Byron Buxton has never been to the Hollywood Walk of Fame, but he understands how motivating those simple, personalized stars must be. He experiences that ambition every time he arrives at Target Field.
"Walking through that hallway outside the [Twins' home] clubhouse, all those stars are on the wall. I see them each and every day," Buxton said of the stadium's All-Star display, with a star for each Twins player who has ever been selected to the American League team, and a list of the years each made it. "I tell myself, 'One of these days, I'm going to get a star.' I know I will if I just keep going, just keep working."
That day could be here. MLB will announce this year's All-Star rosters on Sunday (ESPN, 4:30 p.m.), and Buxton's case for inclusion for playing in the July 19 game at Dodger Stadium — less than five miles from the Hollywood Walk of Fame — is stronger than ever. His career-high 22 home runs rank fourth in the American League and his .552 slugging percentage ranks sixth.
"He's been on the field, he's healthy. That's huge," fellow outfielder Max Kepler said. "If he's on the field, Buck's the MVP."
Yet Buxton is probably not even the most likely Twin to hear his name called Sunday.
"For me, 100 percent [Luis] Arraez needs to be there," Twins third baseman Gio Urshela said. "He's getting two or three hits every day!"
Not every day, but more than anyone else in the majors; Arraez's 32 multi-hit games lead all of MLB, as does his .354 batting average. His .425 on-base percentage trails St. Louis' Paul Goldschmidt by two points for the major league lead, all while shifting among three infield positions.
No Twin fared well enough in the public online vote to become a finalist to start the game — starters will be revealed Friday — which is hardly a surprise. Only Jorge Polanco, elected as the starting shortstop in 2019, and Joe Mauer, the starting catcher in 2013, have been voted to the team by fans in the past dozen years. But Arraez's fourth-place finish among first basemen was the best by a Twin this year, a fact he said made him proud.