Vancouver Sun

All-star voting becomes a royal farce

Ballot stuffing by Kansas City fans online exposes poor system for player selection

- KAVITHA A. DAVIDSON

It’s not even 2016 yet, and already we’re dealing with a ballot-stuffing controvers­y.

Kansas City Royals fans are doing their all to ensure the roster for the all-star game is as royal blue as possible. The most recent tally has the American League starting lineup featuring seven Kansas City players plus Mike Trout of the Anaheim Angels and Miguel Cabrera of the Detroit Tigers. Yes, that means that we could see Omar Infante — currently the worst hitter in the league — starting at second base in Cincinnati on July 14.

This is, as Yahoo Sports’ Jeff Passan puts it, anarchy. And it’s exactly what Major League Baseball deserves.

Some people are mad at Royals fans for making a mockery out of the all-star game, which is fine, except you can’t make a mockery of something that’s already a joke.

The game is a popularity contest that shouldn’t carry any real weight. But MLB’s misguided decision to make it meaningful, by having it determine homefield advantage for the World Series, leads to the same arguments every year dealing with: player campaigns, managerial selection of pitchers and the rule that every team gets at least one player on a roster.

We’re hardly the first to point out that if you’re going to have the all-star game carry the importance it currently does, then you can’t have the lineups determined by fan vote. If the game is really about the fans, it shouldn’t mean anything in the post-season. Royals fans are showing MLB it can’t have it both ways.

The league has to know how flawed all-star voting is. It’s the first year without the paper ballot, allowing 35 votes per email address, leaving open the possibilit­y for really intrepid fans with a lot of time on their hands to abuse the system.

The ballot-stuffing we’re seeing is likely the result of a bit more technologi­cal sophistica­tion; an SB Nation writer found a flaw with MLB’s voting security: There is none. The site doesn’t require any verificati­on of the email address used to vote.

A Royals blogger claims to have used a Gmail quirk to trick the system into thinking he’s voting from multiple email addresses. (Considerin­g the Houston Astros apparently haven’t learned to change their corporate passwords, I’m not surprised at how easily MLB’s voting system can be exploited.)

The league wants you to know that it takes the sanctity of allstar voting VERY SERIOUSLY. Bob Bowman, the chief executive of MLB Advanced Media, told Passan the league has cancelled between 60 and 65 million votes suspected of being fraudulent. That’s nice, but it leaves a whopping 300 million votes that have been “sanitized” and still puts eight Royals in the starting lineup. Voting ends July 2. Given the demographi­c issues MLB is facing in its mostly elderly fan base, perhaps it’s a good sign so many of its fans are tech-savvy enough to disrupt all-star voting to this level. Perhaps it will finally get the message that the all-star game is and should be a meaningles­s exhibition by and for the fans. We’d like to think that one day we’ll have Omar Infante to thank for inspiring that change.

 ?? ED ZURGA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Kansas City’s Lorenzo Cain is one of several Royals destined to start for the AL in the upcoming all-star game courtesy of online ballot stuffing.
ED ZURGA/GETTY IMAGES Kansas City’s Lorenzo Cain is one of several Royals destined to start for the AL in the upcoming all-star game courtesy of online ballot stuffing.

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