Joe Mauer and eight other members of the Twins are on the MLB All-Star Game ballot that was released Friday afternoon at Target Field.
The others are second baseman Brian Dozier, shortstop Pedro Florimon, third baseman Trevor Plouffe, catcher Kurt Suzuki and four outfielders -- Josh Willingham, Oswaldo Arcia, Aaron Hicks and Jason Kubel.
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Terry Steinbach knows from experience that there's no perfect way to pick baseball's All-Star teams.
The 2014 season isn't quite 4 weeks old, but in keeping with recent tradition, Major League Baseball will release its annual All-Star ballot Friday. This opens a 10-week election to pick the starters for this year's showcase, on July 15 at Target Field.
The selection process has changed numerous times and spurred plenty of debate since 1933, when the Chicago Tribune asked fans to vote on the starters for the first All-Star Game. Now, more than 30 million ballots are cast each year, with about 80 percent of those submitted online.
Over the years, there have been notable examples of ballot stuffing, including the effort that helped make Steinbach the American League's starting catcher in 1988, despite a .217 first-half batting average. Reports surfaced that summer of an Oakland fan designing a board of nails to punch bundles of ballots with votes for Steinbach and other Athletics players.
"Should I have been there? Probably not, if you look at the numbers," said Steinbach, now the Twins bench coach. "But I wasn't going to turn it down, and I wasn't going to let it bother me."