
Just Blaze doesnt know how much this beat really means to me 🤧
King Solomon
10K posts

@NegativeXP24
All I need is a pair of boots and a backpack.

Just Blaze doesnt know how much this beat really means to me 🤧











Rules for the strike zone. I suppose that’s one way not to change the rules but still change the rules… Grok put together a comprehensive understanding of what is happening: The MLB strike zone has two relevant definitions/identification methods in 2026: the longstanding official rulebook definition (used for initial human umpire calls and unchanged) and the precise, player-specific identification used by the new Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) Challenge System (powered by T-Mobile and Hawk-Eye technology), which serves as the definitive authority on challenges.** ### Official Rulebook Definition (MLB Official Baseball Rules / Glossary) The strike zone is the area **over home plate** from the midpoint between the batter’s shoulders and the top of the uniform pants (when the batter is in his natural stance and prepared to swing) down to a point just below the kneecap - Any part of the ball must pass over any part of home plate while in that vertical area for it to be a strike. - The zone is technically three-dimensional (a box) but judged as the pitch crosses home plate. - This has been in place since 1996 (with minor historical tweaks before that; e.g., 1988–95 used the top of the knees as the bottom). - Human home-plate umpires make the initial ball/strike call based on this visual definition relative to the batter’s stance. ### ABS Challenge System Identification (New for 2026) Starting Opening Day 2026, MLB introduced the ABS Challenge System. Players (batter, pitcher, or catcher) can challenge an umpire’s ball/strike call by tapping their hat/helmet. The system then uses Hawk-Eye tracking (12 cameras per ballpark, same as Statcast, transmitted via 5G) to determine the result definitively. The ABS strike zone is **individualized per player** and measured with extreme precision (independent testers use manual measurement + biomechanical analysis; standing height taken without cleats to prevent manipulation). It is **two-dimensional** (a flat vertical plane/rectangle at the exact center of home plate) rather than the rulebook’s 3D box. **Exact specifications:** - **Width**: 17 inches (identical to the full width of home plate). - **Top boundary**: 53.5% of the player’s measured standing height. - **Bottom boundary**: 27% of the player’s measured standing height. - **Depth/plane of evaluation**: The ball’s location is captured precisely as it passes through the **midpoint** (center) of home plate — 8.5 inches from the front edge and 8.5 inches from the back edge. (Earlier tests at the front of the plate were abandoned because they produced inconsistent results, especially with breaking balls.) This creates a slightly smaller zone overall than the typical human-umpire-called zone (which MLB data showed was roughly 55.6% at the top and 24.2% at the bottom, and about 6 square inches larger in a 2-2 count) **Key operational notes for 2026 identification:** - The zone is fixed for each player for the entire season (pre-measured by MLB). - Challenges are not allowed when a position player is pitching. - Results are displayed instantly on stadium scoreboards and broadcasts with a graphic showing the ball’s exact location relative to the individualized zone. - The system was tested extensively in the minors and spring training; the 2D midpoint plane was chosen for consistency (3D versions were tested but dropped due to issues with pitch movement). In practice for 2026 games: The umpire still makes the on-field call using the rulebook definition, but any successful challenge overrides it with the ABS measurement above. This hybrid approach ensures the “identification” of strikes is now technologically precise and standardized while preserving the human element for non-challenged pitches. These details come directly from MLB’s official announcements and Statcast/ABS dashboard documentation. The rulebook itself has not changed the core definition — only the enforcement/identification method via ABS has been added for challenges.



Judging by my Instagram feed, it seems Glock switches are perfectly legal now (they're not - this is sarcasm to be clear)... #CityLife #StLouis #switch #based #2nd #2a #switch #glock #extendo #ProblemSolver #crime #urban #democrats #twotierjustice







This was an attack on the lower and the middle class. Treason!

