It's the same conversation, just a different year.
Every season, virtually every Major League roster has players deserving of All-Star selections that get left on their sofas for the weekend.
This year, the Padres pitching staff may be the most distinguished of the All-Star snubs.
The Padres have the best record (49-34) in the National League and boast the best team ERA (3.05) in the NL by a long shot (St. Louis is next at 3.28), yet couldn't command enough respect to land a pitcher on the roster.
Gregerson is having an All World year for the Padres.
I was watching the New York Mets-San Diego Padres series last week, and in two games of that series, Padres’ manager Bud Black summoned Luke Gregerson out of the bullpen. In those two appearances, Gregerson faced six Met batters and struck them all out.
He went through them like a hot knife through butter.
I thought to myself, "Wow, Gregerson is having himself a pretty good year."