Tag: derek jeter
Jeter, Trout Shine In All-Star Game

Jeter, Trout Shine In All-Star Game

Minneapolis (AFP) — Derek Jeter went two-for-two, helping the American League grab home field advantage in the World Series with a 5-3 win over the National League in the MLB all-star game Tuesday.

Jeter belted a double on the second pitch from NL starter Adam Wainwright as the New York Yankees shortstop made his final all-star game appearance at Minneapolis’ Target Field.

Jeter also scored a run for the American League which won the mid-summer classic for the second-straight year. The victory earns whatever American League team reaches the World Series home field advantage in the MLB championship.

Miguel Cabrera blasted a two-run homer in the first inning, while all-star game MVP Mike Trout doubled, tripled, drove in two runs, and scored another for the winners.

Jeter is playing in the final season of his brilliant 20-year career. Even though his numbers this season didn’t warrant a selection, MLB fans chose him to appear in his 14th all-star game based on his legacy and reputation as a team-first player.

He walked off the field in the top of the fourth inning Tuesday to a standing ovation as the song “New York, New York” echoed through the Target Field stadium.

Jeter now has the second highest batting average in the all-star game at .481. Former Detroit Tiger Charlie Gehringer ranks first with .500.

But Jeter’s hits Tuesday didn’t come without some controversy. Wainwright told reporters after his brief appearance on the mound that he didn’t want to spoil Jeter’s moment by overshadowing the future hall of famer.

“I was going to give him a couple of pipe shots,” Wainwright said. “I didn’t know he was going to hit a double, though.”

Boston Red Sox manager John Farrell named Jeter, who played in his first all-star game in 1998, as his leadoff hitter for the AL.

Jeter’s celebration Tuesday was similar to the way his former Yankee teammate Mariano Rivera was honored during last year’s 3-0 AL win.

Jonathan Lucroy hit a pair of RBI doubles to pace the NL, which went one-for-10 with runners in scoring position. The NL has now lost back-to-back all-star games on the heels of a three-game win streak.

This is the third time that the all-star game was held in Minneapolis and the first since the NL rolled to a 6-1 win in 1985 at the Metrodome.

Next year’s classic will be at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati, Ohio.

AFP Photo / Rob Carr

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The New Pride of the Yankees

There still is, we learned this week, genuine hope for the human race.

It was not to be found here in Washington, where noisy public squabbling over whether to take the United States into Chapter 11 or to raise the nation’s legal debt limit has continued to dominate. No, hope came to us in the unlikely and hefty 6-foot, 5-inch form of a young cell-phone salesman named Christian Lopez of Highland Mills, N.Y.

The reason Lopez’s name may sound at least vaguely familiar is that he, a lifelong Yankees fan, was in the bleachers where he snagged Yankee captain Derek Jeter’s 3,000th career hit, a home run. The red-blooded, free-market thing for Lopez to do next was to auction the historic baseball on eBay, where even in this dismal economy, he could have expected to get well over the $220,100 Andrew Morbitzer was paid in 2006 for the baseball Barry Bonds hit for his 715th home run.

But Lopez, a 2010 graduate of St. Lawrence University and carrying more than $100,000 in student loan debt, announced immediately that he would forego any six-figure financial windfall. “I’m going to give it to Derek,” Lopez announced during the game. And as he later explained to reporters: “It wasn’t about the money — it’s about a milestone. I mean, Mr. Jeter deserved it. … Money’s cool and all, but I’m only 23 years old, and I have a lot of time to make that. It’s his accomplishment.”

These, I submit, are the refreshing words of an exceptionally classy young man. Oscar Wilde once defined a cynic as someone who knows the price of everything and knows the value of nothing. By that standard, Christian Lopez — who simply did the right thing as he saw it — may qualify as the most uncynical human being in the Western Hemisphere.

He was immediately criticized in print and on talk shows for being a sucker and not cashing in on his big chance. For me, an unreconstructed Boston fan, the New York Yankees have always inspired an unadulterated hate. The gifted Bill Mead put it well: “Most all good Americans hate the Yankees. It’s a value we cherish and pass on to our children like decency, democracy and the importance of a good breakfast. “Asked why, Mead explained: “They’re spoiled rotten. They think they’re such Hot Stuff. Their owner is obnoxious. Their fans are gross and rude.”

Of course, neither Mead nor I ever met Yankee fan Christian Lopez, to whom the open-handed Yankees organization did give four luxury seats to every game for the rest of this season — including the playoffs — and a bunch of Yankee attire and memorabilia.

Here is where the decency of Lopez becomes infectious. Because he could face a tax bill of up to $13,000 on the expensive seats he was given and because “Miller High Life believes you should be rewarded for doing the right thing, not penalized,” that brewer publicly offered to pay whatever Christian owes to IRS. Then Brandon Steiner of Steiner Sports and Mitchell Modell of Modell Sporting Goods each pledged a minimum of $25,000 toward paying off Christian’s student loans. Just maybe, as St. Thomas Aquinas taught us, goodness really is diffusive of itself.

At this dreary time when runaway greed and organized selfishness are epidemic — in both public and private life — the spontaneous, natural generosity and class of Christian Lopez, a new Pride of the Yankees, lift my spirits and rekindle my hope.

To find out more about Mark Shields and read his past columns, visit the Creators Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.

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