Giants catcher Daniel Susac loses both ABS challenges vs. ump Jen Pawol
Jen Pawol went 2-for-4 vs. the ABS challenge system, winning both initiated by the Giants' Daniel Susac but losing the Nationals' challenges.
WASHINGTON – Jen Pawol was behind the plate for her first major league game in the automated balls and strikes challenge system era. And the first woman to serve as an ump in a Major League Baseball game stood her ground against the so-called robots. Pawol called balls and strikes for the San Francisco Giants - Washington Nationals game Friday, April 17 and withstood a pair of challenges from Giants catcher Daniel Susac, with a pair of ball calls upheld quickly by the ABS system.
By the third inning, the Giants were out of challenges, while the Nationals successfully appealed a pair of calls during San Francisco’s 10-5 victory. To be sure, this was a solid standoff early in this ABS era. Entering Friday’s game, players were successful on 54% of their challenges to umpires, and the typical game averaged 4.
05 challenges. Pawol saw exactly four challenges and won two of them. Of course, ABS is relatively old news for those umpiring in Class AAA in recent years, where ABS was first deployed on a trial basis.
Pawol is technically still in the Class AAA ranks. She is on MLB’s list of call-up umpires who are based in Class AAA yet work major league games as fill-ins in the event of injuries, illnesses, vacations, or other forms of absence by the 76 full-time umps. That’s how she came to make her 2025 debut and on Aug.