Minor League Baseball The independent
Atlantic League first used ABS, nicknamed "robot umpires", during its 2019 all-star game.
Umpires used earpieces to receive ball-strike calls using
TrackMan technology. Umpires could make a call based on the automated message, or could make their own call if the automated system malfunctioned or registered a call with which the umpire disagreed. The
Arizona Fall League began using ABS during its 2021 season. The technology drew complaints from players and fans for its treatment of
breaking balls as strikes even when they break and drop out of the strike zone. Human umpires were obligated to make a call based on ABS, and players could be ejected if they contested a call, as with all ball-strike calls. The
Florida State League, a
low-A league in Florida, used ABS in its 2021 season. The
Major League Baseball Umpires Association (MLBUA) agreed to cooperate and assist if MLB commissioner
Rob Manfred decided to use ABS at the major league level, as part of the MLBUA's contract with MLB in 2020. Five
Triple-A baseball stadiums used ABS in 2022, and the system expanded to all stadiums at that level in 2023. In 2023, Triple-A baseball used ABS with and without a challenge system; without a challenge system, human umpires relayed automated calls, and with the system, an automated call would be used only when a team requested a challenge. In 2024, Triple-A teams that played six-game series first used ABS without a challenge system for the first three games, and with challenges for the latter three; starting on June 25, MLB announced that only the challenge system would be used. In 2024, 51% of challenges in Triple-A games were successful. Unlike in MLB, KBO uses ABS to call balls and strikes automatically.
Major League Baseball ABS was in place for
Spring Training before the
2025 MLB season. MLB used ABS for the
2025 All-Star Game, with a similar configuration to spring training: each team had two challenges, which could be requested by the pitcher, catcher, or hitter immediately after a call.
Cal Raleigh, the first player to request an ABS challenge in an MLB All-Star Game, successfully challenged the umpire's ball call of a pitch he caught from
Tarik Skubal, resulting in
Manny Machado being called out on strikes.
Jacob Wilson was the first batter to challenge a call, successfully getting a pitch from
MacKenzie Gore changed from a strike to a ball. In September 2025, MLB's competition committee approved use of ABS beginning with the
2026 season, with similar processes to those used in Spring Training and the All-Star Game. Each team starts with two challenges, retains a challenge if it is successful, and may receive additional challenges in extra innings. The following day,
Francisco Álvarez, catcher for the
New York Mets, made the first successful ABS challenge in an MLB regular season game, after he challenged a ball call on a pitch by
Freddy Peralta. The call was changed to a strike, resulting in the batter,
Oneil Cruz, striking out. ==Mechanics==