Max Scherzer is not a fan of the ABS System as he wishes to be judged by humans. Ex-Marlins president blashed the pitcher for his stance.
While all of the attention will be on the pitching matchup that pits one of the greatest pitchers from St. Louis, Toronto's Max Scherzer, against the Cardinals'
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."
Replay technology has been part of Major League Baseball for over 15 years ago now, but the league’s ball-strike challenge experiment is a step too far for one future Hall of Famer. Max Scherzer, making his Blue Jays spring training debut,
Max Scherzer isn't a fan of MLB's automated ball-strike challenge system, telling reporters last week that he would prefer to be judged by humans. So Trea Turner—who saw those comments—chose to have a bit of fun at Scherzer's expense on Sunday,
Max Scherzer is 40 years old and chasing his third World Series championship. With time running out on his career, he wanted to play somewhere in 2025 that would give him a chance at another ring, and that’s how he ended up with the Toronto Blue Jays.
In the last decade, starting pitchers have suffered more injuries and become more disposable. But a three-time Cy Young winner says MLB should start "upping the rules."
Toronto Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer is finding his groove. Scherzer is feeling healthy and throwing smoke this spring.
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.
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 ."
Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer opened up after his former teammate challenged him on his first pitch. Here's what Scherzer had to say.