In a moment that perfectly encapsulates the growing pains of Major League Baseball’s 2026 season, Pittsburgh Pirates infielder Nick Gonzales found himself at the center of a technological absurdity during Friday’s matchup against the Chicago Cubs. With the Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) system now a permanent fixture of the big leagues, players are still learning the nuances of the challenge mechanism—and as Gonzales discovered, sometimes the system acts faster than the human intent behind it.
The Sequence That Sparked Debate
The incident occurred in the seventh inning of Pittsburgh’s 2-0 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Facing Cubs reliever Caleb Thielbar, Gonzales was down 0-2 with one out and no one on. A pitch sailed toward the plate, and umpire Roberto Ortiz signaled a called third strike. In a reflex that has become common among players adjusting to the new era, Gonzales instinctively brought his right hand to his helmet—the universal signal to initiate an ABS challenge. However, he seemingly realized immediately that he didn’t want to burn one of his team’s precious challenges. He began walking toward the Pirates’ dugout, effectively abandoning the idea.
But the system, and umpire Roberto Ortiz, had already registered the gesture. Despite Gonzales attempting to retract the motion, Ortiz walked out from behind the plate to signal the review. The verdict from the ABS system was immediate: the pitch was outside. The strike call was overturned, and Gonzales was granted a reprieve, much to his own confusion. He eventually flied out to left field, but the moment highlighted a lingering uncertainty regarding how players should communicate their intent to challenge in the heat of the moment.
The New Era of ABS Challenges
The implementation of the Automated Ball-Strike challenge system in 2026 was designed to be a compromise between the precision of technology and the traditional human elements of the game. For years, the baseball community debated whether to replace umpires with a “robot umpire” that would call every pitch. The result, negotiated by the league and the players’ union, was the current challenge system. In this format, human umpires continue to call the game, but teams are allotted two challenges per game, which they retain if the review proves successful.
This system places a tremendous amount of agency on the players. The pitcher, catcher, and hitter are the only ones permitted to initiate a challenge. This creates high-pressure decisions: Do you save your challenge for a high-leverage moment later in the game, or do you burn it to overturn a strike that was mere centimeters off the plate? The Gonzales incident underscores the “human error” in the “challenge” aspect—not in the calling of the pitch, but in the signaling of the appeal itself.
The Managerial and Tactical Perspective
Pirates manager Don Kelly spoke to reporters after the game about the confusion. “That was an interesting one,” Kelly said. “I’m not sure verbally what was said there, and I don’t know if there was physical touch between the hand and the helmet. It’s new to all of us and how we’re going about it, and I think if the umpire deems that you make an intention to challenge, that’s what Roberto went with there.”
This highlights a secondary angle often overlooked: the relationship between the umpire and the player during a challenge. In this case, the umpire’s interpretation of Gonzales’s gesture became the governing factor. This introduces a “gray area” that the league will likely need to clarify as the season progresses. If a player touches their helmet to fix it or wipe sweat, but the umpire interprets it as a challenge, the game is paused. This friction point is currently one of the most discussed topics in MLB front offices.
Why the System Matters
The ABS challenge system is fundamentally about accountability. For over a century, the “human element” of the umpire was accepted as an inherent part of baseball’s character. However, with the rise of high-fidelity tracking technology, the margin for error became a source of significant fan and player frustration. The 2026 system attempts to thread the needle: it keeps the umpire in the loop, preserving the traditional structure of the game, while providing a safety valve for the most egregious missed calls.
However, as the season unfolds, we are seeing the unintended consequences of this “safety valve.” Players are now tasked with managing their pitch-by-pitch count, their team’s challenge allotment, and their own physical reactions. The Gonzales situation—winning a challenge he didn’t explicitly want—proves that the technology is binary, but the human implementation is far from it.
Future Implications
Looking ahead, this event might spark a rule refinement. Will the league require a verbal confirmation along with the helmet gesture? Could there be a “cooling off” period for players to revoke an accidental challenge? These are questions that will likely be addressed in the next collective bargaining session or via mid-season rule updates. The Pirates’ experience with Gonzales is likely to be studied as a case example of how not to standardize the gesture, pushing the league toward more explicit communication protocols.
Furthermore, the psychological toll on players cannot be understated. Knowing that every gesture could change the flow of the game adds a layer of mental taxation to an already difficult job. As batters like Gonzales face 95-mph fastballs, the ability to focus on the ball while simultaneously managing a technological interface is a challenge that baseball’s architects may not have fully accounted for.
Ultimately, while the Pirates secured a victory, the conversation following the game revolved entirely around the “phantom” challenge. It serves as a reminder that even as baseball pivots toward Silicon Valley-style precision, the game remains, at its core, a series of human interactions—complete with all the awkwardness, confusion, and accidental successes that entails.


