Major League Baseball’s Home Run Derby is already great, but here’s how we make it perfect

We don’t necessarily NEED this change to the Home Run Derby, but it’d be a great one.

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As much fun as the MLB All-Star Game has become in recent years, there’s really not much baseball can do to make it cooler than the Home Run Derby. 

No matter how many times MLB changes the format or rules of the derby — no matter if the players are going head-to-head or advancing through a bracket — it turns out people will fill a stadium and tune in to watch (most of) the best hitters in the sport sock some dingers. 

At the end of the day, MLB just can’t screw up this formula. We saw this when Vlad Guerrero Jr. won the event in Seattle on Monday.

And yet! The competition is inherently held on an uneven playing field because the league allows batters to choose their own pitchers. It’s kind of silly, isn’t it? 

Don’t get me wrong, I love seeing who sluggers pick to throw them batting practice every year. There’s also something hilarious about watching sons hit absolute moonshots off their dads on one of the sport’s biggest stages. It also adds to some jaw-dropping moments like Adley Rutschman going yard from both sides of the plate in one at-bat.  But it also doesn’t really make sense, does it?

If the idea is to see who can hit the most home runs over a given timeframe, why not use a pitching machine that we know puts the ball in the same spot every time? Why entrust the most important variable of the Home Run Derby — where the ball crosses the plate — to relative chance? 

Anyone who wanted to see Adolis Garcia put on a true display of his power on Monday night would’ve appreciated some consistent balls over the plate. Instead, they watched his pitcher get absolutely roasted on social media. Pete Alonso has won the derby twice but his pitcher on Tuesday couldn’t stop painting the corner, which limited his ability to hit them out of the park. 

Don’t even get me started on the betting aspect — that segment of fans would surely love to see pitching machines used. 

The Home Run Derby is really just a silly exhibition, so it’s not like this is a change that needs to happen, but you can’t help but wonder if it would make the event better in the long run. The cost of the incredible pitcher-batter storylines may not be worth tinkering with this one, but it’s certainly worth a conversation.

Boppenheimer…The NFL’s Supplemental draft explained…and more

— Boppenheimer. Barbenheimer. Oppbie. Whatever you want to call the Barbie and Oppenheimer crossover, it’s fantastic. Charles Curtis has more.

— Here’s our Christian D’Andrea explaining how the NFL Supplemental draft works. Thank goodness.

— Here’s more on the 2023 FIFA World Cup Format from our Prince Grimes.

Here’s how to get a free Slurpee from 7Eleven on 7/11.

See you tomorrow!

2022 MLB All Star-Game best bets, MVP odds and predictions

The FTW Staff makes its predictions for the 2022 MLB All-Star Game

The 2022 MLB All-Star Game will open with the National League (-115) as a slight favorite over the American League (-105) at Tipico Sportsbook.

Considering the AL has won the Midsummer Classic for eight consecutive years—including six wins at NL ballparks during the streak—there might be some trepidation over backing the home team.

There’s also a new wrinkle this year bettors will want to pay attention to. If the two teams are still tied after nine innings of play, the regular extra innings rules will be eschewed in favor of a Home Run Derby consisting of three players from each side. That could complicate things for bettors who settle on the 1.5 run spread.

Los Angeles Dodgers legend Clayton Kershaw is starting for the NL while Tampa Bay Rays ace Shane McClanahan gets the nod for the AL with first pitch slated for 8 p.m. ET on FOX.

The AL leads the all-time series, 46-43-2, and leads the all-time run-differential at 378-372.

Let’s run through some of the best bets and make a few predictions. All odds via Tipico Sportsbooks.

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Breaking down the Shohei Ohtani vs. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. AL MVP race and who should win it

Can Vlad really win it?

It felt like a foregone conclusion a month or two ago that Shohei Ohtani would win American League MVP no matter what happened the rest of the season, or no matter how bad the Los Angeles Angels were.

But! Here comes Vladimir Guerrero Jr.!

The slugger for the Toronto Blue Jays might be on his way to finishing the season as a Triple Crown winner (!) if he keeps up a torrid September. Would that put him in front of Ohtani, especially if the Angels end up shutting down his pitching due to a sore arm?

Let’s break it down and see who really should win this thing:

The Spanish play-by-play call of Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s All-Star Game homer was so good

Play this on a loop.

Vladimir Guerrero Jr. had himself an incredible All-Star Game debut Tuesday night in Denver – he hit a monstrous home run to left field in the third inning and then was named the MVP of the game at just 22 years of age.

Not bad!

Guerrero, who has 28 home runs at the break, had this to say after the game, via USA Today Sports’ Gabe Lacques:

“Dreams come true,” Guerrero said, the game’s MVP trophy riding shotgun on the postgame podium. “Since I was a kid I’ve always been thinking about this moment.

“I’ve worked all my life, very hard, and thank God it’s happening now.”

That all has to feel really awesome.

You know what else was awesome? The Spanish call of his home run, which happened while Dominican recording artist El Alfa El Jefe was in the booth and he stole the show:

So good.

Fans loved it:

Vlad Guerrero Jr. gave Max Scherzer a hug after nearly decapitating him during MLB All-Star Game

No hard feelings.

Washington Nationals ace Max Scherzer started Tuesday’s MLB All-Star Game in Denver with a quick 1-2-3 inning, but he nearly lost his head in the process.

After Los Angeles Angels two-way star Shohei Ohtani grounded out to second to open the inning for the American League, Toronto Blue Jays slugger Vlad Guerrero Jr. stepped up to the plate. And on the fourth pitch, a 95-mile-an-hour fastball, Guerrero nearly decapitated Scherzer with a blistering line drive to second.

It was a relatively easy out for the National League as Pittsburgh Pirates’ Adam Frazier made the play and Scherzer hit the ground. But that was still a scary, close call for the three-time Cy Young Award winner, a four-time All-Star Game starter.

And afterward, Guerrero jogged over to the mound to hug it out with Scherzer. No hard feelings, and per The Washington Post‘s Chelsea Janes, Scherzer is just happy to be alive.

Guerrero then went on to homer in the top of the third against Milwaukee Brewers’ right-hander Corbin Burnes.

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Vladimir Guerrero Jr.’s Hall of Fame dad was the proudest on Twitter after son’s 3 HR night

“What a night for my boy.”

Vlad Guerrero Jr. is having a stellar start to 2021 after the night he had on Tuesday.

And his Hall of Fame father Vlad Sr. was loving the whole thing on Twitter.

Junior smashed three home runs against the Washington Nationals in a 9-5 win (fun fact: did you know Vlad the Elder didn’t ever do that in his career? So says MLB.com).

What’s even better is Guerrero Sr. was tweeting about his son throughout the night, a proud father gushing about his kid doing amazing things.

Here are the highlights from the amazing performance followed by the tweets from the proud papa:

Love all of it.

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