Chicago Sun-Times

MLB GETS EASY ‘W’

After moving All-Star Game from Atlanta to Denver, baseball is prevailing in the culture war

- GABE LACQUES Twitter: @GabeLacque­s

In the days after MLB’s move of its All-Star Game from Atlanta because of onerous voting regulation­s passed by state legislator­s and signed into law by Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, the major leagues and others supporting the game’s relocation faced a multiplatf­orm fusillade of criticism that might be alarming were it not so amusing.

From the halls of Congress to the cries of despair from fevered keyboard warriors frothing from their Facebook feeds, the vocal minority has shouted in unison:

That MLB is now an ultra-liberal, commie-loving cabal.

That it has capitulate­d to “wokeness,” a term already appropriat­ed and mangled into disfigurem­ent from its original meaning.

That they shall never throw out a first pitch or attend a game again, so long as . . . so long as . . . Augusta National member Rob Manfred is still running MLB.

The arguments are thin, the attacks scarcely rooted in reality and they’re particular­ly absurd for anyone who has spent a few minutes around the game.

Just who, exactly, is this woke mob within MLB?

Is it the players, whose clubhouse tables are often crowded with copies of Guns & Ammo and Field & Stream and whose lessthan-overwhelmi­ng acceptance of a vaccine that could preserve their season suggest an ideologica­l lean away from the left?

Is it the executives, many who run their teams with a bloodless efficiency that would make the Wal-Mart empire blush?

Is it the owners, whose political contributi­ons — even to the fringiest of politician­s — are hiding in plain sight and give a fair indication of which way they lean?

No, baseball remains plenty conservati­ve. And it is clear that its more rigorous embrace of socialjust­ice initiative­s in the past year is not only on the right side of history but also, simply, good business.

Consider the “corporate champions” standing alongside MLB in its rebuke of Georgia’s voting laws: Delta, Coca-Cola, American Airlines, JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup.

Not exactly Ben & Jerry’s and Patagonia.

As the corporate “mob” grows in voicing its disapprova­l, it becomes easier to understand how Manfred’s stunning decision at the time to move the game out of Georgia was executed swiftly and unilateral­ly.

So the game found a new home in Denver, and the league readied

for the triggered indignatio­n of the right, and now, nearly a week out, it’s clear the blowback is nothing MLB can’t handle.

The national GOP? Reduced largely to Red-Baiting 101 and a silly conflation of ticket purchasing and voting rights, even as defections in its ranks rise.

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell? He issued a “warning to corporate America to stay out of politics,” yet immediatel­y begged that it continue giving money, you know, to him.

The unofficial mainstream

media arm of the right?

A Fox News query to White House press secretary Jen Psaki on Tuesday, claiming voting regulation­s in Colorado, the new site of the All-Star Game, were similar to Georgia’s, was parried in less than 60 seconds.

One might call it Psaki “dunking” on Fox News, but it was too easy.

See where this is going? The furor will subside, and any notion of the game ever existing in Atlanta may drown in a chorus of oohs and ahhs from a Home

Run Derby held at mile-high Coors Field.

Baseball survived through a half-century where it first barred Black players from the game, then faced blowback and boycotts and threats when it dared allow Jackie Robinson to play. It survived Jose Feliciano’s national anthem, a no-hitter thrown under the influence of hallucinog­enics and the designated hitter.

A poorly plotted and increasing­ly fringy culture war?

That’s a fight MLB knew it could and will win.

 ?? JOHN SPINK/AP ?? Workers load an All-Star sign onto a trailer after it was removed from Truist Park in Atlanta on Tuesday. MLB is relocating the All-Star Game to Coors Field in Denver.
JOHN SPINK/AP Workers load an All-Star sign onto a trailer after it was removed from Truist Park in Atlanta on Tuesday. MLB is relocating the All-Star Game to Coors Field in Denver.
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