Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

KC should host 2021 All-Star Game

- JACK HARRIS

To celebrate a game-changing century, the Negro Leagues Baseball Museum was planning to have a “game-changing” year in 2020.

That’s how Bob Kendrick, president of the Kansas City-based museum, described it — a year-long long celebratio­n of the Negro Leagues’ 100th anniversar­y that was to feature events in ballparks across the country, in front of fans across the sport, but would always be centered in Kansas City, where the first official Negro League was founded a century before.

“We were off and running, we were off to a flying start,” Kendrick said, speaking from his office during the summer. “Then, just like that, everything comes to a screeching halt.”

The covid-19 pandemic, of course, was to blame, disrupting not only the 2020 Major League Baseball season but all the centennial celebratio­n events the Negro Leagues Museum was planning to stage around it.

“A year of planning and anticipati­ng had to be extinguish­ed almost in the blink of an eye,” Kendrick said. “It was going to be a game-changer for the museum, in terms of the platform, the national and internatio­nal platform that the celebratio­n was going to create.”

Maybe, one year and millions of covid-19 vaccinatio­ns later, that celebratio­n can still take place.

Perhaps Kansas City should host the relocated 2021 All-Star Game.

With MLB now looking for a new site to host the Midsummer Classic, which the league removed on Friday from Atlanta after Georgia passed a controvers­ial new voting law that civil rights groups fear will restrict voting access to people of color, few markets present an opportunit­y as special as Kansas City.

Just imagine, an entire week at Kauffman Stadium during which the history of the Negro Leagues is featured front-and-center.

Picture the patrons, arriving nationwide, flooding a Negro Leagues

Museum that, in its early days, only survived with the financial support of former Negro League players themselves cutting checks to cover the rent.

Think of the impact, both on the long-term growth of the museum, and of the message MLB could send — the way it could take an ugly story and make it a powerful one.

“We didn’t want this celebratio­n to be watered down,” Kendrick said in June 2020, when covid-19 regulation­s forced the museum to shut its doors.

“I didn’t want to do celebratio­ns in ballparks where there were no people in the stadium. That seemed to be doing a disservice to the magnitude of what this story is all about — both on and off the field.”

Wouldn’t it be cool if MLB now decided to give the museum — and the Negro Leagues’ important and influentia­l history on the sport and the country — one of its biggest platforms of all? If it provided a forum for all those canceled celebratio­ns to be reschedule­d under a national spotlight?

“Count me and [Kendrick] in to help in any way!” Kiona Sinks, community engagement and digital strategy manager of the Negro Leagues Museum, tweeted on Friday in response to the idea. “We have hosted the All-Star Game in 2012 before so it would be awesome to have [it] back in KC!”

There is a major caveat: Missouri’s state legislatur­e is considerin­g its own controvers­ial voting law that, according to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, would require photo IDs and create other restrictio­ns critics fear disproport­ionately affect people of color and other marginaliz­ed communitie­s. If that passes, then MLB would likely have to look toward one of the increasing­ly few states that hasn’t tried pushing through voting restrictio­ns this year.

Yet, Kansas City provides an undeniable opportunit­y, too, a chance to create in 2021 what couldn’t be done in 2020. Think about it, Rob Manfred. There’s a century-long legacy to consider.

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