| All-Star Futures Game | |
|---|---|
| Frequency | Annual |
| Location | Varies(see prose) |
| Inaugurated | July 11, 1999,Fenway Park,Boston,Massachusetts |
| Most recent | July 12, 2025,Truist Park,Atlanta, Georgia |
| Participants | Minor League Baseball players |
| Organized by | Major League Baseball |
| Website | Official website |
TheAll-Star Futures Game is an annualbaseballexhibition game hosted byMajor League Baseball (MLB) in conjunction with the mid-summerMLB All-Star Game. A team ofAmerican League-affiliated prospects competes against a team ofNational League-affiliated prospects. From the inaugural 1999 event through 2018, teams of prospects from the United States faced off against teams of prospects from other countries.

The Futures Game was conceived byJimmie Lee Solomon, an Executive Vice President of Baseball Operations forMajor League Baseball, looking for an event to showcase theminor leagues and round out the All-Star week festivities.[1] Early versions of the game created marginal interest in the baseball community, but the event has attracted more attention in later years.
Rosters are selected by a joint committee consisting of people from Major League Baseball, MLB.com, andBaseball America magazine.[2] All 30 MLB organizations are represented, with up to two players from any organisation and 25 players per team. One team is made up of prospects from American League organizations and the other of National League prospects. From 1999 to 2018, teams were divided into U.S. and World teams based on place of birth. Any player selected to the All-Star Futures Game but promoted to the majors prior to the game is replaced.
Players born inPuerto Rico were part of the World team despite being U.S. citizens by birth, because that territory has its own national baseball federation andnational team.
The game is played by the same rules listed in theOfficial Baseball Rules published by Major League Baseball. Exceptions are game duration and the handling of tie games. From 2008 through 2018, games lasted 9 innings. From 1999 to 2007 and since 2019, games last seven innings. Through 2018, up to two extra innings were available to settle a tie after playing all regulation innings. In 2019 and since 2021, one extra inning may be played, with each half-inning starting with a runner at second base, the last player put out. The home team wins if they take the lead in the 7th or 8th inning; the visitors win if they hang on in either inning; the game is over if it is tied after eight.
Two major changes took place in the 2008 game:
Two major changes took place in the 2019 game:[4]
The first game to end in a tie under the new rules was the 2019 game; it ended the seventh inning tied 2–2 and remained a tie after the completion of the eighth inning.
Each year, an award is presented to the game'smost valuable player. Multiple award winners have gone on to becomeMLB All-Stars, denoted in the below table of game results. In 2003, the award name was changed from Futures Game Most Valuable Player Award to the Larry Doby Award, named afterNational Baseball Hall of Fame inducteeLarry Doby (1923–2003).[5] Note that the similarly namedLarry Doby Legacy Award is an unrelated award presented by theNegro Leagues Baseball Museum.
| MVP | Most valuable player |
|---|---|
| † | MLB All-Star on a future occasion |
| ‡ | MLB All-Star Game MVP on a future occasion |



| U.S. | World | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wins | 13 | 7 | |
| Runs | 100 | 84 | Most total runs: 22 (2012) |
| Year | Winner | Score | Ballpark | MVP | MVP organization | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2019 | TIE (0–0–1) | 2–2[c] | Progressive Field | Sam Huff | Texas Rangers | [26] |
| 2020 | — | —[d] | Dodger Stadium | — | — | [27] |
| 2021 | National (1–0–1 NL) | 8–3 | Coors Field | Brennen Davis | Chicago Cubs | [28][29] |
| 2022 | American (1–1–1) | 6–4 | Dodger Stadium | Shea Langeliers | Oakland Athletics | [30] |
| 2023 | National (2–1–1 NL) | 5–0 | T-Mobile Park | Nasim Nuñez | Miami Marlins | [31] |
| 2024 | National (3–1–1 NL) | 6–1 | Globe Life Field | Cam Collier | Cincinnati Reds | [32] |
| 2025 | National (4–1–1 NL) | 4–2 | Truist Park | Josue De Paula | Los Angeles Dodgers | [33] |
| National League | American League | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wins | 4 | 1 | Ties: 1 (2019) |
| Runs | 29 | 14 | Most total runs: 11 (2021) |
From 1999 to 2013,ESPN2 held the rights to the Futures Game. From 2014 to 2021, and since 2024,MLB Network held the rights. In 2022 and 2023, the game was streamed onPeacock.