I don’t think you get to the (point) where you take the human element out of it, but if we can improve the big missed calls, I think everybody will be pleased with that.”
Improved accuracy, of course, was the resounding argument of those players in favor of ABS, and many saw it as a way to help human umpires improve as well. An automated zone would evaluate umpires in real time and offer instant feedback, giving them a chance to adjust their sights if they miss a call.
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“It feels like the behind-the-plate umpire has more incentive to make the right call or at least give the right effort,” said an NL hitter in favor of ABS. “That feels like a good thing.”
The expected compromise was likely fueled by the deep antipathy players have for removing the human element from the game entirely. The player-umpire dynamic remains fundamental to the baseball experience — one that players believe provides an edge of sorts, or at least an ability to explore the edges. In the majors, many players argue, the ability to work with an umpire — to understand his quirks and adapt to his flaws — is an important part of playing the game. Umpires have a feel for the moment, pitchers have a feel for the umpire, and hitters have to feel some sense of uncertainty when deciding whether to swing. Mistakes might be a feature, not a bug.
“I like when you’re throwing a good game and dotting it up, you might get another half inch,” one NL pitcher said. “I like having that camaraderie, that respect between players and umpires. When that guy’s having a good game and we’re on the same page and everything’s clicking, that’s f—ing baseball. We don’t need a freaking robot.”
And while the ABS system would most directly affect umpires, players expressed concern about its impact on the other person behind the plate.
“I think catchers’ values are going to decrease,” one player said. “Framing is an art. There are guys who have risen up the ranks because they know how to frame well.”
Framing — the ability to receive a pitch so that it appears to be a strike — has become a revered and measurable talent, understood as a defining skill that separates elite catchers from lesser receivers. An automated zone would eliminate its value.
“All that work I did the last 15 years, out the door,” one catcher said.
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As another catcher put it: “That’s our food, stealing strikes.”
But it’s not only catchers who are concerned.
“It takes away every bit of what the catcher is trying to do,” one pitcher said. “(Their) job is to be able to receive and frame balls, and the umpires adjust to that and the hitter in the box. That’s kind of the cat-and-mouse game.”
Then there’s a mistrust of the technology itself. Players used to uncertainty on the edges have found a defined, computer-generated strike zone to be jarring.
“It feels like you’re throwing to a different zone,” one pitcher said.
“Rehabbing last year in Triple A and I had (the ABS system),” one outfielder said. “It was mind-blowing how small the zone is. I remember taking pitches low and away, and I figured I was down 0-1, and they called it a ball.”
Hitters become far less aggressive when they know a pitch just off the plate will be called a ball, which is why many opponents argue that ABS will slow down the game — something baseball has worked on in recent years to avoid. But some players are also worried that computers, too, can make mistakes.
“In Triple A last year, there were times you’d feel like you threw a ball right down the middle and it’s a ball,” one pitcher said. “And it’s like, whoa, whoa, whoa, something’s off there.”
How do you argue with a robot?
“I used it years ago when I was in the Fall League,” said one hitter. “Guys would bounce curveballs that somehow nicked the zone. It hit the plate, but it’s a strike somehow?”
One pitcher had a similar experience: “I pitched with it in a rehab game,” he said, “and it takes the top of the zone completely away. I’d throw one belt-high and it comes up on the scoreboard as two balls above. It just doesn’t feel like part of the game.”
Ultimately, the umpires are a part of the fabric of the game, just like the players themselves; most players and managers have considerable respect — admiration, even — for the work of umpires.
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“Good umpires are good umpires,” one player said.
“Most of the umpires are doing a very good job every single game,” said another. “Those guys’ jobs are incredibly hard, and 95, 96 percent of the time they’re doing what they’re asked to do.”
“If the umpires leave the game,” an AL starting pitcher said, “I don’t want to be a part of it.”
Technology has been a growing force in baseball for several decades, but the game’s best players still appreciate and long for the human element of the sport.
“I just like old-fashioned baseball,” one pitcher said. “Call it if it looks good.”
What is one change you would make to improve baseball on or off the field?
Work is work. It can be rewarding and even enjoyable, but it can also be maddening and tiring, whether you’re a writer, a teacher, a doctor, a landscaper, a tax collector, a shoe designer or a traffic cone inventor.
And it can be that way for baseball players, too. The Athletic asked more than 130 big leaguers: What is one change you would make to improve baseball on or off the field?
The players had ideas. Boy, did they ever.
“More hockey fights!” one major leaguer suggested. “How ’bout that? Let’s fight each other!”
Now we’re talking.
Here are just a few of the highlights breaking down those players’ thoughts.
‘Less games, more off days’
Most responses fell broadly into a few defined categories. One of the most popular dealt with the 162-game schedule.
“I really enjoyed the seven-inning doubleheaders (during the 2020 Covid season),” one player said. “And I would change it so we’d have less games, more off-days.”
He paused.
“And same pay,” he added, laughing.
“I think if you could keep the 162-game season but have every Monday off like the minors,” another player suggested. “Start the season a little earlier but have the consistency of a day off every week. I think you’d see a lot fewer soft-tissue injuries.”
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How to start the season earlier? One player suggested eliminating spring training — though, to be fair, a lot of players seem to like that idea if asked in late March — but many of those who focused on scheduling concerns seemed most interested in getting consistent breaks.
“We have talked about it as players all the time,” one said. “Some of the older guys who haven’t been in the minor leagues (since they introduced the Monday off day) don’t realize how nice it is. It’s not us saying, ‘Oh, we want to play less.’ It’s like, you have that Monday off day to either feel better or get collected. Maybe it would clean up some injuries, too.”
One player suggested fewer games would keep fans interested — “I just feel like the schedule is exhausting for people,” he said — while another suggested adjusting the schedule to play in the warmer southern cities early, saving the cooler northern cities for the summer, would keep players and fans happy. But not everyone is on board with cutting back on the number of days.
“My wife wouldn’t like this,” said one player, presumably double-checking that this survey would remain anonymous, “but I would make the season longer.”
‘Old-school baseball’
“Hot take,” said one player. “I think the shift was a competitive advantage for smarter teams and players. Don’t penalize the teams that do it better. Bring it back!”
Rule changes were the most popular theme among players. There were suggestions ranging from eliminating catcher’s interference — “Some guys could be purposely making their swings longer to get it!” — to moving the pitcher’s mound closer to home plate (you know, because 100-mph fastballs don’t get there quickly enough).
One of the more hitter-friendly suggestions was to bring back the 2019 baseballs — before they were allegedly juiced — while one of the less catcher-friendly suggestions was to bring back collisions.
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“I like the old sliding into bases, knock the catcher out,” one player said. “That’s why people cared so much about hockey. We’re entertainment.”
There was no shortage of suggested rule changes involving pitchers. One player talked about ending pickoff limitations, another suggested doing away with the three-batter minimum, and multiple pitchers said they should be able to step off the rubber with no one on base to call a timeout. You likely already read the player responses to the automated strike zone above — spoiler alert: they’re generally against it — and at least 10 players mentioned tweaks to the pitch clock, either eliminating it or lengthening it.
“It’s taken the thinking out of pitching,” one said.
When it comes to rule eliminations, one player was a “yes” across the board: “Remove all the rules they’ve added,” he said. “We should play old-school baseball.”
Of course, it is possible to both defend the old school and embrace some new ideas.
“I like the idea of making first base wider, deeper, so you don’t have those collisions at first on those bang-bang plays,” one player said. “Other than that, it’s America’s pastime for a reason. They knew what they were doing when they were making it. It’s perfect the way it is.”
‘Do what the NBA did’
While most players focused their suggestions on the field, others looked at baseball’s place in television, traditional journalism, and social media.
“Off the field? I’d say more marketing,” one player suggested. “Doing what the NBA did the last five years of really marketing players and better utilizing social media. I know we’re trying, but my wife, who doesn’t follow any sports, always sees basketball stuff come up. She’s on social media all the time, and she says she feels like she sees NBA stuff all the time, but never MLB.”
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That was a relatively popular critique.
“Better marketing of younger players and for younger fans,” one player said.
“Make clips, highlights and viewing of live games much easier,” said another.
“Promoting a wider array of players more often,” added yet another. “Rather than just the top eight guys consistently.”
That sentiment about broadening the array of players who get regular media exposure was echoed, including by one player who suggested a more concerted effort to make Spanish-speaking players more comfortable with English-speaking media.
“I’ve got two things,” one player said. “One, do the (World Baseball Classic) at the All-Star break. And two, do more, like, worldwide events. More (games in) England. More, like, Spain if there are stadiums to hold it. South America. Events around the world.”
Generally, the idea of promoting baseball — in different markets, to different fans, using a wider array of players — was the most common off-the-field suggestion. One player said he’d like to see more “Hard Knocks” style baseball documentaries.
Another said there should be more fan access in ballparks. Another said ticket prices should be slashed.
“I would just do cooler things for the fans to enjoy the game,” one player said, getting to the heart of the matter. “Like, I feel like the NFL and NBA have cooler jerseys. We could have some cooler stuff. We’re starting to do it with the City Connects, adding all the colors. And football and basketball games, they’re playing music while the game’s going on, maybe you could do something like that. Make it more entertaining.”
‘It’s kind of a messed-up system to begin with’
Players have long pushed in CBA negotiations for a quicker path to free agency and arbitration, but ownership naturally prefers more years of team control. It’s a well-established sticking point that was mentioned a handful of times in our survey.
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“The arbitration system,” said one player with limited service time. “I am an older player, and I’m not going to have much of a chance to earn a lot of money because the team controls me for several years. By the time I could even be a free agent, I will likely be near the end of my career. It’s kind of a messed-up system to begin with.”
One player suggested teams do more to help pay for housing, especially in spring training. Another suggested larger rosters to spread the workload and perhaps limit injuries. Among the less-obvious suggestions about the player experience: allowing players to be more creative in what they wear on the field; limiting the amateur draft to college players only; and an offseason trade deadline.
“Find a way to keep teams more competitive, I guess,” one player said. “To make games more meaningful at the end of the season when teams are out of it. You can’t do minor league style where there’s a first-half and second-half winner, but like, finding a way to make it more competitive all the way through.”
With an open-ended question like this, service time and the path to free agency are rarely far from the players’ minds.
“Unless you’re an absolute stud,” one said, “it takes players a long time to get established, get their feet under them and start making good money. If we could shorten rookie minimum or arbitration to two years, it could be good for the game.”
‘It would eliminate my job, but it would make it interesting’
The schedule. The rules. The money. The marketing. We expected these types of suggestions. We did not expect … this.
Match play, like in golf.
“Each inning is match play,” one player said, having clearly thought this through. “We’re at home and the other team goes 1-2-3 in the top of the first. Our guy hits a homer, we hit a walk-off in the bottom of the first. We win the first inning, and then it goes right to the top of the second.”
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The player — a pitcher — noted that such a setup could completely revolutionize pitching staffs, with quicker innings making it easier to use only the top arms.
“It would eliminate my job,” he said. “But it would make it interesting!”
His wasn’t the only out-of-the-box idea. One player called for expansion to 32 teams. Another requested more retractable roofs to avoid rain delays. Yet another recommended more demotions to the minor leagues — but for umpires, not players.
“You know in softball how they have the two bases at first?” one player said. “That would be a good one.”
Sure. Maybe. It’s at least more realistic than the proposal that extra innings be replaced by a two-player home run derby, or the lengthy and detailed suggestion — with a reference to Greg Maddux and an insistence that this would increase offense — that television remove the strike zone box from broadcasts (because the TV strike zone has distorted the impression of the strike zone and changed the way pitchers earn strikes on the edges … though it’s possible that might actually happen anyway?).
“From what I understand, the square is not the real strike zone anyway,” the player said.
That’s one way to think of changes outside of Major League Baseball itself.
Another way? Get back to the roots of the game by recommending a change in the culture of youth baseball, its demand for expensive tournaments, and its push toward early specialization.
“That system is totally broken,” one player said. “Yeah, exposure is great to get in front of the scouts and play, but I’m a firm believer that, if you’re good, they’re going to find you.
“Just let kids have fun.”
Editor’s note: Some player quotes included in this story have been lightly edited for length and clarity.
(Illustration: Dan Goldfarb / The Athletic; Photo: Norm Hall / Getty Images)
NRLW: Jacinta Carter on embracing the Cronulla lifestyle
After winning the premiership with Newcastle in her first season of NRLW, Jacinta Carter has now moved to Cronulla in search of opportunities and she’s loving life in the Shire. Chatting to Declan Byrne on ‘The Saturday Sledge’, Carter talks about how she’s embraced her new home, who sat her down to tell her what […]
After winning the premiership with Newcastle in her first season of NRLW, Jacinta Carter has now moved to Cronulla in search of opportunities and she’s loving life in the Shire. Chatting to Declan Byrne on ‘The Saturday Sledge’, Carter talks about how she’s embraced her new home, who sat her down to tell her what it means to be a Shark and her level of QLD Origin fandom as kid.
COLUMBIA, S.C. – South Carolina sophomore Joyce Edwards is back on international duty for USA Basketball as part of the six-woman 2025 USA 3×3 Nations League team competing at the 2025 FIBA 3×3 Nations League America Conferences July 21-27 in Punta Arenas, Chile. This tournament marks Edwards’ third USA Basketball event this summer, including her […]
COLUMBIA, S.C. – South Carolina sophomore Joyce Edwards is back on international duty for USA Basketball as part of the six-woman 2025 USA 3×3 Nations League team competing at the 2025 FIBA 3×3 Nations League America Conferences July 21-27 in Punta Arenas, Chile.
This tournament marks Edwards’ third USA Basketball event this summer, including her 3×3 debut at the USA Basketball 3X Nationals in May where she teamed with Tessa Johnson, Chloe Kitts and Maddy McDaniel to reach the semifinals. Earlier this month, Edwards helped the U.S. to gold at the 2025 FIBA Women’s AmeriCup in Santiago, Chile. It was her third international gold medal with USA Basketball.
The 2025 FIBA 3×3 Nations League America Conference features six three-game tournaments over seven days. The competition will run in a ‘stops’ format with multiple stops held over the course of the weeklong event. Teams will accumulate points based on their performance in each stop. Team members can substitute as needed for each day’s four-person entry.
The FIBA 3×3 Nations League will be a qualification route to the FIBA 3×3 U23 World Cup 2025. Conference winners will qualify for the event, set for Sept. 17-21 in Xiong An, China. China will receive automatic qualification along with the reigning champion USA team. The rest of the teams will come from the winners of each conference and the next teams in the FIBA 3×3 Nations League 2025 final standings.
Continue to check GamecocksOnline.com and the team’s social media accounts (@GamecockWBB) for the most up-to-date information on the women’s basketball season.
Tarleton State’s Prestina Ochonogor wins gold, sets new U-20 African Record at African U20 Championships
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STEPHENVILLE, Texas – Tarleton State freshman Prestina Ochonogor shined once again on the international stage taking home gold and setting a new African U20 record at the 2025 African U20 Championships in Abeokuta, Nigeria on Saturday. Ochonogor dominated with all three of her jumps exceeding 6.60 meters. She set […]
STEPHENVILLE, Texas – Tarleton State freshman Prestina Ochonogor shined once again on the international stage taking home gold and setting a new African U20 record at the 2025 African U20 Championships in Abeokuta, Nigeria on Saturday.
Ochonogor dominated with all three of her jumps exceeding 6.60 meters. She set a new season best and posted her third-best lifetime leap with a 6.71-meter jump. That leap established herself with the U20 African record and U20 African championships record as well.
The youngster breaks the U20 record previously held by fellow Nigerian Olympian, Ese Brume. Brume’s best leap of 6.61 meters came when she was 19 years and 162 days old. Ochonogor recently celebrated her 19th birthday, setting the new record at 19 years and 16 days old. Brume also held the meet record of 6.33 meters set over 10 years ago when the competition was in Addis Abada, Ethiopia.
The Bennin, Nigeria, native, has been setting constant records since joining the Tarleton State squad. In her first jump as a Texan, she set the new women’s indoor long jump school record and WAC Championships Meet record with a 6.49-meter jump. She bested herself later on in the competition re-breaking those records and setting a new all-time WAC record with a 6.64-meter leap. But she wasn’t done there. In the outdoor slate, she set the new school record at the Texas Relays. At the WAC Outdoor Championships, she tied the meet record with a 6.67-meter leap.
Ochonogor is no stranger to competing for Nigeria at the national level. A summer ago, Ochonogor jumped for Nigeria at the 2024 Paris Olympics. As one of the youngest competitors at the 2024 Paris Games and one of the youngest to compete for Nigeria, the then 17-year-old finished 12th in the women’s long jump.
In her first season as a collegiate athlete, the freshman brought home major accolades. She won the WAC long jump title in both the indoor and outdoor season and was a First Team All-American with an eighth-place finish at each NCAA National Championship. She also earned the WAC Outdoor Female Freshman of the Year, the second Texan this year to win the honor, joining indoor freshman Victoria Cameron.
At the end of the month, Ochonogor will compete at the Nigerian National Championships in the long jump. The freshman will be competing for a chance to earn a bid to the 2025 World Championships in Tokyo, Japan in September.
Canada falls to Serbia in men’s Volleyball Nations League
LJUBLJANA — The Canadian men’s volleyball team fell 3-1 to a Serbian team desperate to avoid relegation in Volleyball Nations League on Saturday. LJUBLJANA — The Canadian men’s volleyball team fell 3-1 to a Serbian team desperate to avoid relegation in Volleyball Nations League on Saturday. Serbia’s (15-25, 25-22, 25-18, 25-22) victory over the Canadians […]
LJUBLJANA — The Canadian men’s volleyball team fell 3-1 to a Serbian team desperate to avoid relegation in Volleyball Nations League on Saturday.
LJUBLJANA — The Canadian men’s volleyball team fell 3-1 to a Serbian team desperate to avoid relegation in Volleyball Nations League on Saturday.
Serbia’s (15-25, 25-22, 25-18, 25-22) victory over the Canadians assured the Serbians a berth in next year’s Nations League with a ranking of 15th out of 18 participating countries.
Canada, ranked 14th with a record of 4-7, will also return to Nations League in 2026. The Canadians wrap the VNL preliminary round Sunday against Ukraine.
Canada dominated the Serbians in the first set, but the latter adjusted to pull out the victory.
Serbia led in attack points (53-50), aces (4-3) and made fewer errors (26-29). Canada had the more effective block (8-4).
“We have to execute at a higher level if we want to be able to compete internationally,” observed Canadian head coach Dan Lewis.
“The statistics in general were not that bad, plus minus was good overall, but we didn’t have enough serving pressure on them and our attack dropped to a level that’s not sufficient enough to compete at a high level.
“We’re not digging enough balls and we’re not presenting ourselves with enough block positive and slow down transition opportunities and this has been a theme for some of our matches. We need to improve on this if we’re going to win.”
Brodie Hofer of Langley, B.C., (15 points), Isaac Heslinga of Orangeville, Ont., (14 points), and Toronto’s Xander Wassenaar Ketrzynski (11) led scoring for Canada.
Serbia’s Drazen Luburić led all scorers with 20 points (18 kills and 2 aces)
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 19, 2025.
Australian captain Bronte Halligan (right) battles it out with Greek player Sofia Tornarou. (EPA PHOTO) Australia’s women’s water polo team suffered a heartbreaking loss in the dying seconds of their quarter-final at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore. The Aussie Stingers and Greece were locked at 7-7 with eight seconds left on Saturday, but Australia […]
Australian captain Bronte Halligan (right) battles it out with Greek player Sofia Tornarou. (EPA PHOTO)
Australia’s women’s water polo team suffered a heartbreaking loss in the dying seconds of their quarter-final at the World Aquatics Championships in Singapore.
The Aussie Stingers and Greece were locked at 7-7 with eight seconds left on Saturday, but Australia inexplicably turned over the ball and the Greeks swam towards the Aussie goal, shooting from outside to beat the buzzer, scoring with two seconds left.
There were never more than two goals separating the teams all game, and the Aussies seemed to have the momentum in the final quarter.
It was always going to be an emotion-charged game, the two sides having faced off in the quarter-finals at the Paris Olympics. Australia won that game and went on to claim the silver medal. But, like Australia, the Greeks have a new-look team and have already achieved strong results in this Olympic cycle.
Stingers captain and dual Olympian Bronte Halligan said the team were devastated they won’t have the opportunity to play for a world championship medal.
“That’s a really tough result. As Bec (Rippon, Stingers coach) said, quarter-final water polo you’ve got to stick it out right to the end and we did,” Halligan said.
“The Greeks also did that, but we showed real heart out there and I couldn’t be more proud of our girls.
“It’s a tough loss and it’s going to sting for a little bit, but the girls will hold their heads high knowing we did everything we could have.
“This is a stepping stone and we really want to build this squad, we have a lot more goals. I think it’s exciting to see where we are going to go over the next few years during this Olympic cycle.”
Rippon echoed Halligan’s sentiment, saying despite the disappointment of the loss there is a lot they can build on as they set their sights on LA 2028.
“We spoke about it before the game, that this is what we do all the hard work for, these big moments, and we go out there and leave everything we’ve got in the pool, and I think we did that tonight,” Rippon said.
“It is a heartbreaking way to lose, but we did leave everything out there and I’m proud of the team.”
Australia now meet Japan in the classification matches on Monday.