The Commercial Appeal

All-star Game a refreshing diversion

- Gabe Lacques

DENVER – After 17 months spent under a mask, Major League Baseball is emerging from the shadows this week at Coors Field.

For the first time since the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered the industry, it gathers en masse, largely vaxxed and almost entirely unmasked, for the 91st Allstar Game. And from Sunday’s Futures Game, to an undeniably momentous Home Run Derby, to Tuesday’s exhibition of youth excellence and veteran vigor, the air of renewal will be undeniable.

Never underestim­ate the power of a bro hug, an old acquaintan­ce renewed, even a knowing nod from across the field. The league and its very best players are uniting in a way they haven’t since 2019, which was followed by a year in which this event did not exist, and the World Series barely did.

The joys will be higher, the woes more easily laughed off.

This will be an All-star Game like no other, for so many reasons. Shohei Ohtani may command everyone’s attention from Tokyo to Temecula from the moment he launches his first moonshot into the Mile High air in the Home Run Derby. So many of the young kings ready to take over the game – from Tati to Vladito – are here, starting and ready for a star turn. And MLB now knows the hard part of pandemic baseball is behind it – more than 85% of all Tier 1 and 2 personnel across the league is fully vaccinated.

Yet as the game’s jewel event takes on its usual shine, the clouds – some passing, others gathering – will be hard to ignore, not unlike the smoke from the Morgan Creek Wildfire that made the sky above Denver on Sunday something less than an impeccably glorious blue.

Start with the absences, both numerous and significant.

They get no more devastatin­g than Ronald Acuña Jr., off to another Mvpcaliber start, voted in by the fans but now shelved for the remainder of 2021 after tearing his right ACL, barely 24 hours before he was to depart for Denver.

Acuña’s injury was the most severe and noteworthy in a season defined by them; after two months, soft tissue injuries were up 160% and oblique tears and strains 83% over the last full season. The whys of this injury scourge are still unknown, but the smart money remains more collateral damage from 2020, which featured two spring trainings, a herky-jerky 60-game sprint and then a full spring training a few months later. Appreciate your health, folks. Speaking of which, a handful of Allstars are doing just that this week – staying home to nurse myriad maladies, be they tangible, lingering or on a more visceral level.

Jacob de Grom wanted to spend some time at home, and also had a pair of nagging injuries. Buster Posey busted a thumb, while fellow Hall of Fame caliber talents Mookie Betts and Yadier Molina saw All-star discretion as the better part of regular season valor. Kyle Schwarber’s stunning home run binge ended with the tug of a hamstring.

In all, 17 players elected by fans or players or named by the league to rosters will be sitting out, most due to injury, a handful because they pitched Sunday.

We’re not about to attendance-shame anybody for skipping an All-star Game in the year 2021. After that hell of a 2020, we’re all still catching our breath, so imagine competing on an everyday basis at the level these chaps do, only to learn your lone four-day leave would be consumed by a game that doesn’t count. But let’s talk about the Astros.

They are arguably the best team in the American League – overwhelmi­ngly so based on run differential – and have reached at least the AL Championsh­ip Series four consecutiv­e years. Royalty, still, even if impugned by scandal.

They earned four All-star selections. They will be represente­d here by nobody.

Carlos Correa claimed family time with a pregnant wife before falling ill this weekend. Reliever Ryan Pressly’s wife is due any day. Jose Altuve and Michael Brantley?

Both started Sunday’s game against the Yankees, Brantley playing his sixth consecutiv­e game and Altuve appearing unimpeded by a leg injury. Start your conspiracy theories that the Astros wanted to avoid further scorn from fans for a mere exhibition game. Their absences were only exacerbate­d Sunday, when Altuve hit a startling three-run, walk-off home run off Yankees reliever Chad Green, then clapped back at Aaron Judge by tearing his shirt off, throwing some more kerosene on Buzzergate.

It was phenomenal theatre. It would have made a fantastic talking point this week. But the Astro at the center of it all will be invisible.

That the Astros’ intentions might bear greater scrutiny only shows how fresh the wounds of their 2017-18 sign-stealing scandal remain.

“They need it badly,” manager Dusty Baker said of the break, defending his guys who did their cheating long before he was their manager.

Trouble is, there’s just no ducking this. The other night, former Astro George Springer slipped into Baltimore incognito – attired in a powder blue Toronto jersey. A crowd of barely 7,000 that had no direct tie to the sign-stealing kerfuffle suddenly roared to life with boos.

Rather go to the All-star Game next year? Well, that one’s at Dodger Stadium, where the home folks are still a little salty over the now-disputed 2017 World Series title.

It was just three years ago that the Astros sent a six-pack of players to Washington for the All-star Game. Justin Verlander chartered a jet for five of them. They performed the #Inmyfeelin­gs challenge. Alex Bregman twerked.

Crazy to imagine that group suddenly receding from the spotlight.

We’re four years removed from that scandal, two years removed from its revelation by The Athletic, yet the ripples don’t stop. Tuesday, MLB commission­er Rob Manfred will hold his first expansive press briefing since Feb. 18, 2020, when he apologized for days earlier calling the World Series trophy “a piece of metal,” an inelegant defense of his discipline handed down for the scandal.

Shortly thereafter, the pandemic shut it all down.

Manfred made a few appearance­s since, a CNN spot here, a phone interview there, perhaps some carefully crafted comments at a gathering of eggheads at sports business seminars or university panels or whatnot.

The pandemic has since receded but Manfred’s plate remains full, what with his sticky substances crackdown, franchise instabilit­y in a pair of markets and the noxious cloud of Trevor Bauer’s administra­tive leave and alleged assault lingering over a league facing the most important test of its domestic-violence policy yet.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP ?? A sign stands outside the Play Ball Park exhibit Thursday at the Colorado Convention Center staged by Major League Baseball as part of the festivitie­s leading up to Tuesday’s All-star Game in Denver.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI/AP A sign stands outside the Play Ball Park exhibit Thursday at the Colorado Convention Center staged by Major League Baseball as part of the festivitie­s leading up to Tuesday’s All-star Game in Denver.

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