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"It's a difficult time, on a great day for baseball, the All-Star game, something everyone looks to," Yankees and AL manager Joe Girardi said. "A great man in baseball passed. He's meant so much to not only this organization, but to the game of baseball, and to all of us personally."
It took the NL 14 years to break through after several close calls. The National League lost the last two 4-3, including that 15-inning affair in 2008 at Yankee Stadium. The two before that were also one-run defeats. In 2002, they tied 7-7.
Phillies chairman Bill Giles had razzed Manuel that his job was on the line if the NL didn't finally win again.
Turns out this National League lineup didn't need star Washington rookie Stephen Strasburg -- though the phenom pitcher might have generated a nice buzz around the ballpark in those early innings.
Jimenez, Colorado's 15-game winner and first-time All-Star, came out of the gate with two scoreless innings. Tampa Bay's Price -- who at 24 was the youngest All-Star starter since 23-year-old Dwight Gooden of the Mets in 1988 -- matched that. Then came Marlins ace Josh Johnson with two more.
It took until the fifth inning for hitters to start making regular contact, the shadows all but gone aside from a couple of small patches in the outfield. With a first-pitch temperature of 85 degrees, this was a steamy summer night even by Southern California standards.
Neither offense did much to excite a relatively quiet Orange County crowd of 45,408. There were noticeable empty seats high in the third deck of right field.
Bell's all-out sprint in from the bullpen to face local Angels favorite Torii Hunter generated some of the only roars all night. Bell pitches for the NL West-leading San Diego Padres.
"McCann came up with that three-run double, and that can break your back with the pitching they have over there," Hunter said. "It bummed me out, but I was having so much fun out there, playing in my own ballpark. That's what this game is really all about -- having fun."
The NL squandered its best early opportunity with runners on the corners and one out in the fifth. Justin Verlander struck out Corey Hart and got McCann on the long fly to right.
Dodgers reliever Hong-Chih Kuo put the AL in good position -- men on second and third with no outs -- when he stopped Joe Mauer's comebacker and sailed a routine throw to first high over the head of Adrian Gonzalez.
Evan Longoria scored the go-ahead run, which was unearned.
The NL leads the overall All-Star game series 41-38-2.
NOTES: Seattle's Ichiro Suzuki made a record ninth start as the AL's leadoff hitter, in his 10th All-Star game. ... The game was the 11th played in California and third in Anaheim. San Francisco last hosted in 2007. ... St. Louis' Yadier Molina became the first NL catcher to start in back-to-back All-Star games since New York's Mike Piazza in 2004-05. McCann replaced Molina in the fifth.
[Associated Press;
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