Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

After 42 years and a pandemic, the wait is over

All-Star game returns to Dodger Stadium for first time since 1980

- By Jorge Castillo

Chub Feeney stood before the team for his annual rah-rah speech in the home clubhouse at Dodger Stadium. It was July 1980. The National League All-Stars were about to defend their eight-game winning streak against their American League counterpar­ts, and Feeney badly wanted to continue the trivial dominance.

Feeney was the National League’s president. Winning that game mattered to him and it mattered to players in the room back when the summer showcase was more than just a lightheart­ed, miked-up scrimmage.

“The pride took over,” Steve Garvey said.

Garvey was the National League’s starting first baseman and one of six Dodgers selected to the team that year. He was selected most valuable player in his first AllStar appearance in 1974. He appeared in 10 games over his career and went undefeated. But nothing compared with suiting up in Los Angeles in 1980.

“To win the game in front of our crowd was extra special,” he said.

The 1980 All-Star game was the first held at Dodger Stadium and the second the Dodgers hosted since moving to Los Angeles in 1958. Ken Griffey Sr. was chosen the MVP. The first home run derby was five years away. Interleagu­e baseball was a distant nightmare for purists.

The ballpark was seemingly an ideal host. Perfect weather every day. Celebritie­s everywhere. Consistent fan support in a huge market. But years, decades, generation­s passed and the game never returned.

Finally, after 42 years and recent consternat­ion, that will change when Dodger Stadium hosts the All-Star game and its growing list of events in July. The futures game and celebrity game will be held first, on a Saturday. The draft will happen at L.A. Live on Sunday. The home run derby will take center stage Monday before the game concludes the midseason festival on Tuesday, July 19.

“It’ll be pretty special,” Dodgers infielder and two-time All-Star Max Muncy said. “The All-Star game is almost, in a way, kind of what the city of L.A. is. It’s Hollywood, it’s lights. It’s just a big stage. That’s everything that L.A. does on a nightly basis.”

Ending the drought was one of Dodgers ownership’s priorities when Guggenheim bought the team a decade ago. The effort came to fruition in April 2018 when Major League Baseball awarded the 2020 game to the Dodgers.

MLB prioritize­s teams that never hosted the game and new ballparks, but that formula has not always been consistent; nine teams were awarded the game twice between 1980 and 2018.

“It’s kind of unthinkabl­e,” Dodgers President Stan Kasten said. “Because the other sports try to get here as much as they can, and baseball had not been here for that long a period of time. I can’t explain why it took so long.”

In 2019, the Dodgers, with the All-Star game in mind, unveiled plans for a $100-million renovation featuring a new center-field plaza to be opened for 2020. The COVID-19 outbreak changed everything.

In March 2020, four months before Dodger Stadium was slated to host the exhibition, MLB suspended operations. Within a few weeks, Kasten said, it became clear the game wasn’t happening.

A mammoth sign with the AllStar game logo was delivered to Dodger Stadium that spring anyway. It would’ve been a waste but for one thing: The logo didn’t include the year. So, the Dodgers put up the sign in the empty ballpark anyway.

“It’ll just be a reminder that it’s coming,” Kasten said.

Four months later, MLB awarded the Dodgers this year’s game. The near future remained murky. The pandemic still was raging. Vaccines were not yet available. And a discouragi­ng possible obstacle loomed within the sport: the expiration of the collective bargaining agreement.

MLB implemente­d a lockout on Dec. 1. The season, All-Star game included, was in danger. But the owners and union hammered out a deal to save it.

“You’re talking about the thirdoldes­t stadium in MLB and all the history that’s been through there,” Dodgers third baseman and twotime All-Star Justin Turner said. “The fact that it’s been 40-something years since they had an AllStar game just seems crazy.”

This time, Dodger Stadium will host its first home run derby. There won’t be a rousing pregame speech from the National League president because that position became obsolete at the turn of the century. The American League will have the eight-game winning streak to defend.

The game itself will feel different.

It won’t feature the ferocity Garvey and the other players displayed in 1980. It will be a made-forTV production with ads plastered everywhere and long commercial breaks. But the stars finally will glow in Los Angeles once again. All it took was 42 years.

 ?? Lennox McLendon Associated Press ?? JERRY REUSS was one of six Dodgers selected to the 1980 National League team, which had an eight-game win streak against the American League team of Yankees pitcher Rich Gossage.
Lennox McLendon Associated Press JERRY REUSS was one of six Dodgers selected to the 1980 National League team, which had an eight-game win streak against the American League team of Yankees pitcher Rich Gossage.
 ?? Associated Press ?? KEN GRIFFEY SR. of the Reds, named most valuable player of the 1980 game, gets some love from Montreal’s Gary Carter after the National League defeated the American League 4-2.
Associated Press KEN GRIFFEY SR. of the Reds, named most valuable player of the 1980 game, gets some love from Montreal’s Gary Carter after the National League defeated the American League 4-2.

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