Pat Neshek was the losing pitcher in Tuesday night's All-Star Game, but the Park Center graduate and former Twins reliever tried not to let that sour his whole experience.
"It wasn't so much nerves," Neshek said. "I was actually really relaxed, and I think that might have been the problem.
"My stuff was terrible. My fastball was barely breaking 90 [miles per hour] out there, and it just felt weird out there. I'm kind of glad to get that out of my system. It stunk. There's a lot on the line, but you're going to have those days."
Neshek got a huge ovation during pregame introductions and later said, "That was probably one of the highlights of my career."
With the score tied 3-3 in the fifth, National League manager Mike Matheny turned to Neshek, who has posted a 0.70 ERA in 43 appearances for him this season with St. Louis. Neshek had given up just one run since April 9.
"I can't imagine a guy being more amped to be here," Matheny said. "Everything considered, that was a big, big deal and tough situation to throw him into. But he has been in those all year."
Neshek got the first out, thanks to a diving stop by first baseman Paul Goldschmidt. But the next three batters — Derek Norris, Alexei Ramirez and Mike Trout — all got base hits before Matheny summoned reliever Tyler Clippard.
Neshek will head back to St. Louis, where the Cardinals face the Dodgers on Friday.