Invasion Of The Robot Umpires - IELTS Reading Answers & Explanations
From Cambridge IELTS 20 Academic Reading Test 2 · Part 3 · Questions 27–40
Reading Passage
Invasion of the Robot Umpires
A few years ago, Fred DeJesus from Brooklyn, New York became the first umpire in a minor league baseball game to use something called the Automated Ball-Strike System (ABS), often referred to as the ‘rob-umpire’. Instead of making any judgments himself about a strike*, DeJesus had decisions fed to him through an earpiece, connected to a modified missile-tracking system. The contraption looked like a large black pizza box with one glowing green eye, it was mounted above the press stand.
Major League Baseball (MLB), who had commissioned the system, wanted human umpires to announce the calls, just as they would have done in the past. When the first pitch came in, a recorded voice told DeJesus it was a strike. Previously, calling a strike was a judgment call on the part of the umpire. Even if the batter does not hit the ball, a pitch that passes through the ‘strike zone’ (an imaginary zone about seventeen inches wide, stretching from the batter’s knees to the middle of his chest) is considered a strike. During that first game, when DeJesus announced calls, there was no heckling and no shouted disagreement. Nobody said a word.
For a hundred and fifty years or so, the strike zone has been the game’s animating force - countless arguments between a team’s manager and the umpire have taken place over its boundaries and whether a ball had crossed through it. The rules of play have evolved in various stages. Today, everyone knows that you may scream your disagreement in an umpire’s face, but you must never shout personal abuse at them or touch them. That’s a no-no. When the robe-umpires came, however, the arguments stopped.
During the first robe-umpire season, players complained about some strange calls. In response, MLB decided to tweak the dimensions of the zone, and the following year the consensus was that ABS is profoundly consistent. MLB says the device is near-perfect, precise to within fractions of an inch. “It’ll reduce controversy in the game, and be good for the game,” says Rob Manfred, who is Commissioner for MLB. But the question is whether controversy is worth reducing, or whether it is the sign of a human hand.
A human, at least, yells back. When I spoke with Frank Viola, a coach for a North Carolina team, he said that ABS works as designed, but that it was also unforgiving and pedantic, almost legalistic. “Manfred is a lawyer,” Viola noted. Some pitchers have complained that, compared with a humans, the robot’s strike zone seems too precise. Viola was once a major-league player himself. When he was pitching, he explained, umpires rewarded skill. “Throw it where you aimed, and it would be a strike, even if it was an inch or two outside. There was a dialogue between pitcher and umpire.”
The executive tasked with running the experiment for MLB is Morgan Sword, who’s in charge of baseball operations. According to Sword, ABS was part of a larger project to make baseball more exciting since executives are terrified of losing younger fans, as has been the case with horse racing and boxing. He explains how they began the process by asking fans what version of baseball they found most exciting. The results showed that everyone wanted more action: more hits, more defense, more baserunning. This type of baseball essentially hasn’t existed since the 1960s, when the hundred-mile-an-hour fastball, which is difficult to hit and control, entered the game. It flattened the game into strikeouts, walks, and home runs - a type of play lacking much action.
Sword’s team brainstormed potential fixes. Any rule that existed, they talked about changing - from changing the bats to changing the geometry of the field. But while all of these were ruled out as potential fixes, ABS was seen as a perfect vehicle for change. According to Sword, once you get the technology right, you can load any strike zone you want into the system. “It might be a triangle, or a blob, or something shaped like Texas. Over time, as baseball evolves, ABS can allow the zone to change with it.”
“In the past twenty years, sports have moved away from judgment calls. Soccer has Video Assistant Referees (for offside decisions, for example). Tennis has Hawk-Eye (for line calls, for example). For almost a decade, baseball has used instant replay on the base paths. This is widely liked, even if the precision can sometimes cause problems. But these applications deal with something physical: bases, lines, goals. The boundaries of action are precise, delineated like the keys of a piano. This is not the case with ABS and the strike zone. Historically, a certain discretion has been appreciated.”
I decided to email Alva Noe, a professor at Berkeley University and a baseball fan, for his opinion. “Hardly a day goes by that I don’t wake up and run through the reasons that this [robe-umpires] is such a terrible idea,” he replied. He later told me, “This is part of a movement to use algorithms to take the hard choices of living out of life.” Perhaps he’s right. We watch baseball to kill time, not to maximize it. Some players I have met take a dissenting stance toward the robots too, believing that accuracy is not the answer.
According to Joe Russo, who plays for a New Jersey team, “With technology, people just want everything to be perfect. That’s not reality. I think perfect would be weird. Your teams are always winning, work is always just great, there’s always money in your pocket, your car never breaks down. What is there to talk about?”
*strike: a strike is when the batter swings at a ball and misses or when the batter does not swing at a ball that passes through the strike zone.
Questions
Questions 27–32 Yes / No / Not Given
Do the following statements agree with the claims of the writer in Reading Passage?
In boxes on your answer sheet, write
YES if the statement agrees with the claims of the writer
NO if the statement contradicts the claims of the writer
NOT GIVEN if it is impossible to say what the writer thinks about this
Questions 33–37 Summary Completion
Complete the summary using the list ofphrases, A-H, below.
Write the correct letter, A-H, in boxes on your answer sheet.
A pitch boundary
B numerous disputes
C team tactics
D subjective assessment
E widespread approval
F former roles
G total silence
H perceived area
Calls by the umpire
Even after ABS was developed, MLB still wanted human umpires to shout out decisions as they had in their 33. The umpire’s job had, at one time, required a 34 about whether a ball was a strike. A ball is considered a strike when the batter does not hit it and it crosses through a 35 extending approximately from the batter’s knee to his chest.
In the past, 36 over strike calls were not uncommon, but today everyone accepts the complete ban on pushing or shoving the umpire. One difference, however, is that during the first game DeJesus used ABS, strike calls were met with 37
Questions 38–40 Multiple Choice (One Answer)
Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.
Answers & Explanations Summary
| # | Answer | Evidence | Explanation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Q27 | NO | DeJesus had decisions fed to him through an earpiece | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that DeJesus did not decide what was a strike. He only received the decisions through an earpiece. Answer Explanation: The answer is NO. This means that DeJesus did not share decision-making about strikes with the ABS. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is NO because the passage explains that DeJesus did not make decisions himself. Instead, he received the strike calls through an earpiece connected to the ABS system. This shows he was not sharing decision-making; he was just announcing what the system told him. |
| Q28 | YES | In response, MLB decided to tweak the dimensions of the zone | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that MLB changed the size of the strike zone after hearing complaints from players. This means they listened to the players and believed the changes were necessary. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the MLB agreed to change the size of the strike zone because players complained about it. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is YES because the passage states that when players complained about strange calls, MLB decided to change the dimensions of the strike zone. This shows that they took the players' criticisms seriously and made changes. |
| Q29 | NOT GIVEN | But the question is whether controversy is worth reducing, or whether it is the sign of a human hand | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage asks if it is good to reduce arguments in baseball, but it does not provide clear information about MLB wanting to justify spending money on accuracy. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'NOT GIVEN' because the passage does not clearly say whether MLB justifies the money spent on improving the accuracy of ABS. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'NOT GIVEN' because the passage discusses the efforts of MLB to improve baseball and mentions the technology of ABS, but it does not specifically state that they want to justify the money spent on making ABS more accurate. |
| Q30 | NO | a type of play lacking much action | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that this kind of play does not have a lot of action. This means that it is not exciting. Answer Explanation: The answer is NO. This means that the writer does not think that the fastball made the game more exciting. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is NO because the passage explains that the fastball led to fewer exciting moments, resulting in more strikeouts, walks, and home runs. This lack of action is seen as not exciting. The writer mentions that after fastballs became common, baseball changed into a style lacking excitement, which does not agree with the statement. |
| Q31 | NOT GIVEN | Sword's team brainstormed potential fixes. Any rule that existed, they talked about changing - from changing the bats to changing the geometry of the field. But while all of these were ruled out as potential fixes, ABS was seen as a perfect vehicle for change | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that Sword's team thought about changing many rules, including the baseball bat, but then decided not to change them. It does not tell us if they argued over this. Answer Explanation: The answer means that we don't know if there was strong disagreement about changing the baseball bat. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is NOT GIVEN because the passage does not talk about whether there was a fierce debate about changing the baseball bat on Sword's team. It mentions that they brainstormed changes but does not describe any arguments or disagreements. |
| Q32 | YES | According to Sword, once you get the technology right, you can load any strike zone you want into the system. "It might be a triangle, or a blob, or something shaped like Texas. Over time, as baseball evolves, ABS can allow the zone to change with it." | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that if the technology works well, ABS can create any type of strike zone shape, like a triangle or even a shape like Texas. This means that ABS can change the strike zone whenever baseball changes. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the writer believes ABS can change the shape of the strike zone. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is YES because the passage explains that once the technology for ABS is right, it can allow the strike zone to change in different shapes. This shows that ABS makes changes to the shape of the strike zone possible. |
| Q33 | F | Major League Baseball (MLB), who had commissioned the system, wanted human umpires to announce the calls, just as they would have done in the past | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Major League Baseball (MLB) wanted human umpires to make decisions and announce them in the same way they did before the use of the Automated Ball-Strike System (ABS). This suggests that the old way of letting umpires make calls is still important to MLB. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'F', which means 'former roles'. This indicates that MLB wants umpires to return to their original way of making calls. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'F' because the excerpt shows that MLB wanted umpires to announce calls like they did in the past, referring to the 'former roles' of umpires. This emphasizes that even with the new technology (ABS), the job as it was done before is still valued. |
| Q34 | D | Previously, calling a strike was a judgment call on the part of the umpire | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that before the ABS, when the umpire called a strike, he had to make his own choice or decision, not just follow rules. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the umpire had to decide if the ball was a strike based on his opinion. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'subjective assessment' because before the Automated Ball-Strike System (ABS) was created, umpires had to use their own judgment to determine if a ball was a strike or not. This shows that calling strikes was not just about the rules, but also about what the umpire thought. |
| Q35 | H | a pitch that passes through the 'strike zone' (an imaginary zone about seventeen inches wide, stretching from the batter's knees to the middle of his chest) is considered a strike | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage describes that a strike is called when the ball goes through an area that is imagined, not a real line. This area goes from the knees to the chest of the batter. Answer Explanation: The answer is H, which means 'perceived area.' This means how people see or understand where something is. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'H' because the passage says that a ball is a strike if it passes through an imaginary zone that stretches from the batter's knees to the middle of his chest. This area is not a physical line but is understood as a 'perceived area'. |
| Q36 | B | For a hundred and fifty years or so, the strike zone has been the game's animating force-countless arguments between a team's manager and the umpire have taken place over its boundaries | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage tells us that for a long time, there have been many arguments in baseball about what counts as a strike. This means that in the past, people often disagreed about the calls the umpire made. Answer Explanation: The answer is 'B', which means there were many arguments in the past about strikes called by the umpire. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is 'B' because the passage explains that arguing about strike calls is very common in baseball history. It says, 'For a hundred and fifty years or so, the strike zone has been the game's animating force-countless arguments... have taken place over its boundaries...'. This shows how disputes were normal in the past. |
| Q37 | G | During that first game, when DeJesus announced calls, there was no heckling and no shouted disagreement. Nobody said a word | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that when DeJesus made calls during the game, everyone was quiet. There were no complaints or shouts. This shows that people accepted the robot umpire's decisions. Answer Explanation: The answer is G, which means a lot of quietness. No one said anything. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is G because during the first game with the robot umpires, nobody argued or complained. There was total silence when the umpire made calls, showing that players and fans accepted the decisions given by the Automated Ball-Strike System (ABS). This is in contrast to the past when there were often arguments about calls. |
| Q38 | B | When he was pitching, he explained, umpires rewarded skill. “Throw it where you aimed, and it would be a strike, even if it was an inch or two outside. There was a dialogue between pitcher and umpire.” | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains how umpires used to make calls based on their judgment. When pitchers aimed for a spot, even a little outside the strike zone, it could still be called a strike. There was communication or 'dialogue' between the pitcher and the umpire about these calls. Answer Explanation: The answer says that using ABS may reduce some of the appeal of the game. This means that with robots making the calls, the human connection and the excitement of arguments might go away. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is B because the passage talks about how ABS changes the nature of the game. It mentions that with the robot umpires, there are fewer arguments and this might take away from the excitement of the game. The word 'dialogue' in the excerpt highlights the personal interaction that used to make the game more engaging, which could be lost with ABS. |
| Q39 | D | According to Sword, ABS was part of a larger project to make baseball more exciting since executives are terrified of losing younger fans | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage explains that Sword believed using ABS would help make baseball fun and exciting for younger people because they are worried that young fans are not as interested in baseball anymore. Answer Explanation: The answer means that Morgan Sword wanted to make sure baseball stays interesting for young fans. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is about how Sword saw the Automated Ball-Strike System (ABS) as a way to make baseball more exciting and appealing to younger fans. He and his team wanted to know what kind of baseball fans found most exciting and learned that people wanted more action in the game. |
| Q40 | C | Some players I have met take a dissenting stance toward the robots too, believing that accuracy is not the answer | Excerpt/Passage Explanation: The passage says that some players do not agree with the robot umpires because they think that just being accurate is not good enough. They believe that the size of the strike zone needs some flexibility for the game to be enjoyable. Answer Explanation: The answer means that the writer included Not and Russo's thoughts to show that being correct in the game is not the same as having fun while watching it. Reason For Correctness: The correct answer is C because both Not and Russo express the idea that just being accurate or perfect in baseball does not mean that people will enjoy the game more. They suggest that the fun and excitement of baseball can come from imperfections and disagreements, making it more interesting for fans. |
