MLB to Consider a Return to Club Uniforms for Future All-Star Games

MLB to Consider a Return to Club Uniforms for Future All-Star Games
Los Angeles Dodgers designated hitter Shohei Ohtani walks on to the field before the Major League Baseball All-Star game in Arlington, Texas, on July 16, 2024. (LM Otero/AP Photo)
The Associated Press
Updated:

ARLINGTON, Texas—Major League Baseball will consider going back to having players wear their team uniforms during the All-Star Game, Commissioner Rob Manfred said Tuesday.

Club uniforms were used by the American League from 1933–2019 and by the National League from 1934–2019. When the game resumed in 2021 following the pandemic-related cancellation in 2020, MLB had started a uniform contract with Nike and Fanatics, and All-Stars were outfitted in specially designed league uniforms that have drawn abundant criticism from traditionalists.

This year’s American League uniforms had a sandy base with red sleeves and lettering, and the National League had a navy base with light blue sleeves and lettering.

“I’m aware of the sentiment on this issue,” Manfred told the Baseball Writers’ Association of America. “I think where my head is on it, it’s something we’re going to have a conversation about coming out of the All-Star Game. We’ve got a lot of uniform things going on. And, obviously, the conversations have to involve the players first and foremost, but [also] Nike, some of our partners. But I am aware of the sentiment, and I do know why people kind of like that tradition.”

MLB and Nike were criticized for club uniforms this year and said in May that 2025 club outfits will have larger lettering on the back of jerseys and individual customization of pants. Players complained this year that white pants worn by some teams are see-through enough to show tucked-in jersey tops.

Manfred said a national steaming package of local television broadcasts is a future possibility.

“I could see a situation where we grow into a 30-club model. It might start on the digital side, where you have 14 or 15 clubs, and you start with a digital product there as your first alternative,” he said.

“I was in Sun Valley last week and I did the whole speed-dating thing with everybody who’s ever streamed anything. When you talk to people in the streaming business, they’re not really interested in buying the state of Wisconsin and two counties in Michigan,“ Manfred added. ”They want to be able to stream, quite frankly, all over the U.S. and Canada, but more broadly internationally.

“So, I think those conversations are a product of owners saying, holy cow, the [regional sports network] business is really deteriorating. We know the future’s going to be streaming. What we’re hearing from the streamers is they want a more national product, and we need to be responsive to what people want to buy.”

MLB took over production of Arizona Diamondbacks and San Diego Padres local television broadcasts last year following the bankruptcy of Diamond Sports’ Bally networks and said MLB will be available as an option for teams looking for new deals. He said Padres game are approaching 40,000 subscribers, which he called a good figure.

“Having said that, from a revenue perspective, it is not generating what the RSNs did,“ Manfred said. ”The RSNs were a great business. Lots of people paid for programing they didn’t necessarily want. And it’s hard to replicate that kind of revenue absent that kind of bundling concept.”

While offense is near half-century lows, it has picked up from early in the season.

“The decline in offense is something that we’re paying a lot of attention to, and we’ll continue to monitor to make a decision as to whether we think we need to do something,“ Manfred said. ”You do hear a lot of chatter about the dominance of pitching in the game. That’s absolutely true.”

After the success of the June 20 game between the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals at Rickwood Field, Manfred said MLB will return to the historic ballpark in Birmingham, Ala., but the “exact form” had not been determined.

By Ronald Blum