MLB analyst adds insult to injury with ridiculous Seiya Suzuki take

Seiya Suzuki's dominant season for the Cubs continues to be dismissed by MLB writers everywhere.
Chicago Cubs designated hitter Seiya Suzuki hits a home run off the St. Louis Cardinals at Wrigley Field.
Chicago Cubs designated hitter Seiya Suzuki hits a home run off the St. Louis Cardinals at Wrigley Field. | Geoff Stellfox/GettyImages

The Chicago Cubs are sending three representatives to the All-Star Game in Atlanta this year, with Kyle Tucker and Pete Crow-Armstrong starting for the National League's squad outfield and Matthew Boyd preparing to make himself available out of the bullpen as a pitching reserve.

However, the 54-36 Cubs have obviously gotten strong performances from a multitude of contributors on their roster, leading to a litany of All-Star snubs, including Nico Hoerner, Michael Busch, and Seiya Suzuki.

Suzuki, the MLB RBIs leader at the time of the All-Star roster announcement on July 6, has universally been crowned by fans as the biggest snub in this year's class. However, the Cubs' designated hitter continues to be disrespected by the media, with Yahoo Sports' Jordan Shusterman snubbing Suzuki from his All-Snub list.

Seiya Suzuki snubbed from Yahoo's MLB All-Star snubs list

Now, in defense of Shusterman, he did try to defend his selections by appealing to the brilliant season Michael Busch is having, claiming that the first baseman was a bigger snub than Suzuki.

Regardless of where you stand on that argument, though, what's clear is that Suzuki obviously should have been on this list. It's not like teams were limited to one selection each — the Mets (three!), Phillies (two), and Astros (two) all got multiple nods for their respective All-Star snubs.

At the end of the day, being snubbed from the snubbed list doesn't really affect anything for Suzuki or the Cubs, but it is a reminder that Suzuki continues to just be ruthlessly dismissed on the national stage.

Through 86 games (382 plate appearances) this season, the Japanese slugger is batting .263/.319/.561 (141 wRC+) with 25 home runs and 77 RBIs. Both of those latter figures are already career highs for Suzuki, who is on pace for a 40 HR, 120 RBI season. All-Star voting be damned, those numbers will earn him some post-season awards.

As a friendly reminder to Cubs fans: Jake Arrieta won his Cy Young award one decade ago, going on a historic second half run after being snubbed of an All-Star appearance of his own. History does have a way of repeating itself.