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Digital Baseball Umpires

Dekaner writes "Wired is running an article on an electronic umpire that tracks each baseball pitch and judges whether it is within the "strike zone" has been installed at 10 major league ballparks in the U.S. The QuesTec system uses several cameras that track each pitch and compare the machine's judgment with that of the umpire standing behind the catcher. At the end of each game it provides a summary of its ratings and compares them with the umpire's calls. In general there is reasonably good agreement. In a recent test the QuesTec system judged that 32.1 percent of pitches were within the "strike zone", while the umpire called 31.4 percent as strikes. However, the umpires association has filed a complaint about the system's unreliability and incapability to replace the human 3-D, real-time view. "

4 of 403 comments (clear)

  1. Right... by Prince_Ali · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Does anyone read:

    "However, the umpires association has filed a complaint about the system's unreliability and incapability to replace the human 3-D, real-time view."
    as, "It points out our mistakes!"

    1. Re:Right... by Yunzil · · Score: 4, Interesting

      By and large, this is a GREAT tool in that it will help get rid of the absurd variance in strike zones as called by different umps.

      Shrug. That's part of the game. Some umps have a wide strike zone. Some really squeeze it. Some allow a higher strike than others. As long as they are consistent, no one cares much.

      Ron Luciano had a story in one of his books about a game he called early in his career. The pitcher threw a pitch right around the top of the "official" strike zone. Ron called it a ball. The next pitch was right around the batter's knees. Ron called that a ball too. The catcher turned to him and said, "I'm not complaining, but you have to give me either the high pitch or the low pitch or we're going to be here all night." At that moment, Mr. Luciano was enlightened.

  2. I agree with the umps... Maybe by RustyTire · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I have been playing sports my entire life and I must say that it is the human factor that makes it interesting. To take all the errors out of sport is to take away something -- and as I have recieved many a bad call I can't believe I am saying this -- special from it.

    Then again, with all the money that is in sports these days maybe it is a good idea -- from the point of view of owners, players, and sponcers. I think it takes something away from the fans.

    --
    I do not control the Sig, the Sig controls me.
  3. Why remove the human element? by zptdooda · · Score: 4, Interesting

    "These are proud professionals who don't want to be evaluated by a faulty apparatus"

    Or even by a working apparatus.

    This can go wrong in so many ways, false positives and false negatives along every border of the strike zone. But aside from the mathematical reasons, why take away the human element even more from baseball?

    You know one of the most fun parts of playing sports in my neighbourhood as a kid was watching my big brother argue whether something was a goal or not, who was safe or out. It was subjective and it was fun!

    Now we have photo radar and cars that will apply the brakes themselves too. Sheesh.

    --
    Esteem isn't a zero sum game