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Anaheim and New York Mets prime candidates to host All-Stars

SAN FRANCISCO -- The Los Angeles Angels and New York Mets
have emerged as prime candidates to host All-Star games in the next
few years.

Baseball commissioner Bud Selig said Tuesday he plans to
announce two or three All-Star sites within the next two months.
The 2008 game will be at Yankee Stadium, which is scheduled to
close after next season, and the 2009 game is at Busch Stadium in
St. Louis.

The Angels are a candidate for the 2010 game, and the Mets are a
candidate for the 2011 or 2013 game, a pair of baseball officials
said, speaking on condition of anonymity because Selig had not
announced any decisions.

Angel Stadium has undergone extensive renovations since the
All-Star game was last played there in 1989. The Angels also hosted
the All-Stars in 1967.

The Mets hosted the All-Stars in 1964, Shea Stadium's first
season. They plan to move into their new ballpark, Citi Field, in
2009.

Washington, which moves into a new ballpark next year, also is
among the NL hopefuls to get an All-Star game in the next few years
along with the Arizona Diamondbacks and Los Angeles Dodgers, one of
the executives said. Kansas City and Tampa Bay are among the AL
teams that would like to host the All-Stars, the executive added.

After playing both the 2006 (Pittsburgh) and 2007 (San
Francisco) games in NL parks, Selig wants to go back to the
traditional rotation between the leagues.

"The intensity is unbelievable," Selig said. "I can't keep
everybody happy. Everybody wants it."

Next year's game at Yankee Stadium will mark the first not
played at a new ballpark since the All-Stars went to Boston's
Fenway Park in 1999.

"As long as they're saying goodbye to it, we ought to do the
same thing," Selig said.

The Angels' status was first reported Tuesday by the Los Angeles
Times.