The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

MLB cancels All-Star Game for first time since 1945

- By Beth Harris

LOS ANGELES » Dodger Stadium’s 40-year wait to host the All-Star Game is going to last even longer.

The game scheduled for July 14 was canceled July 3 because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, and Dodger Stadium was awarded the 2022 Midsummer Classic. The 2021 game is set for Atlanta’s Truist Park, home to the Braves since 2017.

Because of the pandemic, opening day had already been delayed from March 26 to July 23 or 24.

“Once it became clear we were unable to hold this year’s All-Star festivitie­s, we wanted to award the Dodgers with the next available All-Star Game, which is 2022,” Commission­er Rob Manfred said in a statement.

No date for the 2022 game has been announced, although Dodgers president Stan Kasten said it would take place in the third week of July.

This year will be the first time since 1945 that no game is held. Travel restrictio­ns because of World War II kept the game scheduled for Boston’s Fenway Park and any player selections from taking place that year. It was pushed back to the next season.

The Dodgers hosted the only the Midsummer Classic in Dodger Stadium history in 1980, won 4-2 by the National League.

The stadium — third-oldest in baseball behind Fenway and Chicago’s Wrigley Field — is the only park in the majors not to have increased its 56,000-seat capacity since it opened in 1962.

That’s not to say it hasn’t changed, however.

Since 2013, the stadium that overlooks downtown Los Angeles has undergone a series of structural and behind-the-scenes improvemen­ts, including two entrance plazas on the field level, tiered seating and bar areas overlookin­g both bullpens. The ballpark has also gotten new HD video screens and sound systems, wider concourses and renovated restrooms, kids play areas, displays to honor the franchise’s storied history, new home and visiting clubhouses and batting cages.

And that doesn’t include the $100 million in renovation­s that helped the Dodgers land the 2020 game. Those feature two acres of food and entertainm­ent offerings in a new center field plaza and spruced-up outfield pavilions. Also added were elevators, escalators and bridges to improve circulatio­n around the ballpark without changing its picturesqu­e look and feel. The speaker tower sound system in center field is being replaced. New so-called “home run seats” are being added in front of existing outfield seats.

“We had a lot of elaborate preparatio­ns coming into this year, not the least of which is this huge, fantastic renovation,” Kasten said on a video conference call.

The Dodgers have installed a sign above the visitors’ bullpen in right field noting the All-Star game. It arrived without a date, making it viable to use for the upcoming 60-game regular season.

“It will be a constant reminder that Los Angeles is getting a game,” Kasten said, adding that money pledged by MLB and the Los Angeles Dodgers Foundation for community projects around the game will be spent this year.

People who purchased tickets for this year’s game will be offered an incentive to let the team hang on to their money until 2022, Kasten said. Refunds will also be offered beginning Monday.

The coronaviru­s slowed constructi­on at the stadium. In mid-April, retired Hall of Fame broadcaste­r Vin Scully narrated a brief video of the project.

 ?? TIM PHILLIS - FOR THE NEWS-HERALD ?? An overview of Progressiv­e Field before the All-Star Game on July 9, 2019.
TIM PHILLIS - FOR THE NEWS-HERALD An overview of Progressiv­e Field before the All-Star Game on July 9, 2019.

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