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670 The Score
Sports He was an All-Star? MLB edition

He was an All-Star? MLB edition

75756A5E-120A-4932-810C-2FD980DB785E
By Jordan Cohn, Audacy Sports
670 The Score

(AUDACY) You would figure that Kirk Gibson, the two-time World Series champion and 1988 MVP, played in an All-Star Game at some point in his career. It would seem likely that 1993 Rookie of the Year and two-time top-10 MVP candidate Tim Salmon earned All-Star recognition once or twice. You'd naturally think that one of the four 200-hit, 40-steal seasons posted by the speedy Juan Pierre would've led to All-Star honors.

By this point, you probably know where I'm going with this -- Kirk Gibson was never an All-Star, Tim Salmon wasn't either, nor was Juan Pierre. Surprising, right? Those players were never regarded as the absolute best of the best — even Gibson's MVP honor is one that could've been awarded to another player — but they seem to have been good enough to warrant All-Star honors at least once, you know?

It's especially surprising that they never did after you read some of the names on the list below. For a short time, the players you'll read about were pretty good, and we're not taking that away from them. But when you hear their names in hindsight, the first thought that comes to mind is likely isn't, "That guy was an All-Star-caliber player!" But that's the way it went, and we're here to remember them for reaching the Midsummer Classic.

On this list, we're only looking at players from the past two decades. Sure, you probably didn't know that Peanuts Lowrey was an All-Star in 1946, but you probably also didn't know who Peanuts Lowrey was period ... and no offense to Peanuts Lowrey, by the way.

All statistics retrieved from Baseball Reference.

Ken Harvey
Photo credit Brian Bahr/Getty Images

Ken Harvey | Kansas City Royals | 2004

With a career bWAR of -0.4 across only 271 games played, Harvey was plagued by injuries in the big leagues that affected both his longevity and productivity. However, in his short stint with the Royals, Harvey earned an All-Star nod with a solid first-half performance (10 homers, 34 RBIs, .305/.353/.452) in 2004.

One player he got selected over, for instance, was teammate Mike Sweeney, who had 16 homers and a higher OPS at the break. Most obviously snubbed, however, was White Sox first baseman Paul Konerko, who was seventh across MLB at the halfway point with 22 homers and who was slashing .296/.384/.567 -- but had no All-Star nomination to go along with all that production. However, Konerko would go on to make it five times after that, making it six total All-Star honors in his career.

Brandon Inge
Photo credit Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Brandon Inge | Detroit Tigers | 2009

The All-Star moment you'll associate most with Inge is his performance in the 2009 Home Run Derby, when he belted a whopping grand total of ... zero homers. Yikes. But he was also a part of the actual All-Star Game that year, and it's not like he didn't deserve it. He was near the top of the leaderboard at the break with 21 homers and a .515 slugging percentage, both of which were outliers compared to the rest of his career.

Inge was a solid player at times for Detroit, but his career .233/.301/.384 slash line doesn't exactly suggest an All-Star ceiling at any point. In fact, of all players ever named to an All-Star team, Inge is in the bottom 10 in career batting average (minimum 5,000 plate appearances), and he didn't exactly have the power as some of the other names in that group like Dave Kingman, Chris Davis and Carlos Pena.

Zach Duke
Photo credit Gregory Shamus/Getty Images

Zach Duke | Pittsburgh Pirates | 2009

From 2001 to 2010, there were only two seasons in which the Pirates had more than one All-Star representative. One of those years was 2006, when Jason Bay and Freddie Sanchez got their rightful recognition. The other was 2009, when Sanchez reached 100 hits in the first half of the year and was joined by Zach Duke, the eventual league leader in losses (16) from the rough 2009 Pirates' campaign.

At the half, he was 8-8 with a 3.29 ERA. That's not too bad! In the second half, he was 3-8 with a 5.17 ERA. That's not too good! Yovani Gallardo could've been considered, with an 8-7 record and a 3.22 ERA in the first half and with more than twice as many strikeouts. Chris Carpenter (7-3, 2.47 ERA at the break) was also a stronger candidate that season.

The Pirates had some other names who could've gone in Duke's spot, like 2011 All-Star Kevin Correia and 2013 All-Star Jeff Locke.

Phil Hughes
Photo credit Andrew Burton/Getty Images

Phil Hughes | New York Yankees | 2010

With a 4.52 career ERA, Hughes probably doesn't bring the term "All-Star" to mind when you recall his career. You probably don't think of the term "MLB ace" either. However, he was both.

Hughes was 5-0 after his first five starts in the 2010 season with a 1.38 ERA, so it's no wonder that his name was in the mix for All-Star recognition. He went 6-2 over his next 10 starts too, giving him an amazing 11-2 record in the first half, but he recorded a 5.08 ERA over that stretch. That was a sign of things to come. With a 4.90 ERA in the second half, Hughes finished with an 18-8 record and a 4.19 ERA for the season. His wins were more of a testament to the Yankees' explosive, league-leading run production than anything else.

Following a rough 2013 season in which he went 4-14 with a 5.19 ERA, Hughes was signed by the Twins as a free agent and ... became their ace. He actually had his strongest season too, going 16-10 with a 3.52 ERA in 2014, made even more impressive by his 2.65 FIP (fielding-independent pitching), which was a top-10 figure in baseball.

So, some good years? Sure. An All-Star pitcher? That's not exactly what Hughes seems to have been.

Ty Wigginton
Photo credit Jed Jacobsohn/Getty Images

Ty Wigginton | Baltimore Orioles | 2010

This is what happens when you're a 29-59 team at the halfway mark, you know? Someone had to be the All-Star representative for the Orioles, and that was Wigginton, the veteran playing for his then-fifth team. He'd wind up playing for the Rockies, Phillies and Cardinals over the next three seasons.

At the half, Wigginton was slashing .252/.334/.434 with some solid pop — 14 homers and 45 RBIs — but he would wind up seeing all three of those figures go down to .248/.312/.415 by the end of the season. Those are all pretty close to Wigginton's career averages, showing you why he's an inclusion on the list.

Alexi Ogando
Photo credit Rick Yeatts/Getty Images

Alexi Ogando | Texas Rangers | 2011

I'm going to show you two stat lines here:
-- 7-0, 2.10 ERA, .188 BAA
-- 6-8, 4.83 ERA, .272 BAA

Would you believe those are the two stretches that made up Ogando's 2011 season? Though not exactly split into the first and second halves of the year, the first stat line is what Ogando did in his first dozen appearances of 2011, whereas the second is what he did over the remaining 19. That's quite the drop-off.

Ogando would stick around Texas for a few more years, though he flipped between the starting rotation and the bullpen and never quite found the stuff that set him off to such a good start in 2011. His last appearance was with the Indians in 2018, when he pitched a single inning and gave up two hits, three walks and two earned runs.

Bryan LaHair
Photo credit Brian Kersey/Getty Images

Bryan LaHair | Chicago Cubs | 2012

In LaHair's final year in which he saw MLB action, he was an All-Star in his age-29 season. It's unusual for a player's big league story to end there and not be followed by some career-ending injury, but that's the way it went with LaHair, largely due to the emergence of Anthony Rizzo. It was also due to his second-half performance, but first let's recap what made him an All-Star.

In the first half, LaHair hit 14 homers with a .286/.364/.519 slash line. That's certainly All-Star worthy, and LaHair was one of two Cubs (along with Starlin Castro) to make the squad in 2012. But his second half went poorly. He had two homers and a .202/.269/.303 slash line. That helps to explain why that season was the last that LaHair would play in MLB. He continued his career in an assortment of minor, independent and international leagues.

Domonic Brown
Photo credit Rich Schultz/Getty Images

Domonic Brown | Philadelphia Phillies | 2013

What a tough era of Phillies history this was. The post-World Series letdown was a big one, even after a few more years of regular-season success, and the years from 2013 to 2017 all kind of blend together into one big pile of bleh.

For a brief time, it looked like Brown could be the bright spark this team needed for the next wave of success. After all, he had 18 home runs and a an impressive .915 OPS a whole 60 games into the 2013 season, and despite a little slump before the break, his first half was certainly worthy of an All-Star nod. Only seven players in the league had more home runs than his 23 when the Midsummer Classic arrived.

In the second half, Brown hit four. He'd hit 15 more in his career with the Phillies and in the majors as a whole, and he played his final game at age 27 in 2015. Brown finished with a 0.7 career bWAR, and his first half in 2013 was a strange anomaly.

Marco Scutaro
Photo credit Jennifer Stewart/Getty Images

Marco Scutaro | San Francisco Giants | 2013

Marco Scutaro ... postseason hero, solid slap hitter, reliable and versatile infielder. That all checks out. All-Star? That isn't something most think of when we hear the 13-year journeyman's name.

Interestingly enough, that honor did come for Scutaro, and it came in his second-to-last season at age 37. Perhaps he was still riding the high of his 2012 playoff performance, one that included the NL Championship Series MVP award, as he kept on hitting right into 2013. He recorded 101 hits in the first half and slashed .316/.367/.400. He was perhaps also the beneficiary of then-Giants manager Bruce Bochy leading the NL squad that year. Along with Scutaro, Bochy had Buster Posey and Madison Bumgarner on board for the festivities.

Aledyms Diaz
Photo credit Dilip Vishwanat/Getty Images

Aledmys Diaz | St. Louis Cardinals | 2016

Now a utilityman with the Houston Astros, Diaz got his big league career off to a pretty hot start. Entering the league as a 25-year-old rookie in 2016, Diaz slashed .315/.380/.536 in the first half with 13 homers and 48 RBIs, including an unbelievable month of April in which he slashed .423/.453/.732. You really can't get kick off a career better than that, and All-Star honors seemed right.

Now though, the fact of the matter is that no one thinks of Diaz as an everyday starter on a contender, much less an All-Star. If there's a way he can regain the magic that carried him throughout the first half of his rookie year, he hasn't found it yet.

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