The final score was 5-3 American League, but few people will remember much about the actual game they played in Target Field on Tuesday night. They'll remember the heartfelt sendoff that baseball and his fellow players gave Derek Jeter, the psychic transfer of power to boy king Mike Trout, and the group hug that Minnesota enjoyed with one of its own.
"It's a night I'll never forget," Twins closer Glen Perkins after tuning out the din of 41,048 chanting his name while he recorded the final three outs, with the help of recent Minnesota import Kurt Suzuki, for his first All-Star save. The whole experience, Perkins said, "met my expectations — and more."
Just imagine how Jeter feels. The only way the selection to his 14th and final All-Star Game could have been more perfect was if, after diving to his left for Andrew McCutchen's hard grounder on the game's first play, he had thrown out the Pirates speedster at first. McCutchen was safe by a millisecond, proof that not every moment was scripted for TV.
But when the inning ended, the tributes began. As Jeter strode to the plate to lead off for the American League, the recorded voice of legendary Yankee Stadium public address announcer Bob Sheppard intoned his name: "Jee-tah." The Yankees captain stood at the plate, waiting for a pitcher who wasn't going to do him the favor of cutting off the ovation.
"I just wanted him to enjoy it. I thought that was his moment," NL starter Adam Wainwright said. "I put my glove up and just backed up almost to second base, just saying, 'Dude, I'm not going anywhere until this ovation dies down.' … I'd still be standing out there if they were still cheering."
They were cheering even louder and longer in the fourth inning, when Jeter took the field with the rest of the AL stars, but Chicago's Alexei Ramirez soon jogged out to relieve him. The shortstops hugged, "New York, New York" played in the stadium, Jeter tipped his cap to the crowd, took congratulations from the entire AL dugout and returned to the field for one final salute.
"It was a wonderful moment that I'm always going to remember," he said. "For them to do that, that was much better than if there was something scripted."
Jeter, who finished with a single, a double and countless ovations, said he was uncomfortable with the attention — but especially touched by Wainwright's gesture. "I tried to tell him to pick [his glove] up, let's go. He let the fans give me an ovation, which I'll always remember," Jeter said. "For him to do that says a lot about him and how much of a class act he is."