
Kyle Schwarber's 3 homers in All-Star Game's first tiebreaking swing-off lift NL over AL
In baseball's equivalent of soccer's penalty-kicks shootout, the game was decided by having three batters from each league take three swings each off coaches. The change was agreed to in 2022 to alleviate the concern of teams running out of pitchers.
Schwarber was named All-Star MVP after going 0 for 2 with a walk in the game.
Players from both teams stood outside their dugouts during the swing-off, jumping and shouting after each homer from their side. When Jonathan Aranda's last swing for the AL fell short, NL players circled around Schwarber to celebrate.
'It was awesome,' Schwarber said. 'The guys were really into it. They were yelling, screaming, cheering me on every swing. And then when that last one goes over, they were all pumped. It was a lot of fun.'
Managers had to declare their swing-off orders before the game, although Kyle Stowers subbed for Eugenio Suárez for the NL after Suárez was hit on the hand by a pitch late in the game.
Brent Rooker put the AL ahead by homering on his last two swings, and Stowers hit one.
Randy Arozarena boosted the AL lead to 3-1, and Schwarber was successful on all three tries, going down to a knee as he sent the one into the Chop House seats in right.
Aranda failed on all three tries, hitting the right-field wall with his second, and the NL didn't have to use its last batter, two-time Home Run Derby champion Pete Alonso, as it won for just the second time in the last 12 All-Star Games. The AL leads 48-45 with two ties.
'I was ready for it,' said Alonso, who began warming up in a batting cage when the AL tied the game in the ninth inning. 'But I'm glad Schwarbs did it and we did it the easy way.'
Ketel Marte's two-run double in the first had put the NL ahead, and Alonso's three-run homer off Kris Bubic and Corbin Carroll's solo shot against Casey Mize opened a 6-0 lead in the sixth.
The AL comeback began when Rooker hit a three-run pinch homer against Randy Rodríguez in a four-run seventh that included Bobby Witt Jr.'s RBI groundout.
Robert Suarez allowed consecutive doubles to Byron Buxton and Witt with one out in ninth, and Steven Kwan's infield hit on a three-hopper to third off Edwin Díaz drove in the tying run.
Joe Torre, the 84-year-old former Yankees manager, went to the mound for a pitching change in the eighth to take the ball from Shane Smith and hand it to Andrés Muñoz. The Hall of Famer was picked as a coach by current New York skipper Aaron Boone, who managed the AL.
Heat on the mound
Paul Skenes, the first pitcher to start the All-Star Game each of his first two seasons, struck out Gleyber Torres and Riley Greene in a perfect first that included Aaron Judge's inning-ending groundout. The 23-year-old right-hander reached 100 mph on four of 14 pitches.
Jacob Misiorowski,
a controversial inclusion
after pitching in just five major league games in his rookie season, fired nine pitches of 100 mph or more in a one-hit eighth 34 days after his major league debut. The 23-year-old righty, added to the NL roster by baseball Commissioner Rob Manfred, reached 102.3 mph.
There were 21 pitches of 100 mph or more, down from a record 23 last year but up from 13 in 2023, 10 in 2022 and one in 2021.
Robot umpire debuts
Four of five challenges were successful in the first use of the robot umpire in the All-Star Game
Seattle catcher Cal Raleigh
signaled for an appeal to the Automated Ball-Strike System in the first inning
, getting a strikeout for Detroit's Tarik Subal on San Diego's Manny Machado.
Athletics rookie Jacob Wilson also was successful as the first batter to call for a challenge, reversing a 1-0 fastball from Washington's MacKenzie Gore in the fifth inning that had been called a strike. Mets closer Edwin Díaz and Blue Jays catcher Alejandro Kirk also won challenges, and Marlins outfielder Kyle Stowers lost one.
Earning a hand
Freddie Freeman was removed for Alonso with two outs in the third inning, giving the crowd of 41,702 a chance to cheer a player who spent 12 seasons with the Braves and helped win the 2021 World Series title.
Styling
Teams were back in their regular-season club jerseys
— whites for the NL, mostly grays for the AL — after four years of special All-Star uniforms that were much criticized.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. arrived in a Valentino smoking jacket and Christian Louboutin shoes. Instead of having players line up on the foul lines as they were introduced, they walked to a four-level red podium stretching across the infield dirt with flashing lights, smoke a DJ and dancers.
___
AP MLB:
https://apnews.com/hub/mlb

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Yahoo
16 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Dodgers recall Edgardo Henriquez, designate Lou Trivino for assignment
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles Dodgers recalled pitcher Edgardo Henriquez and designated reliever Lou Trivino for assignment on Monday. Henriquez is 1-0 with a 5.89 ERA in 18 games for Triple-A Oklahoma City. He was activated on June 29 and optioned to the Comets after missing the start of the season with a foot injury. The 23-year-old right-hander made his big-league debut with the Dodgers last season, going 0-0 with a 2.70 ERA and five strikeouts in 3 1/3 innings. Henriquez has been in the Dodgers organization since 2019, appearing in 106 games. He was signed as an international free agent in September 2018. Trivino gave up two runs in one-third of an inning on Sunday and took the loss against the Milwaukee Brewers. The 33-year-old right-hander allowed 11 runs in 26 1/3 innings over 26 appearances this season. He previously pitched for San Francisco, the Athletics and the New York Yankees over six seasons. He signed as a minor league free agent with the Dodgers in May. ___ AP MLB: The Associated Press


Boston Globe
17 minutes ago
- Boston Globe
Red Sox could use upgrade at first base, but Abraham Toro and Romy Gonzalez have been complementing each other
'They're doing an outstanding job,' said manager Alex Cora. 'You put them both in the blender, it's a good first baseman.' Toro — evidently opposed to a Cubist dissolution of the self — offered a less violent portrait. Advertisement 'We complete each other,' Toro said of his first base partnership with Gonzalez. Get Starting Point A guide through the most important stories of the morning, delivered Monday through Friday. Enter Email Sign Up What are the dimensions of completeness? Since the Triston Casas injury, Sox first basemen have offered stability, with a combined .265/.307/.419 line overall — respectable, middle-of-the-pack production. " However, the production has been skewed. Most of the impact has come courtesy of Gonzalez, whose self-described 'extremely locked in' status has been both the stuff of T-shirts among his teammates and tremendous contributions. Sox first basemen have posted a .333/.354/.533 against lefties since the Casas injury. Against righties during the same stretch, Sox first basemen were hitting .236/.287/.371 — good for a .658 OPS that ranks 23rd among big league first basemen in that time. Those numbers have been trending steadily down. After the team's first basemen posted a .788 OPS against righties in the first four weeks after Casas suffered his injury, the team's production has cratered to a .204/.263/.301 mark since the beginning of June. Advertisement Clearly, there's room for improvement. But will there be available players who represent upgrades? It looks like a late-forming market — something that prompted the Phillies to move aggressively to sign free-agent righthander David Robertson after a workout for interested teams (including the Red Sox, who were represented by Breslow and assistant GM Eddie Romero) on Sunday. Teams are still deciding whether to buy or sell, and so the Phillies pushed forward with a bird in hand. 'A lot of things change daily at this time,' said Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski. 'Some clubs, when we talked to them last week, they had one mind-set, and then after a weekend — good or bad — they had another mind-set. That may change a couple more times between now and the 31st. Ten days until the trading deadline, that's a long time.' For the Sox, those 10 days could define whether the Diamondbacks elect to keep or trade free-agent-to-be Josh Naylor, a 2023 All-Star who entered Monday hitting .292/.361/.452 with 11 homers. Because he is a pure rental (albeit one who could receive a qualifying offer from the Diamondbacks — thus entitling Arizona to draft-pick compensation if he departs as a free agent), Naylor is seen as the most prominent first baseman on the market. Advertisement Ryan O'Hearn of the Orioles also bears watching, with Baltimore resigned to dealing pending free agents. O'Hearn, who replaced Devers as the designated hitter on the AL All-Star team, is hitting .282/.378/.458. There have been rumblings that the Rays could consider dealing Yandy Díaz (.294/.352/.468 with 15 homers), and it's endlessly fascinating to imagine a scenario in which Tampa Bay packages Díaz (who is signed through 2026) and a starting pitcher such as Taj Bradley or Shane Baz for a Sox outfielder such as Wilyer Abreu. But such a scenario is seen by multiple major league sources as extremely unlikely, with a deal of such magnitude seen as a near-impossibility for division rivals who are competing for a postseason berth. The A's merit watching both because they're one of the few teams without realistic hopes of contending this season and because they have a surplus of first baseman/left field/DH bats in 22-year-old rookie masher Nick Kurtz, long-term DH/corner outfielder Brent Rooker, and first baseman/corner outfielder Tyler Soderstrom. There's roughly zero chance the A's would deal Kurtz or Rooker, but Soderstrom — a 23-year-old who crushes righties (.270/.357/.504 with 17 homers) — is seen across the industry as a potential trade target. With four remaining years of team control after 2025, the A's are in no rush to move him. So, to circle back: Will the Sox upgrade at first between now and the deadline? It's still too early to say. Certainly, the Sox have learned never to be too comfortable at the position — but they feel better about the blend of Gonzalez and Toro than they've felt about many other combinations. 'We've had a lot of people at first base the last four years — a lot of them,' said Cora. 'From Kyle [Schwarber] playing first base, Franchy [Cordero] playing first base — we have tried a lot of stuff. [But] these two guys, in spring training they showed they can play the position, and throughout the season, they're getting better. … I think both of them have been great.' Advertisement Te players know better than to assume what the team will look like by July 31 — or what roles they might play on the other side of the deadline. 'I think we've been doing a good job with that platoon kind of role. Romy has been really great against lefties, and I've been able to handle righties. Whatever the team does, if they're trying to add on, I just want to stay here and hopefully be a part [of it] for the playoffs,' said Toro,' who was part of a surprising deadline deal between the Astros and Mariners in 2021. 'Hopefully I stay on the team. Whatever role they want me to be, I'll be happy to do what they ask.' Alex Speier can be reached at


Chicago Tribune
17 minutes ago
- Chicago Tribune
Pete Crow-Armstrong out of Chicago Cubs lineup Monday with a bruised right knee and RHP Ben Brown recalled
The Chicago Cubs are hopeful Pete Crow-Armstrong's absence from the lineup will be limited. Entering Monday's series opener against the Kansas City Royals, Crow-Armstrong had started all but one game for the Cubs this season as the 23-year-old All-Star became a staple in the middle of their order. His ability to play every day while delivering elite defense and taking his offensive production to another level this year has been valuable. However, a bruised right knee kept Crow-Armstrong out of the lineup for Monday's game against the Royals. Manager Craig Counsell described Crow-Armstrong as day-to-day and hopes he is back in the lineup Tuesday. The knee felt a little swollen after Crow-Armstrong woke up Monday, Counsell said, so they wanted to give him the day off. It's not exactly certain when he banged it up during Sunday's game against Boston, but, looking at replays, Counsell believes it likely happened during the rundown in the second inning when he awkwardly slid into third base. Crow-Armstrong was tagged out by Red Sox pitcher Garrett Crochet, after which he and Counsell argued that Crochet obstructed the base on the sequence. 'It's why it was a blocking-the-bag situation because the slide was clearly altered,' Counsell said Monday. 'If you watch the slide and replay, it's not a normal-looking slide, and further reason that was blocking the bag.' Seiya Suzuki made his first career start in center field Monday night with Crow-Armstrong sidelined. Counsell opted to go with Suzuki at the position rather than Ian Happ, who has played 240 big-league games in center field, including 199 starts, though none since 2022 (three games, 12 innings). Both players got limited game reps in center field during spring training. 'This is not a scenario we want to consider a lot, obviously, just because we want Pete in there,' Counsell said. 'In the end, just leaving Ian where he's at and just putting Seiya out there — Seiya has been running around there a little bit during (batting) practices and stuff like that.' The Cubs opted for an opener Monday with reliever Ryan Brasier getting the start. Right-hander Ben Brown was recalled before the game, giving the Cubs a multi-inning option to follow Brasier. The Cubs optioned reliever Ethan Roberts. The Cubs sent Brown to Triple-A Iowa last month to give him a reset and a break in his workload to help manage his innings. Brown made two starts with Iowa and allowed one run over nine innings. 'He pitched very well, very efficient in both outings, did exactly what he wanted to do,' Counsell said. 'There's not a new pitch, there's nothing new happening there. He's got to execute better, it's as simple as that.'