In 2002 the MLB All-Star Game was a wonderful mid-summer spectacle. Barry Bonds, fresh off a record-setting season, had a home run stolen over the wall on a gem of a play by Torii Hunter. Then he belted a 2-run bomb later in the game to get his revenge. The National League went up 4-0. Then the AL stormed back and led 6-5. In the 7th inning the lead changed hands twice and finally in the 8th inning Omar Vizquel tripled in the tying run to make it 7 to 7. This one was headed to extra innings.
All-Star games are designed to get everybody in the game. Folks in San Diego don’t have a lot to cheer for – they’d like to see Trevor Hoffman get in there and strike somebody out. The American League used all 9 of their pitchers. The National League had 10… all made it into the game. But the score was still tied. This IS an exhibition and nobody wants to see guys overused or get hurt, so Bud Selig made an executive decision: after 11 innings, he called it off. 7-7… a tie… in a baseball game. The fans in Milwaukee let him have it and Milwaukee is ground zero for Bud Selig. This was HIS town. Popular opinion started raining down – the All-Star game wasn’t what it used to be... it didn’t matter anymore... it was SO inconsequential that the commissioner didn’t even care if it ended in a tie.
So the following year, Selig started a bold experiment. Whichever league won the All-Star game would get home field advantage for the World Series. It made no sense. It was a desperate attempt by the commissioner to win the fans over – to loudly shout “I DO care about the All-Star game!” So much so that he tied a VERY important piece of the World Series to an exhibition game often decided by a guy off the bench. The fact that it happened once was laughable. The fact that it was renewed twice and made a permanent part of the game is a disgrace.
Of COURSE the higher seeded team with the better record should have home field. And this is no small thing. This means an extra game where the pitchers have to hit (an area in which the Rangers are not well-versed) Plus there was no American League team better at home this year than the Texas Rangers. So far this postseason the Rangers are an .800 team in Arlington. 4-1. That all-important extra home game has been taken away from Texas. Why? Because the commissioner put his own popularity ahead of the sport. Ironic considering his popularity was never much to start with. The steroid era took shape, blossomed and even flourished under his watch. A few years ago Selig announced that he would retire after the 2009 season. Then he didn’t. Now he says he’ll retire after the 2012 season. Let’s hope this time it sticks… and the new regime retires this home field travesty along with him.
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