How the teams are picked.The manager for each league's team is the manager of the previous year's league champion. Note that this honor is applied to the person, not the team, so it's possible that the All-Star manager could no longer be with the team he won with (as happened in 2003, when Dusty Baker managed the National League team despite having moved from the champion San Francisco Giants to the Chicago Cubs in the off-season). The coaching staff is selected by the manager. Each team consists of 32 players, selected in one of the following ways, listed in order:
* Fan Voting: Baseball fans vote on the starting position players for the All-Star Game, with ballots distributed at baseball games before mid-season and, more recently, on the Internet. When the game is played at an American League park, the Designated hitter for the AL team is also selected in this manner.
Between 1935 and 1946, the manager of each all-star squad selected the entire team. Fans received the right to vote on the eight starters (excluding the pitcher) starting in 1947. In 1957, fans of the Cincinnati Reds mounted a campaign to stuff the ballot box, and elected a Red to every position, except first base. The Commissioner, Ford Frick, stepped in and removed two Reds from the lineup. Fans thus lost the power to elect the non-pitching starters until 1970. From 1958 through 1969, players, coaches, and managers made the choice. |