Top 10 Worst MLB All-Stars

Clueless fans are to blame for the All-Star Game selection of some of these B-teamers, while others benefited from baseball's requirement that each club supply a warm body. Here are the players who prove that to make baseball's Midsummer Classic — which this year will be played on July 14 in St. Louis — you don't actually have to be any good

Vinegar Bend Mizell, St. Louis Cardinals (1959)

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Wilmer (Vinegar Bend) Mizell, a country boy who earned his nickname by playing ball in Vinegar Bend, Ala. (pop. 50), finished 1959 with a decent 13-10 record and a serviceable 4.16 ERA. But Vinegar really dishonored his '59 All-Star selections — baseball played two Midsummer Classics from 1959 to 1962 to raise money for player pensions — with a sour second half. During the '59 backstretch, Mizell went 4-7 with an indecent 5.94 ERA. Luckily for Vinegar, he fared much better in politics after his playing career ended in 1962. As a Republican from North Carolina, Mizell served three terms in Congress, where he fiercely stuck up for the state's tobacco industry. Later, Presidents Ford and Reagan appointed him to posts in their Administrations.

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