Peanuts, Cracker Jacks, and Boring Ass Baseball
On Tuesday, Major League Baseball will be hosting its 83rd
All-Star Game in Kansas City. This Midsummer Classic is a welcomed break from
the regular season as it allows players and fantasy owners a few days to relax
from the 162-game season. Fans love all the hoopla, including the ever popular
Home Run Derby held Monday. It allows general managers to review their teams
and evaluate them going into the unofficial second half of the season. It even
allows ESPN to host something called “The ESPYS” the day after the game. The
game is also a huge crock of shit.
My biggest pet peeve of the MLB All-Star game is the winning
team determines home field advantage for the World Series. An exhibition game
in July featuring many players who won’t be playing in October will play an
integral part for the championship. This made no sense in 2003 when this rule
was created and it doesn’t make sense now. The rule came as a result of the
2002 All-Star Game, which resulted in a tie. Both managers ran out of players
after 11 innings and asked Commissioner Bud Selig, who was in attendance, how
to proceed. Selig agreed with both managers that playing further would be an
enormous injury risk and declared the game a tie. All the fans at Miller Park
in Milwaukee booed the decision and ruined Bud Selig’s homecoming. Selig was
the former owner of the Milwaukee Brewers and this was supposed to a defining
highlight of his tenure, bringing this game back to his city. Instead, the
media ripped him a new one and he looked like a douche. Rather than accept the
2002 game as an aberration and leave it as is, Selig tweaked some rules about
expanded rosters, re-entry into the game, and the home field rule.
The funny thing about all the rule changes is it does
nothing to ensure there won’t be another tie in the All-Star Game. It has some
measures in place to go beyond 11 innings, but not too much longer. Selig
basically took this 1987 Toyota Tercel of a game and gave it a new paint job.
It might look nicer, but it is still the same shitty car. If Selig wanted to
implement the “This One Counts” message with more validity, he’d address my
second beef with the All-Star Game.
Since 1970, the starters for both teams have been chosen by
the fans. This was baseball’s way of thanking their fans for their loyalty and
their ability to put up with $5 hot dogs and $9 beers. Unfortunately, the fans
are fucking idiots. The fans vote for players like they would their 6th
grade president; they vote for their friend. This year is a prime example. The
San Francisco Giants encouraged their fans to vote for only Giants in the final
week of voting and those homos listened. They got three players into the
starting lineup (Buster Posey, Pablo Sandoval, and Melky Cabrera) that had no
busy starting. At least Posey and Cabrera had the numbers to make the All-Star
team. Sandoval shouldn’t be invited to any all-star event this year unless it
featured competitive eating. If you don’t believe Giants fans stuffed the
ballots, Freddy Sanchez finished fourth among second basemen. Sanchez has
played in as many games as you have this year. The fans were able to vote for
the starters prior to 1970, but the commissioner at the time stripped the fans
that right after they abused it and stuffed the ballots with undeserving
players. Maybe it is time for Selig to sack up and do the same.
The rest of the team is selected by players’ vote and the choice
of the All-Star Game’s manager (always the previous World Series’ managers).
The manager’s role is critical as he needs to adhere to another rule: each team
needs a representative. This creates some notable omissions each year as
deserving players are left off the roster because a San Diego Padre needs to
make the team. Discussing the snubs is part of the yearly tradition with this
game. This year had an interesting wrinkle. Dusty Baker of the Cincinnati Reds
indicated that National League manager, the alcoholic Tony La Russa, snubbed
some Reds players due to a grudge from a 2010 brawl. During the brawl, Reds
pitcher Johnny Cueto went all Cobra Kai on La Russa’s Cardinals and kicked
catcher Jason LaRue in the head, giving him a career-ending concussion. Cueto
was among the snubs. La Russa offered a half-assed explanation on why Cueto
didn’t make the team, but most agreed the snub wasn’t as bad as Baker made it
out to be.
Bud Selig is trying to have his cake and eat it too. On one
end, the team is comprised of players as voted by biased fans and coaches. The
players are not exactly giving 100% effort in this glorified exhibition game
(it’s still better than that game of grab ass they call the NFL Pro Bowl). Yet,
the game does matter for the few teams fighting for a ring. The way I see it,
you can have it one way or the other, not both. This isn’t Burger King. Either
keep the rules as is and have the result mean nothing except pride. Or, make
the game for home field advantage but let the manager pick his team. Get rid of
fan voting and the rule where each team needs a rep. Let the manager field the
most competitive team to try and win it for his league. We should not be
subjected to the Jose Altuves of the world. Addressing this would eliminate
most of the flaws associated with this game. Unfortunately, we’d still have to
listen to Tim McCarver call it.
-Written by Marcus Boyd
Agreed. The team with the best record should always get home field. The emphasis should be on winning as many games as possible, not a single exhibition game.
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