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MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred eyeing 2026 for full-time move to automated strike zone system

Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said the 2026 regular season is a "viable option" for adopting the use of an automated strike zone.

Baseball purists aren't going to love this one.

Major League Baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred said Tuesday he's aiming to test an automated strike zone at spring training next year so the system can be a full go for 2026.

"We need '25 to do the spring training test if we can get these issues resolved, which will make '26 a viable possibility," Manfred said. "Is that going to be the year? I'm not going to be flat-footed on that issue."

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Automated strike zones were a hot topic on an episode of the now-defunct "Real Sports" on HBO in 2017, but Major League Baseball finally acted in 2019.

The automated balls and strikes (ABS) system started on an experimental basis and, beginning last year, has been used at all Triple-A ballparks.

The league toyed with two different systems — a challenge system where umps would call the game as normal while teams have a certain number of challenges and a full ABS system. Manfred said players were "almost 100%" in favor of the former.

But, he says, "when you bring something to the big leagues, you got to make sure you've got it right," and there are "technical issues surrounding the definition of the strike zone."

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Balls and strikes have been called by humans for nearly 150 years, and many are afraid of change. However, officiating in all sports is under increasing scrutiny.

This would be far from the first major change Manfred has made to the game. He has been at the forefront of major changes to baseball, most notably those he made ahead of the 2023 season to quicken the pace of play by adding a pitch timer, larger bases and pickoff limitations. To his credit, they have worked.

According to Baseball Reference, the average nine-inning game last year took two hours and 39 minutes to complete, more than 31 minutes faster than the all-time longest time of 3:10 in 2021. It was the first time the average nine-inning game took less than three hours to complete since 2015.

And the 2:39 duration was the fastest since 1985, when the average nine-inning contest took the same amount of time. This year, nine-inning contests last two hours and 35 minutes on average. 

Only 0.4% of games took over 3½ hours, as opposed to 18.7% in 2021. And 30.5% of games in 2023 took less than 2½ hours versus 2.5% three years ago.

The rule changes also led to an increase in attendance despite cries from fans that the game was changing too much. MLB drew 70.7 million fans to its stadiums in 2023, the most since 2017.

This year's attendance numbers are on pace to finish lower than that number, but it should be noted that there is still plenty of summer left.

Manfred has said he will retire from his role after his contract expires in 2029.

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