Reds Giants Spring Baseball
- Ross D. Franklin - AP
- Updated
San Francisco Giants' Bryce Eldridge smiles as he celebrates his run scored against the Cincinnati Reds during the second inning of a spring training baseball game Friday, March 6, 2026, in Scottsdale, Ariz.
Ross D. Franklin - APAs featured on
The robot-umpire system for overturning ball/strike calls is going to be used in regular-season games in the majors this year. The abbreviation for the setup is ABS, but the most important letters when it comes to the change just might be S-I-Z-E — as in the strike zone for some of the game’s tallest players. The top and the bottom of the strike zone for baseball’s biggest giants have long been two difficult areas for umpires. But the ABS system provides an opportunity for a closer look. San Francisco Giants rookie Bryce Eldridge, a 6-foot-7 slugger who got to use ABS in the minors, says he thinks it’s great for the game.
Most Popular
Articles
- Snow is likely on Wednesday, with Winter Weather Advisories up for parts of the Sierra
- Nevada Air National Guard deploys in support of Operation Epic Fury
- One person hospitalized after crash on McCarran between Plumas, Greensboro in Reno
- Historic home gains recognition for its role in women’s history
- Police seek hit-&-run suspect near Vassar Street; no threat to public
- Sparks Police say elderly man reported missing found safe
- K9 alert at industrial job site leads deputies to suspected drugs and two arrests
- Police seek duo in connection with setting car on fire in Sparks
- Truckers passing through Nevada grapple with second-fastest rising diesel prices
- Federal court upholds permit for Rhyolite Ridge lithium-boron project
