Schmuck: Time for baseball to rethink All-Star balloting with World Series at … – Baltimore Sun

It really doesn’t matter whether one of baseball’s tiniest markets has decided to totally rock the Internet-based All-Star vote or some brilliant miscreants have simply hacked it to monopolize the American League lineup with Kansas City Royals.

What matters is that Major League Baseball has left the integrity of the World Series to dangle in the middle of this latest ballot controversy.

Of course, fans and teams have gone to great lengths to skew the All-Star selection process in their favor for decades. And the resulting vote “scandals” have largely been dismissed as a predictable outcome of the sport’s desire to build as much interest as possible in what essentially is a midseason exhibition game.

Really, what are you supposed to expect when everyone is allowed to vote 35 times each from either club websites or mobile devices and every team campaigns endlessly to squeeze every possible vote out of its fan base?

And there are still fans out there trying to beat the system. MLB president of business and media Bob Bowman recently told Yahoo! Sports that baseball has already canceled more than 60 million improper ballots with two weeks to go in the voting, and that’s consistent with the percentage of Internet votes scrubbed in previous years.