Making his third spring training start, Toronto Blue Jays right-hander Max Scherzer struck out six over 3 1/3 strong innings in a 5-0 win over the visiting Detroit Tigers on Saturday in Dunedin, Fla.Scherzer,
Max Scherzer certainly looked sharp on the way to a six-strikeout start against the Detroit Tigers Saturday afternoon. But as he prepares for the 18th season of his big-league career, he’s not about to get ahead of himself.
Max Scherzer has expressed his opinion regarding robot umps before, and he did it again during an appearance on The Athletic's Windup Podcast. Scherzer looks back at the playoffs last year and wonders what there is to fix.
Unfortunately for Scherzer, Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Trea Turner read all about it. So on Sunday, as Scherzer to
If it’s challenge-system feedback baseball wants this spring, then I think we found just the man to supply it.
Trea Turner decided to troll his former Washington Nationals teammate Max Scherzer with a first pitch challenge after the pitcher's viral comments about not being a fan of "robo-umps."
After challenges during a live batting practice resulted in multiple strikes being overturned to balls, San Diego Padres pitcher Yu Darvish, through his interpreter, became one of the first players to express his distaste for the system. On the flip side, fellow starting pitcher Corbin Burnes said he thought it was " great ."
Max Scherzer made waves in his first spring training start for the Toronto Blue Jays, not because of his pitching but because of his reaction after losing a challenge in MLB's new automated ball-strike system.
A player in the latter category was Max Scherzer of the Toronto Blue Jays. Scherzer is an old head, as he's over 40 years old and likely doesn't have many years left as a starting pitcher. For a player like Scherzer,
Max Scherzer, making his Blue Jays spring training debut, was on the wrong side of MLB’s automated ball-strike challenge system (ABS) twice on Tuesday afternoon. To the three-time Cy Young winner, the game has possibly veered too far into using ...
The Toronto Blue Jays got 3.2 solid innings out of veteran Max Scherzer on Sunday, all after Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Trea Turner seemingly poked the bear.
Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer shares his thoughts about the Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) challenge system ahead of Spring Training.
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