MLB All-Star Game: Several St. Louis Cardinals are deserving
May 29, 2015; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Cardinals relief pitcher Trevor Rosenthal (44) celebrates with catcher Yadier Molina (4) after defeating the Los Angeles Dodgers at Busch Stadium. The Cardinals defeated the Dodgers 3-0. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports
With the MLB All-Star Game approaching in less than three weeks, the St. Louis Cardinals still hold Major League Baseball’s best record (47-24) and could boast a large crop of All-Stars as a result.
Such honors would add to the Cardinals’ recently growing involvement in the Midsummer Classic, as St. Louis is expected to carry multiple All-Stars for an eighth-consecutive year.
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Although this year’s festivities take place at the home stadium of division rival Cincinnati Reds in Great American Ballpark, online All-Star voting trends could help the Cardinals remain well-represented.
Regardless of support, other NL All-Star roster vacancies could belong to the Cardinals based on season milestones provoked through timely offensive surprisers and consistent pitching.
Position players for the American and National League can be voted in MLB.com’s online balloting, which runs through July 2.
Next: The near locks for the Midsummer Classic
Apr 28, 2015; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Cardinals third baseman Matt Carpenter (13) hits a triple off of Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Severino Gonzalez (not pictured) during the first inning at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports
The Near Lock-Ins
While the current All-Star leaders are far from guaranteed spots, the fact that Matt Carpenter, Jhonny Peralta and Matt Holliday still rank among the National League’s top vote receivers is an encouraging sign given that online voting ends next Thursday.
The cushion of being selected as a starter not only increases the chance for all three to make returning appearances, but shows that baseball fans recognize their contributions and positional value in the game of baseball.
Carpenter established himself into one of this season’s quickest starts at the hot corner by picking up Player of the Week Honors in April, while Peralta has earned respect through nonchalant efforts including integral roles in two May walk-off wins and a team-leading .305 batting average among qualifiers.
Six-time All-Star Matt Holliday has revived himself offensively by reaching base in his first 45 games of the season, but a hamstring injury suffered in early June may hurt his chances to be selected as a starter and represent the National League.
Next: The toss-ups
May 3, 2015; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Cardinals second baseman Kolten Wong (16) tosses his bat after hitting a walk-off solo home run off of Pittsburgh Pirates relief pitcher Radhames Liz (not pictured) during the fourteenth inning at Busch Stadium. The Cardinals defeated the Pirates 3-2. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Curry-USA TODAY Sports
The Tossups
Since both All-Star teams are allowed to hold 23 active players aside from their starters, several Cardinals may also have an opportunity to make the team as a reserve selected by either coaches or National League teammates.
Kolten Wong, Yadier Molina and Jason Heyward have all received strong support with over 2,000,000 online votes each, but trail the leaders at their respective positions and have taken different paths to increase their All-Star hopes.
Wong is arguably the strongest candidate of the three to make the team as a reserve, largely because of his success compared to other National League second basemen.
He is the only five second baseman to rank among the top 10 for home runs and stolen bases in his position, jump-started by a clutch walk-off home run against Pittsburgh last month.
Molina and Heyward are both improving their offensive presence in the middle of lineup, as the tandem has combined for six home runs and 23 hits since June 16. However, both remain toss-ups to make the team given their early season offseason struggles and the National League’s strong catching and outfield depth.
Next: The Cardinals' strength: pitching
May 30, 2015; St. Louis, MO, USA; St. Louis Cardinals starting pitcher Michael Wacha (52) pitches against the Los Angeles Dodgers at Busch Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jasen Vinlove-USA TODAY Sports
The Pitchers
Pitchers are not allowed to receive All-Star votes online and make the team solely on their league’s reserve selections.
Although Cardinals’ manager Mike Matheny cannot currently influence roster decisions without an All-Star coaching gig this year, he certainly presents intriguing All-Star options in young pitchers Michael Wacha, Carlos Martinez and Trevor Rosenthal.
St. Louis’ rotation has developed into one of the National League’s strongest around the surprising bounce-back campaigns of Wacha and Martinez.
Both starting pitchers are only 23 and have matured into vital rotation pieces for the Cardinals by maintaining sub-3.00 ERAs and combining for over one-third (17 of 47) of St. Louis’ victories.
Meanwhile, Rosenthal has evolved into one of baseball’s most reliable closers and an elite force in the Cardinals’ bullpen. With skillset to throw fastballs up to 100 mph, Rosenthal has converted 22 of 23 save opportunities behind an 0.56 ERA and 34 strikeouts.