Yankees SS José Caballero makes MLB history with first-ever ABS challenge, which he loses

Story by
Yankees SS José Caballero makes MLB history with first-ever ABS challenge, which he loses
Chris CwikContributing writer
Thu, March 26, 2026 at 2:30 AM GMT+1
·
3 min read
246
Add Yahoo Sports on Google

After tinkering with the Automated Ball-Strike (ABS) challenge system for a few years, MLB brought the technology to the regular season in 2026. It didn’t take long before the new technology was put to use.

In the fourth inning of the New York Yankees’ 7-0 Opening Night victory over the San Francisco Giants on Wednesday, José Caballero became the first MLB player to initiate an ABS challenge.

On the first pitch of the inning, the Yankees’ shortstop challenged a strike call from home plate umpire Bill Miller. It proved to be unsuccessful, giving Caballero an 0-1 count. He grounded out on an 0-2 count two pitches later.

Awkwardly, this all happened while the Netflix broadcast was interviewing Giants manager Tony Vitello. So it took a while for the moment to be acknowledged.

This content is not available due to your privacy preferences.
Update your settings here to see it.

The implementation of the ABS challenge system in the MLB regular season was years in the making. MLB started experimenting with the technology years ago but initially limited it to the minor leagues.

That changed in 2025, when the league allowed ABS challenges to take place during spring training and the 2025 All-Star Game. The process went pretty smoothly, leading to the Joint Competition Committee’s vote in September to approve the use of the ABS challenge system during the 2026 MLB regular season and postseason.

Draft your Yahoo Fantasy Baseball team for the 2026 MLB Season

Here’s how the ABS challenge system will work in 2026:

Each team will be given two challenges to start the contest. Every successful challenge will be retained by that team. In other words, if you challenge a call and it’s overturned, you keep your challenge and can use it later in the contest. After two unsuccessful challenges, you’re out of challenges for the game unless it goes to extra innings.

In order to initiate a challenge, the batter, pitcher or catcher must tap their head immediately after the call. If the challenge was made in the appropriate amount of time, the umpire will announce the challenge and an ABS graphic will be displayed in the stadium showing the location of the pitch. The umpire will then announce the result of the call to the stadium.

If a game goes to extra innings, teams will be given one extra challenge per inning if they’ve run out of challenges during the contest. If a team carries over challenges into extra innings, they will not receive an additional challenge in extras.

If a position player is on the mound, the ABS challenge system cannot be used.

When the ABS challenge system was used in spring training, players challenged calls early and often during games. It’s unclear whether that particular strategy will carry over into the regular season or if the early challenges were a way for teams and players to get used to the tactic.

While there are some clear advantages to getting a key call overturned early in a contest, using ABS to secure a game-ending strikeout or extend a final at-bat one more pitch could drastically alter the outcome of a game.

The first ABS challenge of 2026 is in the books. There will, undoubtedly, be many more to come.

CWS
2
MIL
14
Final
Jacob Misiorowski sets Brewers Opening Day record with 11 strikeouts
Broadway star botches Star Spangled Banner in Mets’ season opener
Dodgers are a Death Star: Can they be stopped?
Ohtani tops list of most-popular MLB jerseys — again
ADVERTISEMENT
NYY
7
SF
0
Final
Aaron Judge makes history — with golden sombrero
Yahoo Sports
Yankees thump Giants behind Max Fried’s gem
Yahoo Sports
The Tony Vitello era in San Francisco begins
Yahoo Sports
ADVERTISEMENT

References

Leave a Reply