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MLB’s new automated strike zone has created a massive unintended consequence for hitters and pitchers

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The introduction of Major League Baseball’s automated balls and strikes challenge system was expected to change the sport in 2026. For the entire history of the game, players and managers had complained about missed calls at home plate, with arguments and on-field disagreements commonplace. 

And suddenly, for the first time ever, they could do something about it. 

If catchers, pitchers, or hitters believed an umpire missed a call, they were suddenly allowed to challenge it. Two challenges per game, with more if an individual challenge proves successful. 

Even in just the first month of the season, this new practice has heavily impacted the sport. Inning-ending calls have been overturned, giving hitters another opportunity that, in some cases, has led to game-changing home runs. Pitchers have benefited from catchers getting them out of innings by turning a ball into a strike with a well-timed challenge. 

But that’s all obvious. ABS though, has also created a completely unexpected change that’s significantly impacted both hitters and pitchers.

Walks have exploded under new ABS system

With the introduction of challenges, MLB had to essentially redefine the strike zone to ensure that the tracking system would consistently and accurately measure what actually is a strike or ball. As such, they created a new version of the zone that was based on a player’s specific characteristics.

According to the rule book, “The strike zone will be a two-dimensional rectangle that is set in the middle of home plate with the edges of the zone set to the width of home plate (17 inches) and the top and bottom adjusted based on each individual player’s height (53.5% of the batter’s height at the top and 27% at the bottom).” 

How does this differ from the previous definition? Ben Clemens at FanGraphs measured the change, relative to the 2025 regular season, and found that the zone has shrunk at the top of the zone and on the edges of the plate. 

How has this played out in practice?

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Well, the new strike zone and the obvious embarrassment of having a call overturned has changed how umpires call balls and strikes. With few exceptions, it seems as though they’ve become more stingy with called strikes, and the data bears that out. 

The league-wide walk rate in 2025 was 8.4%, and from 2021 to 2025, it never went below 8.2% or above 8.7%. Thus far in 2026? The walk rate is up to a whopping 9.6%. That is, by far, the highest walk rate of any full season over the past decade.

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Essentially, the league redefined the strike zone to make it a bit smaller than the zone previously used by umpires. Umpires, afraid of being overturned, or at least, more aware of the new zone and its limitations, have been calling fewer strikes. Hitters, no doubt instructed by their teams and aware of this new shift, have been taking more pitches. 

All these factors combined lead to more walks. A 1.2% increase year-over-year is massive in a sport as consistent as baseball.

What’s equally interesting though, is that while on base percentage league-wide is .322, the third-highest figure since 2016, because hitting has become so hard thanks to the increase in velocity and pitch development, batting averages are the lowest they’ve been over the last decade.  

So ABS changed the strike zone, making it smaller than in years past. Umpires adjusted, calling fewer strikes, hitters realized it and became more patient in the process, and now walks are the highest they’ve been in a decade. Now the question becomes, will pitchers adjust back and throw more strikes, even if it risks more hard contact. Just one of many changes brought in by MLB’s attempt to make the game better. 

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Massive fire destroys University of South Florida laboratory building: ‘Total loss’

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A massive fire broke out Saturday afternoon at a laboratory building on the University of South Florida campus in St. Petersburg, authorities said.

Campus police said fire crews were called to the Marine Science Laboratory building for a structure fire.

No injuries have been reported, and the building was safely evacuated, police said.

The cause of the fire is under investigation.

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Large plumes of gray smoke were seen rising from the building late Saturday.

According to the Tampa Bay Times, students and staff were alerted to the fire shortly before 6 p.m.

The school sent an alert reading: “Urgent Alert. Fire reported in MSL, Marine Science Lab. Evacuate building. Avoid area. Emergency personnel responding.”

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St. Petersburg Fire Chief Michael Lewis said more than 60 units and about 200 firefighters responded to the scene.

Lewis said around 9 p.m. that the fire was largely extinguished but that the building is likely “a total loss.”

“The entire roof has burned off,” he said, according to the report.

USF police said it will provide additional updates as more information becomes available.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Cameraman gets caught risking it all to film World Cup’s ‘sexiest fan’ in the Formula 1 paddock

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Sometimes we forget how hard it is to be a cameraman. You’ve got to focus on what you’re supposed to be shooting and block out all other distractions.

Of course, sometimes a little eye candy comes along and slips through the goalie, and that’s what happened to one cameraman — and you’ll see in a second why I’m fairly certain it was a cameraman — working in the Formula 1 Miami Grand Prix paddock.

Hey, he’s only human.

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After Friday’s Sprint Qualifying session, UK broadcaster Sky Sports was doing some analysis with 2009 World Champion Jenson Button, former driver Naomi Schiff and presenter Simon Lazenby.

However, their coverage was somewhat interrupted when the cameraman got a little distracted by a certain paddock guest.

I bet a couple of husbands got dirty looks from the missus when they yelled, “Hey, that’s Ivana Knoll!”

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That’s right, internet sleuths were quick to identify the 2018 World Cup’s “sexiest fan.”

Which is a heck of a title. Do you realize how many people were at that?!

The cameraman managed to get back on track, although it was probably good that one McLaren mechanic wasn’t handling any power tools when Knoll walked by.

That could’ve been disastrous.

I do think Knoll knew what she was doing. One does not stumble into the title of “sexiest fan.”

That’s not the kind of outfit you usually see in a busy paddock with tools and pieces of cars and big stacks of tires all over the place. But Knoll knew there would be cameras, and dammit, where there’s sports and cameras, there’s “World Cup sexiest fan” Ivana Knoll.

Maybe she’ll get a little more facetime at Sunday’s Grand Prix. It was announced on Saturday night that the race’s start time has been moved up three hours to 1 p.m. ET, in an attempt to avoid inclement weather later in the day.

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Trump on Iran Missile Capability: ‘I’d Like to Eliminate It’

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President Donald Trump addressed reporter questions Saturday as he prepared to board a plane, outlining his current posture on Iran’s latest proposal while indicating potential future military and diplomatic steps amid an ongoing standoff.

The post Trump on Iran Missile Capability: ‘I’d Like to Eliminate It’ appeared first on Breitbart.

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