Today marks the date of the 85th Major League Baseball All-Star Game, held at Target Field in Minneapolis, and America is buzzing with baseball chatter. America's favorite pastime has the sports world's full attention on this Tuesday night in July as baseball fans gather to watch the American and National leagues' All-Star teams battle it out.

Hot All-Star storylines this year include Derek Jeter's final performance on the All-Star stage before he hangs up his hat as a 20-year career Yankee. Everyone's excited to watch Los Angeles Dodger Clayton Kershaw come in on a hot streak to pitch for the National League against heavy hitters like the Anaheim Angels' Mike Trout and the Detroit Tigers' Miguel Cabrera. And a year removed from 2013's doping scandal, where 13 MLB players received suspensions for their connections to the performance-enhancing drug clinic Biogenesis, it seems fans are ready to put baseball player misconduct behind them.


But not so fast. All-Star slugger Nelson Cruz (Orioles), who was voted onto this year's American League team after serving his 50-game Biogenesis suspension, isn't the only MLB All-Star with a history of bad behavior. National League outfielder Yasiel Puig (Dodgers) and pitchers Francisco Rodriguez (Brewers) and Aroldis Chapman (Reds) have rap sheets, as does American League first baseman Miguel Cabrera (Tigers).

And that's just this year's top baseball talent. Although Commissioner Bud Selig asserts that MLB has the "toughest" drug policy in American sports, it seems that mixing boozing with baseball makes trouble: DUI and underage drinking make up the majority of MLB player arrests.


So while you're stretching between innings tonight, check out this infographic of Major League Baseball arrests for all your favorite players. Do you feel that player arrests cast a sordid shadow on America's favorite pastime? Or is crime—like the lengthy arrest records of the NFL—just a hallmark of professional sports? Let us know in the comments.