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Blalock’s homer seals AL win

By Associated Press 5 min read

CHICAGO – Hank Blalock’s team is going nowhere. Thanks to him, though, a lot of his AL teammates have a much better chance to go all the way. In an All-Star game that clearly meant more than a mere exhibition, Blalock connected for a two-run, pinch-hit homer off Eric Gagne in the eighth inning that rallied the Americans over the NL 7-6 Tuesday night.

On a night when the teams turned serious and strategy took over, Blalock’s unlikely shot gave the AL champion home-field advantage in the World Series. Blalock and the Texas Rangers are stuck in last place, but Jason Giambi, Ichiro Suzuki and several other stars surely owe him.

The NL was supposed to have the home-field edge this season. Yet after last season’s disastrous 7-7 tie in 11 innings, baseball decided to juice up the All-Star game by attaching more meaning.

Come Oct. 18 – Game 1 of the World Series – fans everywhere will see exactly how much this outcome meant. Of the last eight Series to go to Game 7, the home team has won every one.

Giambi and Garret Anderson also homered as the AL posted its sixth straight victory – not counting the tie – and matched its longest winning streak ever. Now, for the first time since Detroit hosted the opener in 1934 and 1935, the Series will start in the same league in consecutive years.

And the NL has no one to blame except itself. Andruw Jones’ two-run, pinch-hit double and solo homer gave the Nationals a 5-1 lead before Anderson hit a two-run homer in the sixth.

Then, the vaunted NL bullpen blew it. Houston closer Billy Wagner gave up Giambi’s solo shot in the seventh that made it 6-4 and Gagne, who has been successful on 39 straight chances for Los Angeles, fell apart in the eighth.

Vernon Wells hit an RBI double with two outs and Blalock, batting for Troy Glaus, hit a long drive to right field – to the right of the big outfield sign that proclaimed the All-Star slogan, “This Time It Counts.”

Brendan Donnelly got the win with a scoreless eighth, and Keith Foulke pitched the ninth for a save. Rafael Furcal flied out to the warning track in right to end it as the AL closed its overall deficit in the series to 40-32-2.

Anderson won the first Ted Williams MVP trophy. It was supposed to have been given out at last year’s All-Star game in Milwaukee, but the tie changed that.

From the start, it was evident that both teams were intent on winning.

For the first time in years, each side had signs and signals. And there was only one substitution for a position player before the fifth inning – last year, half the elected starters were out of the game by the bottom of the fourth, with the likes of Barry Bonds, Sammy Sosa and Manny Ramirez long gone.

Plus, there was an argument during a sequence that showed exactly how serious the teams were.

Todd Helton’s two-run homer started the NL’s five-run fifth, its biggest All-Star inning since Hall of Famers Hank Aaron, Willie McCovey, Johnny Bench and Steve Carlton got hits in a five-run burst in 1969.

After Furcal singled as a pinch-hitter, AL manager Mike Scioscia took out righty Shigetoshi Hasegawa and brought in lefty Eddie Guardado. NL manager Dusty Baker quickly countered, sending up the right-handed Jones to hit for lefty Jim Edmonds.

Jones hit a drive into the left-field corner for a two-run double. The speedy Furcal was awarded home, even though he started the play on first base, when a fan reached over the wall and picked up the ball.

Scioscia argued the call with plate umpire Tim McClelland, to no avail.

Of course, Scioscia knows all about home-field advantage. Last October, his Anaheim Angels rallied to win Games 6 and 7 and beat out the San Francisco Giants for the championship.

There were no frivolous and overly friendly exchanges, certainly nothing like last summer when Bonds hoisted up Torii Hunter after being robbed of a home run.

There was a scary moment, however, when Edgar Martinez was beaned by Jason Schmidt. The 90-mph fastball cracked Martinez’s helmet, but he was OK and stayed in the game.

Also, there were no security problems at U.S. Cellular Field, where a record crowd of 47,609 watched. Twice in the last two seasons, fans ran onto the field and attacked a coach and an umpire.

Carlos Delgado, leading the majors with 97 RBIs, put the AL ahead 1-0 in the third with a single off Randy Wolf that scored Suzuki.

Suzuki helped preserve the lead, temporarily, by jumping to make a backhanded catch in right-center on Albert Pujols’ drive in the fourth.

Overall, 52 of the 64 players got into the game. The previous two years, 56 players took part.

NOTES: St. Louis’ Edgar Renteria, Jim Edmonds and Pujols were the first three hitters in the NL lineup. The last time teammates batted 1-2-3 in an All-Star game was 1978 when Cincinnati’s Pete Rose, Joe Morgan and George Foster did it. … Starters Esteban Loaiza and Schmidt were former teammates in Pittsburgh from 1996-98.

… Next year’s All-Star game will be played in Houston’s homer haven, Minute Maid Park. … The first All-Star game was played in 1933 right across the street from U.S. Cellular Field at old Comiskey Park. … Roger Clemens pitched in his eighth All-Star game, tying a record, and threw a scoreless inning. He traveled up from Texas earlier in the day after being added to the AL roster Monday.

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