Major League Baseball released rosters for its 92nd All-Star Game, to be played July 19 at Dodger Stadium.
Hey, these snubs aren’t what they used to be. Thanks largely to the paranoia of this game ending in a tie and the acknowledgement that the designated hitter exists, 32 players from each league are initially honored; pretty tough for the 65th-honored player to have too big a beef, right?
Additionally, many of the “disrespected” who didn’t hear their names called on roster-release Sunday will be summoned, some within hours, as injury replacements. (Or, “injury” replacements, in the event a well-decorated veteran decides Cabo sounds more alluring than Chavez Ravine).
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With that, a look at six players who should – and quite possibly will – be headed to Vin Scully Avenue and Stadium Way a week from Tuesday:
This young man already has a Silver Slugger award, top-10 MVP finish and World Series ring to his credit. His .907 OPS is fourth in the NL, his 23 homers as much as any NL All-Star not named Kyle Schwarber.
Yet it will be teammate William Contreras, not Riley, who will join teammates Dansby Swanson and Travis d’Arnaud in L.A. Contreras will also reunite with older brother Willson, the Cubs catcher. It’s a Good Story.
But Contreras will make it as a player-voted designated hitter, a position that debatably doesn’t need to exist. He’s done his damage – 11 homers, a .924 OPS – over just 143 at-bats. Riley has amassed 333 at-bats, more than double Contreras’ sample, but has the misfortune of sharing a position with Manny Machado and Nolan Arenado, arguably 1-2 in NL MVP voting.
Bum deal. Hopefully Riley is granted his first All-Star nod sooner, not later.
Nope, Freeman isn’t a Brave anymore (has he talked about that?) but has almost as strong a grievance as former teammate Riley. Freddie has been the most consistent performer on a Dodgers team that has lived up to record expectations despite several struggling or injured stars. His .853 OPS has come with no days off in this era of load management, his 26 doubles ranking third in the NL.
Despite his emotional conflicts, Freeman has lived up to expectations in his first year in L.A., and should be in this game.
With that in mind, we’re glad Juan Soto was the lone Nationals selection; despite his .243 average, Soto’s .870 OPS and status within the game earns him something of a perpetual spot on the NL roster.
It’s just a drag Bell can’t join him.
He may very well be the hottest name at the trade deadline, and his stat line in this era where it seems Nobody Can Hit is gorgeous: Bell’s .304 average is fifth in the NL, paired with a .386 OBP and 33 extra-base hits. There’s just no room at the inn for Bell, not with Paul Goldschmidt, Pete Alonso, C.J. Cron and the snubbed Freeman and Matt Olson needing accommodation, too.
Same problem, different league. France has looked like the Mariners’ best possible rep throughout a first half in which he ranks 12th in AL OPS and tied for seventh in batting average (.306). He outpoints fan-voted starter Vlad Guerrero Jr. in most rate stats, but Vladito’s 19 homers to France’s 10 and general popularity were too much to overcome.