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Phillies' Trea Turner Trolls Blue Jays' Max Scherzer by Challenging 1st Pitch of Game
Max Scherzer strikes out 4, allows 1 run and hands out zero high-fives in Blue Jays debut
Max Scherzer is embracing the long road back. The three-time Cy Young Award winner allowed one run over two innings in his spring training debut with the Toronto Blue Jays on Tuesday, flashing a little bit of the fire that has become his trademark during his 18-year career.
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Spring training roundup: Max Scherzer solid in Jays debut
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'
Kyle Finnegan returns to the Nationals and Max Scherzer dominates. Subscribe to MLB Morning Lineup wherever you get your podcasts
“What In God’s Name Is He Talking About?” – Ex-Marlins President Blasts Max Scherzer Over ABS Stance
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.
The Toronto Blue Jays have started their spring training schedule ahead of the 2025 season. Their complex in Dunedin, Florida is one of 13 spring stadiums equipped with the Automated Balls Strikes System,
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,
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Scherzer had said about ABS, "We're humans. Can we just be judged by humans?” And that was what ultimately inspired Turner to challenge the first pitch as a prank —
Now, MLB is using the ABS system during spring training games. While so far the reviews have been positive, new Toronto Blue Jays starting pitcher Max Scherzer admitted he wasn't a fan, praising MLB umpires and asking "can't we just be judged by humans?"
Blue Jays pitcher Max Scherzer opened up after his former teammate challenged him on his first pitch. Here's what Scherzer had to say.
Somebody bet Trea Turner during stretches -- it might have been Phillies second baseman Bryson Stott -- that he would not challenge Max Scherzer’s first pitch in Sunday afternoon’s Grapefruit League game at TD Ballpark.
Unfortunately for Scherzer, Philadelphia Phillies shortstop Trea Turner read all about it. So on Sunday, as Scherzer to
Max Scherzer is not a fan of MLB's new ABS challenge system. When asked about the Automated Ball-Strike System (ABS) last week, a rule implementation in which
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