Chase Utley put an imaginary coin on his thumb and pretended to flip it. Who deserves to start the All-Star Game more, Clayton Kershaw or Adam Wainwright?
"That's my answer," the Phillies second baseman said.
It might have been Mike Matheny's, too. As manager of the Cardinals, he wants to honor his workhorse ace. As manager of the NL All-Stars, he wants a brilliant, shutdown starter to face a power-laden AL lineup. In Wainwright, he managed to do both — even though it meant, for a second consecutive season, denying Kershaw the prestigious assignment.
Making that choice "was not an easy task, even though it may have looked that way," Matheny said. "A lot of deserving pitchers [are] out there, but none more so than our Adam Wainwright."
American League manager John Farrell had perhaps a little easier job, especially once Yankees ace Masahiro Tanaka was injured last week. The Red Sox skipper has Yu Darvish and Max Scherzer on his staff, but "given what he's done over his long and successful career, and what he's doing this year," Farrell said, he settled on Seattle's Felix Hernandez, who is 11-2 with a 2.12 ERA.
Hernandez appeared honored by the decision. His catcher, Salvador Perez of Kansas City, seemed even more thrilled. "One hundred percent," said Perez, like Hernandez a native of Venezuela. "I'm excited to be the first two Venezuelans, pitcher and catcher, to start an All-Star Game."
The NL battery is more domestic, with Georgia native Wainwright throwing to Brewers catcher Jonathan Lucroy, a Floridian. Lucroy said he has plenty of respect for a technician such as Wainwright, especially in these days when pitchers seem to throw harder every year.
"There seems to be a huge influx of those 100-mph guys," said Lucroy, chosen by Matheny to replace injured starter Yadier Molina. "Wainwright's one of those guys who doesn't throw mid-90s. He stays around 90 [mph], but he's able to locate so well, he doesn't need to throw so hard."