Calling it a historic moment, Commissioner Bud Selig said Thursday that Major League Baseball plans to expand its video review process next season, giving managers a tool they've never had in an effort to dramatically reduce the number of incorrect calls made in games.
Selig made the announcement after two days of meetings with representatives of the 30 teams. The proposal is to be voted on by the owners in November.
Managers will be allowed one challenge over the first six innings of a game and two from the seventh inning until the completion of the game. Calls that are challenged will be reviewed by a crew in MLB headquarters in New York City, which will make a final ruling.
A manager who sees a call he feels is incorrect can file a challenge with the crew chief or home plate umpire. Only reviewable plays can be challenged. Non-reviewable plays can still be argued by managers, who can request that the umpires discuss it to see if another member of the crew saw the play differently. Reviewable plays cannot be argued by the manager.
Challenges not used in the first six innings will not carry over, and a manager who wins a challenge will retain it.
http://espn.go.com/mlb/story/_/id/95706 ... challenges
Mixed feeling for me. I know I will be the only one,,, but baseball (to me) is all about the human element, and I can tolerate a few mistakes. Baseball is a story, a drama,,,, not a computer game. But I digress... The eyes in the sky will help improve accuracy, and the challenges will be neat, I guess... provided the manager has to throw a water cooler on the field to trigger the review.
