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Jose Cano was 1-1 with a 5.09 ERA in three starts and three relief appearances in 1989 -- his only major league action.
"When he called me at home, that he wanted me to come to the United States because he's going to be in the Home Run Derby, I said, `I'll be happy to pitch to you, because that's what I do at home,'" Jose Cano said.
Weeks was booed by fans, upset he was picked for the derby over Arizona's Justin Upton. Fielder, who chose his derby teammates, was greeted with the loudest boos. He wound up in a tiebreaker to advance from the first round and went 5 for 5, including a 455-foot drive off the ballpark's back wall. He had the longest drive of the night at 474 feet and also hit a ball onto the pool deck area.
Fielder hit a drive over the right-field pool, off a "Diamond Club" sign, that bounded off a fan's head and sent a beer flying.
When Ortiz was down to his last out, stadium announcer Daron Sutton -- son of Hall of Fame pitcher Don Sutton -- urged him on by shouting, "Just picture Kevin Gregg on the mound," referring to last week's fight between the two. Ortiz, the defending champion, also advanced with the tiebreaker, eliminating Holliday.
For each homer with a gold ball, Major League Baseball and State Farm Insurance combined to donate $18,000 to the Boys and Girls Clubs of America. State Farm contributed $603,000 to charities as a result of the derby.
[Associated Press;
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