After Major League Baseball announced its All-Star Game rosters, the field for the now-annual Final Vote was released. And it appeared that there was no way Dodgers outfielder Yasiel Puig would miss out on the All-Star Game.
The kid from Cienfuegos, tore up the league in June, assembled an army of followers and helped the Dodgers escape the basement of the NL West division. His skills are marvelous. He chases pitches out of the strike zone like Bo Jackson but hits them like Kirby Puckett. He entered the weekend batting .397 with eight home runs and 19 RBI.
Puig, however, lost the Final Vote to Braves first baseman Freddie Freeman, who was backed by his club's massive campaign.
Unless there's a late-breaking injury, there will be no Puig-apalooza at Citi Field on Tuesday.
At first, I thought it was baseball's loss to miss out on a good story like Puig's at the Midsummer's Classic. Now, not so much.
Puig, 22, has 36 games of major league experience and has a lot to learn. On the field, Puig already is being pitched differently by clubs looking for a weakness. To his credit, he has eight hits (all singles) over his past five games, so he's finding ways to get on base.
But he has rubbed opponents the wrong way at times.
''That's where he's going right now, creating a bad reputation throughout the league,'' Arizona's Miguel Montero said.