MLB All-Star Game uniforms not drawing All-Star reviews
DENVER (AP) — Fashion forward? Maybe more like fashion faux pas. The fans on social media weren't exactly raving about the new All-Star jerseys that were on display Tuesday night.
No classic birds-on-a-bat design for the Cardinals at Coors Field, no sweet script for the Dodgers. No brown pinstripes on the shirts for the Padres, no recognizable “NY” logo prominently on the hat for the Yankees.
Nowhere close.
Bring back the rainbow of colors, many said, with players wearing their own team’s uniforms. That was a big part of the game's charm, they said.
Brett Anderson, a pitcher for the Milwaukee Brewers, posted on Twitter: “MLB should just let the players wear their own uniforms instead of these slow pitch softball ones.”
The AL wore blue uniforms in its 5-2 win that reminded some of jumpsuits. The NL had an all-white ensemble that had many commenting they look, well, bland.
Rather than familiar logos and names, there were three-letter abbreviations on the jerseys for what team they represented.
Major League Baseball has a billion-dollar contract with Nike, whose swoosh is displayed prominently on the right side of the uniform just below the collar.
DOUBLE DUTY
There’s no two ways about it: Shohei Ohtani could be ushering in an era of two-way players.
Hurler or hitter — why pick? He didn't.
The Los Angeles pitcher/hitter phenom pitched a perfect first inning in the All-Star Game on Tuesday. That was after he led off for the American League as the designated hitter, grounding out to second.
It's a rare double dip. Not even Babe Ruth stayed with doing both for much more than two seasons before phasing out pitching.
The time may be now to update the model, although most players concede they can't envision having enough time to practice both.
“It always takes one to hopefully have a trend,” said Freddie Freeman, a five-time All-Star for the Atlanta Braves. “I just don’t know if anyone will do it like Shohei. That’s one of a kind.”
Freeman was once a dual threat — he said he was drafted by one of two teams who viewed him as a hitter. The rest thought his future might be on the mound.
He could've been like Ohtani.
“My elbow would’ve blown,” cracked Freeman, who was taken in the second round by the Braves in 2007. “My elbow was hurting in high school.”
At the plate, Ohtani leads the majors with 33 homers, which is the most in franchise history at the All-Star break. On the mound, he's been just as dazzling with a 4-1 record and 87 strikeouts courtesy of a fastball that can touch 100 mph.
“Ohtani’s a freak. But there’s no reason somebody else can’t do it,” said St. Louis third baseman Nolan Arenado, who was a closer in high school. “It’s an incredible talent. You’re so valuable to a team if you help on both sides.”
The one obstacle: Finding time to practice both at a major-league level.
“It seems like a lot of work and dangerous in a way, too — health-wise,” Arenado said. “It's hard to do. ... He’s a special player. He’s unique.”
Dodgers right-hander Walker Buehler remembers picking up a bat at Vanderbilt — and being told to set it right back down.
“I didn’t swing a bat for about five years,” Buehler said. “But I get to Double-A and they’re like, ‘Hey, go get 'em.'
“I’m very glad I don’t have to try to (do both). I just try to get a hit every once in a while and feel good about that. I could never imagine doing what he’s doing.”
Same with Cleveland right-hander Shane Bieber, the reigning AL Cy Young Award winner who won’t pitch in the All-Star Game due to a shoulder ailment. Bieber knows all too well what it’s like facing Ohtani the hitter.
“Tough,” explained Bieber, who's limited Ohtani to two hits in 10 at-bats. “I’ve never stepped in the box against him when he’s on the mound. I don’t really plan to.
"What he’s doing is nothing short of spectacular.”
Bieber said his days in the batter's box dwindled in high school for one reason: "I started sucking at hitting.”
“It seemed like pitching was a better way to go, a better opportunity for my future,” recounted Bieber, a fourth-round pick by Cleveland in 2016 out of Santa Barbara. “The decision was kind of made for me. It sounds like (Ohtani) could open the door for a lot more guys to be able to continue their career as a two-way player instead of getting key-holed in one position or another.”
Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner threw a little bit as a kid. Or, as he described it: “I stood on the mound and threw some balls to the catcher.”
He can't fathom being a two-way threat like Ohtani.
“Hitting is hard enough," Turner said. "But pitching every fifth or sixth day? Putting that on his plate is crazy. It’s mind-blowing."
COLE BENCHED
Yankees ace Gerrit Cole was at the game but was told by the Yankees not to pitch.
“They would prefer not,” he said. “It’s always fun to come and get to celebrate everyone else’s accomplishments in the room. The first-time guys are always having a real special time and it’s part of our responsibility to come and answer questions and perform if we’re able to and represent the brand of the game, brand of the industry.”
AROUND THE BASES
Catchers Mike Zunino and J.T. Realmuto each homered. It's the third time in All-Star history where multiple catchers homered, joining Javy Lopez/Sandy Alomar Jr. in 1997 and Bill Freehan/Hall of Famer Johnny Bench in ‘69. ... A total of 19 pitchers threw 278 pitches and everyone threw more strikes than balls. ... Milwaukee pitcher Freddy Peralta had a perfect three-strikeout frame in the seventh. ... White Sox closer Liam Hendriks earned the save. He's the second White Sox closer to accomplish the feat, joining Virgil Trucks in 1954.
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AP Baseball Writer Ronald Blum contributed to this report.
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