With the 2026 MLB All Star Game coming up (July 14), I thought it would be appropriate to revisit my favorite All Star Game Trivia(l) Tidbits and take a look at some targets this year’s All Stars will be sho0ting for. Let’s start with my favorite all-time All Star Game Tidbit. Disclaimer: Negro Leagues’ All Star (East-West) Game records from 1920-48 have not yet been incorporated in MLB records.
I might add here that we can expect most of these records to stand the test of time. Consider: 1) With 30 MLB teams (rather than the sixteen when most of the career All Star records were set), there is more competition to make the All Star Game each year; 2) The opportunity to set individual game records is reduced by current player usage norms (consider the first Tidbit below, which looks at the 1967 All Star Game, when ten players played the full 15 innings).
ASG Tidbit Number One … Bill Freehan Behind the Plate for 15 Innings – 1967
In 1967, when the National League topped the junior circuit 2-1 in 15 innings (at the time, the longest All Star Game ever, later matched by the 2008 All Star contest), Bill Freehan was behind the plate for the AL for all 15 innings – handling five different pitchers and crouching behind 19 different batters (52 plate appearances). By contrast, the National League used three different backstops. That, for Baseball Roundtable, was a most impressive/memorable feat of stamina. It was also a pretty bold move for AL manager Hank Bauer (Orioles), keeping the Detroit Tiger catcher in the crouch for 15 innings. Got to wonder how Tigers” Skipper Mayo Smith felt about that.
For those who like to know such things, Freehan was indeed a workhorse that season – appearing in 155 of the Tigers’ 163 games – and spending time behind the plate in in 147. Freehan was an All Star in nine of his fifteen seasons (1961, 1963-76 … all with the Tigers). The five-time Gold Glover was behind the plate in 1,577 of 1,774 MLB games. His final stat line was .262-200-758.
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Tidbit Extra: Ten Players Played All 15 Innings in the 1967 MLB All Star Game
American League
- Bill Freehan, Tigers, C
- Brooks Robinson, Orioles, 3B
- Tony Oliva, Twins, Twins, CF
- Harmon Killebrew, Twins, 1B
- Tony Conigliaro, Red Sox, RF
- Carl Yastrzemski, Red Sox, LF
National League
- Roberto Clemente, Pirates, RF
- Hank Aaron, Braves, started in CF and finished in LF
- Orlando Cepeda, Giants, 1B
- Gene Alley, Pirates, SS
By comparison, in the 2025 All Star Game, the AL used 30 players and the NL used 34 – and not a single player played the whole nine innings.
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The Roundtable’s Second-Most Favorite ASG Trivia(l) Tidbit Goes Back to The Year of the Pitcher
Not a single run batted in was recorded in the 1968 All Star Game(despite the presence of such future Hall of Fame batsmen as Henry Aaron, Willie Mays, Willie McCovey, Carl Yastrzemski, Mickey Mantle, Johnny Bench, Harmon Killebrew and more). The game’s only run scored in the bottom of the first inning. National League CF Mays led off with a single to left (off Luis Tiant). Mays went to second on an errant pick-off attempt and to third on a wild pitch that was part of a walk to LF Curt Flood. 1B McCovey then grounded into a 4-6-3 double play, with Mays scoring, (No RBI is awarded on a double play.) The game ended by that 1-0 score, with the AL getting just three hits and the NL only five. A total of 12 pitchers gave up the eight hits, and six walks, while fanning 20.
Roundtable ASG Trivia(l) Tidbit Number Three… Carl Hubbell Fans Six Future Hall of Famers
The record for strikeouts by a pitcher in an All Star Game is six – Carl Hubbell (1934); Johnny Vander Meer (1943); Larry Jansen (1950); Fergie Jenkins (1967). Given today’s hard-throwing/free swinging brand of baseball … and the presence of Jacob Misiorowski … we may very well see that six-whiff record equaled or surpassed. But I doubt if anyone will match Hubbell’s 1934 feat of fanning six future Hall of Famers in the same All Star Game (five consecutively). King Carl, on his way to a 21-win season (the second of five straight 20+ win campaigns), came into the game with a 12-5, 2.76 ERA regular-season stat line. Hubbell had struck out 58 hitters in 156 1/3 innings pitched to that point (it was, indeed, a difference game back then), but he was about to make the strikeout a much bigger part of his game.
The game was played on July 10, 1934 at New York’s Polo Grounds – with screwball-specialist Hubbell starting for the NL and Yankee Lefty Gomez starting for the AL. Facing an AL line up stacked with some of the game’s greatest hitters, Hubbell got off to a rocky start, giving up a leadoff single to Detroit 2B Charlie Gehringer, followed by a walk to Senators’ LF Heinie Manush. Then the fun began, as Hubbell set down five straight future Hall of Famers – all on strikeouts – Yankees’ RF Babe Ruth, Yankees’ 1B Lou Gehrig, and Athletics’ 3B Jimmie Foxx to close out the first. Hubbell then fanned White Sox’ CF Al Simmons and Senators’ SS Joe Cronin to open the second – giving him five straight strikeouts, all future HOFers. Hubbell then gave up a single to Yankees’ C Bill Dickey, before whiffing Yankees’ P Lefty Gomez (also a future Hall of Famer, although as a pitcher not a hitter) to end the inning. After an uneventful third inning – two fly outs, a ground out and walk – Hubbell left the game credited with three scoreless innings, two hits, two walks and six strikeouts.
Oh yes, the AL won the game 9-7, and Hubbell’s feat was amplified by how those HOF whiff victims fared over the rest of the game. Against pitchers not named Hubbell, they went seven-for-sixteen, with four doubles, five runs scored and three RBI.
Roundtable ASG Trivia(l) Tidbit Number Four – Henry Aaron’s Record All Star Run
Henry Aaron has the distinction of being an MLB All Star in a record 21 consecutive seasons 1955-1975. The only years he missed were his rookie season (1954) and his final MLB season (1976). He also played in a record-tying 24 All Star Games (there were two All Star Games from 1959 through 1962) and was selected a record 25 times (again due to those two All Star Game years). He did not play in the first All Star Game in 1962, although he was selected for the team.
A few other notable selection tidbits:
- Most consecutive seasons voted an All Star same Starter … 18 – Rod Carew (1967-84);
- Most positions selected as an All Star … 5 – Pete Rose (1B, 2B, 3B, RF, LF);
- Most teams represented as an All Star … 5 – Gary Sheffield (Padres, Marlins, Dodgers, Braves, Yankees; Moises Alou (Expos, Marlins, Astros, Cubs, Giant.);
- Most consecutive All Star Game selections from MLB debut season forward … 10 – Ichiro Suzuki (2001-2010).
Roundtable All Star Game All Star Game Trivia(l) Tidbit Number Five … The Splendid Splinter Shreds (splinters?) the All Star Record Books – 1946
Ted Williams went the distance in the 1946 All Star game – played in front of the hometown fans at Fenway and – thanks to that full-game experience – hit his way into the ASG records books. Williams came into the game hitting .347, with 23 home runs, 82 runs scored and 71 RBI in 79 regular-season games. Compared to the day he was about to have that would look like a slump. Here’s how Williams’ day went.
- In the first inning, batting third and facing the Cubs’ Claude Passeau, Williams drew a walk and then scored on a home run by Yankees’ RF Charlie Keller.
- In the bottom of the fourth, leading off against new NL hurler Kirby Higbe of the Dodgers, Williams homered to give the AL a 3-0 lead.
- In the bottom of the fifth, with Higbe still in the game, Teddy Ballgame came up again – this time with one out the Senators’ CF Stan Spence on third and the Browns’ SS Vern Stephens on second. This time, Williams delivered a run-scoring single.
- In the bottom of the seventh, facing the Reds’ Ewell Blackwell with none on and two out, Williams singled again.
- Finally, in the bottom of the eighth – facing the Pirates’ Rip Sewell and his Ephus pitch – with Stephens and Browns’ P Jack Kramer on base, Williams capped off his day with a three-run homer.
The AL squad prevailed by a 12-0 score – and Williams’ final tally was: four-for-four, plus a walk, two home runs, four runs scored and five runs driven in. In the process, Williams set or tied (and still holds or shares) the following All Star Game single-game records:
- Runs Scored (four – Williams still stands alone);
- Total bases (ten – Williams stands alone);
- Runs Batted in (five – later, 1954, tied by the Indians’ Al Rosen);
- Base Hits (four – tying the Cardinals’ Ducky Medwick, 1937, and later matched by the Red Sox’ Carl Yastrzemski, 1970);
- Home Runs (two – tying Pirates’ Arky Vaughn, who did it in 1941; later tied by the Indians’ Al Rosen in 1954; Giants’ Willie McCovey in 1969; and Expos’ Gary Carter in 1981).
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With the Top Five Tidbits OU=ut of The Way, Here are a few more in no particular order.
Put Me In, Coach, PLEASE!
When the American League won the 1942 All Star Game, they used an ASG record-low 11 players. All eight position players went the distance and the team used one pinch hitter and one relief pitcher.
Here’s the AL lineup:
- Lou Boudreau SS
- Tommy Henrich RF
- Ted Williams LF
- Joe DiMaggio CF
- Rudy York 1B
- Joe Gordon 2B
- Ken Keltner 3B
- Birdie Tebbetts C
- Spud Chandler P
- Bob Johnson PH
- Al Benton P
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Roundtable All Star Game Tidbit … Larry Jansen in Relief – 1950
Giants’ right-hander Larry Jansen came into the 1950 All Star Game with a 9-5, 2.98 record. He came on in the seventh inning, with his NL squad trailing 3-2, He turned in a truly memorable performance. It went like this:
Seventh Inning
Tigers’ P Art Houtteman – Strikeout
Yankees’ SS Phil Rizzuto – Pop Out (C)
Indians’ CF Larry Doby – Strikeout
Eighth Inning
Tigers’ 3B George Kell – Strikeout
Red Sox ‘ LF Ted Williams – Strikeout
Athletics’ 1B Ferris Fain – Fly Out (SS)
Ninth Inning
Yankees’ RF Joe DiMaggio – Fly Out (CF)
Indians’ C Jim Hegan – Strikeout
Yankees’ 2B Jerry Coleman – Strikeout
Tenth Inning
Yankees’ P Allie Reynolds – Ground out (3B-1B)
Rizzuto – Fly Out (SS)
Doby – Single (CF)
Kell – Ground out (SS-2B)
Eleventh Inning
Red Sox’ LF Dom DiMaggio – Ground out (SS-1B)
Fain – Ground out (1B-P)
DiMaggio – Foul pop out (C)
There it was:
- Five innings of relief (second-most innings ever pitched in an All Star Game);
- Six strikeouts (tied for the most in an All Star Game);
- No runs, just one hit and only two balls it out of the infield.
When Jansen left the game, the score was tied at three apiece, with the NL eventually winning 4-3 in 14 frames. Jansen,by the way, pitched in nine MLB seasons, going 122-89, 3.58. He was a two-time All Star (1950-151) and led the NL in wins with 23 (23-11, 3.04) in 1951. He won 21 games (five losses, 3.16 ERA) as a 26-year-old rookie in 1947 – finishing second to Jackie Robinson in the Rookie of the Year Voting.
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Ouch!
The 1950 All Star Game was made especially memorable by the fact that Ted Williams made a leaping, off-the-wall catch on a line drive by Ralph Kiner in the first inning. Williams played through the pain (nine innings) and even drove in a run with a fifth-inning single off Don Newcombe. The pain persisted and, it turns out, William had fractured his elbow making that first-inning catch and didn’t play again until early September.
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Roundtable All Star Game Tidbit … How About a Quality Start?
MLB defines a quality start as one of six innings or more with three or fewer earned runs given up. Now, you can argue (correctly, I believe) that 4.50 ERA may not constitute a quality start. Given today’s All Star Game expectation of one, two or at the very most three-inning pitching appearances, you can confidently say we will not see another quality start in the All Star Game. Historically, there has only been one. The Yankees’ Lefty Gomez (a future Hall of Famer) tossed an All Star Game-record six innings in 1935 – giving up just three hits and one run. Also falling into the “We’ll never see that again” category – the American League used just two pitchers in their 4-1 win, Gomez and the Indians’ Mel Harder.
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Roundtable All Star Game Tidbit … A Pitcher starting two All Star Games in a Single Season
From 1959-1962, MLB featured two All Star Games each season. In 1959, Don Drysdale became the only pitcher to start two MLB All Star Games in a season. On July 7, he started at Forbes Field and held the AL hitless – with four strikeouts – for three innings. (The NL won 5-4). On August 3, he started at the Los Angeles Coliseum and again went three innings, this time giving up three runs on four hits and three walks (fanning five).
Roundtable All Star Game Tidbit … Ichiro Suzuki’s Home “RUN”
The Mariners’ Ichiro Suzuki started the 2007 All Star Game (in San Francisco) leading off (and playing CF) for the AL squad. He had a three-for-three day, won the game’s MVP Award and made a bit of history.
Suzuki singled (off the Padres’ Jake Peavy) to open the game and added a second single (off Ben Sheets of the Brewers) with two outs in the third. The plate appearance that got him on this list came in the fifth inning. Ichiro came up with one out, a runner on first and the AL trailing 1-0. Suzuki stroked the first pitch he saw from the Padres’ Chris Young off the centerfield wall, it took a crazy carom and, before the ball back into the infield, Suzuki had circled the bases, coasting into home plate with a 15-second, two-RUN home RUN – still the only inside-the-parker in All Star Game history. Note: In his MLB career, Suzuki hit 117 regular-season home runs and one post-season homer – none of which were inside-the-parkers. _
Roundtable All Star Game Tidbit – Let’s Get This Party Started
Pedro Martinez holds the record for the most consecutive strikeouts to start an All Star Game – at four. The victims were Barry Larkin, Larry Walker, Sammy Sosa and Mark McGwire.
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How About Some All Star Game Quotes?
“They invented the All Star Game for Willie Mays.”
Ted Williams, 19-time All Star
“There were 50,00 fans or more there, and they wanted to see the best you’ve got. There was an obligation to the people, as well as to ourselves, to go all out. “
Carl Hubbell, nine -time All Star, comment on the 1934 All Star Game
“It’s (getting elected to the All Star Game) right up there with lobster.”
Gary Gaetti, tw0-time All Star
“Any player who says they don’t want to go to an All Star Game is lying to you.”
Derek Jeter, 14-time All Star
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–—ALL STAR GAME TARGETS—–
Most Hits in an All Star Game … Four – Joe Medwick (1937); Ted Williams (1946); Carl Yastrzemski (1970)
Most Doubles in an ASG … Two – Nine players (Most recently, the Brewers’ Jonathan LuCroy in 2014. (No surprise, LuCroy had a league-leading 53 doubles that season.)
Most Triples in an ASG … Two – Rod Carew (1978)
Most Home Runs in an ASG … Two – Arky Vaughn (1941); Ted Williams (1946); Al Rosen (1954); Willie McCovey (1969); Gary Carter (1981)
Most RBI in an ASG … Five – Ted Williams (1946); Al Rosen (1954)
Most Walks in an ASG … Three – Charlie Gehringer (1934); Phil Cavarretta (1944)
Most Stolen Bases in an ASG … Two – Willie Mays (1963); Kelly Gruber (1990); Roberto Alomar (1992); Kenny Lofton (1996); Starlin Castro (2011)
Most Innings Pitched in an ASG … Six – Lefty Gomez (1935)
Most (P) Strikeouts in an ASG … Six – Carl Hubbell (1934); Johnny Vander Meer (1943); Larry Jansen (1950): Fergie Jenkins (1967)
Most Consecutive Strikeouts in an ASG … Five – Carl Hubbell (1934); Fernando Valenzuela (1986)
–—CAREER ALL STAR GAME RECORDS—–
AS Game Hits … Willie Mays – 23
AS Game Doubles … Dave Winfield – 7
AS Game Triples …Willie Mays and Brooks Robinson – 3
AS Game Home Runs … Stan Musial – 6
Stan Musial hit .317 in 24 All Star games with two doubles, six home runs,10 RBI, and 11 runs scored.
AS Game RBI… Ted Williams – 12
AS Game Walks …Ted Williams – 11
Ted Williams hit .304 in 19 All Star Games, with two doubles, one triple, four home runs, 12 RBI and a.439 on-base percentage.
AS Game Stolen Bases … Willie Mays – 6
Willie Mays stole six ASG bases in seven attempts. The most ASG steals without being caught belong to Roberto Alomar and Kenny Lofton at five each.
AS Game Runs Scored…Willie Mays – 20
Willie Mays hit .307 in 24 All Star games, with two doubles, three triples, three home runs, nine RBI, 20 runs scored and six stolen bases.
AS Game Pitcher Wins … Lefty Gomez – 3
AS Game Total Pitching Appearances … Roger Clemens – 10
AS Games Started (pitcher) … Lefty Gomez, Robin Roberts, Don Drysdale – 5
Lefty Gomez went 3-1, 2.50 in five All Star Game starts (18 innings pitched).
AS Game Saves … Mariano Rivera – 4
AS Games Innings Pitched … Don Drysdale – 19 1/3
Mel Harder has pitched the most All Star Game innings without surrendering an earned run (13).
AS Game Strikeouts … Don Drysdale – 19
Don Drysdale went 2-1, 1.40 in All Star games, fanning 19 batters in 19 1/3 innings (10 hits, four walks).
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