2003 Major League Baseball All-Star Game

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2003 Major League Baseball All-Star Game
123456789RHE
National League0000501006111
American League00100213x790
DateJuly 15, 2003
VenueU.S. Cellular Field
CityChicago, Illinois
Managers
MVPGarret Anderson (ANA)
Attendance47,609
TelevisionFox (United States)
MLB International (International)
TV announcersJoe Buck and Tim McCarver (Fox)
Gary Thorne and Ken Singleton (MLB International)
RadioESPN
Radio announcersDan Shulman and Dave Campbell

The 2003 Major League Baseball All-Star Game was the 74th midsummer classic between the all-stars of the American League (AL) and National League (NL), the two leagues constituting Major League Baseball, and celebrated the 70th anniversary of the inaugural All-Star Game played in Chicago, Illinois in 1933.

The game was held on July 15, 2003 at U.S. Cellular Field, the home of the Chicago White Sox of the American League. The game resulted in the American League defeating the National League 7–6, thus awarding an AL team (which was eventually the New York Yankees) home-field advantage in the 2003 World Series. This game was the first All-Star Game to award home-field advantage in the World Series to the winning league, a rule that stemmed from a controversial 7–7 tie in the previous year's edition. In the days leading up to the game, Fox advertised it with the tagline: "This time it counts." Subsequent editions altered the slogan to "This one counts" to reflect the new method of determining the World Series' home-field advantage; that arrangement ended with the 2016 edition, where the AL team (which became the Cleveland Indians, now the Cleveland Guardians) also won home-field advantage; the AL would win the next six years, as well as the last four. The winning league had a 9–5 record in the corresponding year's World Series, with the AL going 6–5 in the 11 years it won the All Star Game and the NL going 3–0 in the three years it won the All Star Game.

This All-Star Game marked the seventh All-Star appearance for the Naval Station Great Lakes color guard from Waukegan, Illinois, who this year was joined by police officers from the Kane County Sheriff's Department who presented the Canadian and American flags in the outfield. Both the five-man color guard and the sheriff's department officers accompanied jazz singer-songwriter Michael Bublé, who sang O Canada, and singer-songwriter Vanessa Carlton, who sang The Star-Spangled Banner accompanied by a celloist. Contemporary Christian music singer Amy Grant performed "God Bless America during the seventh inning stretch. Bublé's performance of "O Canada" was not televised until after the game in the Chicago area, while Carlton's performance was followed by fireworks that shot off the U.S. Cellular Field scoreboard. This was also the last All-Star game to have the stadium's public address announcer announce the all-star rosters and coaches; the game's play-by-play announcer (in this case, Joe Buck) proceeds that custom starting the next year's game and onwards.

Rosters

[edit]

Players in italics have since been inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

Notes

  • a Player was unable to play due to injury.
  • b Player was selected to start, but was unable to play due to injury.
  • c Player replaced an injured player.
  • FV Player was selected by the fans through the All-Star Final Vote.

Game

[edit]

Coaching staffs

[edit]

Umpires

[edit]
Home PlateTim McClelland
First BaseLarry Young
Second BaseGary Darling
Third BaseGary Cederstrom
Left FieldMark Carlson
Right FieldBill Welke

Starting lineups

[edit]
National LeagueAmerican League
OrderPlayerTeamPositionOrderPlayerTeamPosition
1Édgar RenteríaCardinalsSS1Ichiro SuzukiMarinersRF
2Jim EdmondsCardinalsCF2Alfonso SorianoYankees2B
3Albert PujolsCardinalsLF3Carlos DelgadoBlue Jays1B
4Barry BondsGiantsDH4Alex RodriguezRangersSS
5Gary SheffieldBravesRF5Garret AndersonAngelsLF
6Todd HeltonRockies1B6Edgar MartínezMarinersDH
7Scott RolenCardinals3B7Hideki MatsuiYankeesCF
8Javy LópezBravesC8Troy GlausAngels3B
9José VidroExpos2B9Jorge PosadaYankeesC
Jason SchmidtGiantsPEsteban LoaizaWhite SoxP

Game summary

[edit]
Tuesday, July 15, 2003 7:38 pm (CDT) at U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago, Illinois
Team123456789RHE
National League0000501006111
American League00100213X790
WP: Brendan Donnelly (1–0)   LP: Éric Gagné (0–1)   Sv: Keith Foulke (1)
Home runs:
NL: Todd Helton (1), Andruw Jones (1)
AL: Garret Anderson (1), Jason Giambi (1), Hank Blalock (1)

Starters Esteban Loaiza and Jason Schmidt were sharp early on, each throwing a scoreless couple of innings to start the game. In the third, Roger Clemens relieved Loaiza and threw a scoreless inning himself. Randy Wolf could not do the same, allowing Carlos Delgado to single home Ichiro Suzuki with the game's first run, and a 1–0 lead for the AL.

The lead would stand until the fifth inning, when Todd Helton gave the NL the lead with a two-run homer off Shigetoshi Hasegawa. The National League would go on to score three more runs that inning, on the strength of a two-run double from Andruw Jones and an RBI single from Albert Pujols, giving the NL a 5–1 lead.

In the sixth, Garret Anderson hit a two-run homer off Woody Williams to bring the AL back within two. Andruw Jones would get one of those runs back the next inning by hitting a solo shot off Mark Mulder. Jason Giambi got the run right back with a solo shot off Billy Wagner in the seventh.

In the eighth came Éric Gagné, who did not blow any saves in the 2003 regular season. The All-Star Game would prove to be the one blemish on his record for the year. Staked to a 6–4 lead, Gagne gave up a one-out double to Garret Anderson, who was replaced by pinch-runner Melvin Mora. Vernon Wells singled Mora home to make it a one-run game. Then Hank Blalock hit a dramatic, two-out go-ahead home run to put the AL up 7–6.

Keith Foulke came in the ninth to try to earn the save. Foulke closed the door and set the side down 1-2-3. Garret Anderson, who batted 3–4 with a double, home run and two RBI, was awarded the game's MVP honors, a night after winning the 2003 Home Run Derby.

Home Run Derby

[edit]
U.S. Cellular Field, Chicago—A.L. 47, N.L. 39
PlayerTeamRound 1SemisFinalsTotals
Garret AndersonAngels76922
Albert PujolsCardinals414826
Jason GiambiYankees121123
Jim EdmondsCardinals448
Gary SheffieldBraves44
Carlos DelgadoBlue Jays22
Richie SexsonBrewers11
Bret BooneMariners00
SemifinalsFinals
      
1Jason Giambi11
4Albert Pujols14
4Albert Pujols8
2Garret Anderson9
2Garret Anderson6
3Jim Edmonds4

Notes

[edit]
  • For the first time since 1978 (Reds: Pete Rose, Joe Morgan, and George Foster) an all-star team had the first three hitters from the same regular season team (Cardinals: Renteria, Edmonds, and Pujols).
  • From 1997-July 1998, Jason Schmidt and Esteban Loaiza were teammates in Pittsburgh.
  • The honorary captains for the game were Hall of Famers Gary Carter (N.L.) and Luis Aparicio (A.L.).
  • This was Eric Gagné's only blown save of 2003, as he went a perfect 55 for 55 in save opportunities in the regular season.
  • This was the first All-Star Game in which one of the managers was not the manager of the team he had taken to the World Series the year before. NL manager Dusty Baker had led the San Francisco Giants to the NL pennant in 2002, but during the offseason had left the Giants to become manager of the Chicago Cubs. Baker, and not his San Francisco replacement, Felipe Alou, still managed the team.
[edit]

    2003 Major League Baseball All-Star Game
    123456789RHE
    National League0000501006111
    American League00100213x790
    DateJuly 15, 2003
    VenueU.S. Cellular Field
    CityChicago, Illinois
    Managers
    MVPGarret Anderson (ANA)
    Attendance47,609
    TelevisionFox (United States)
    MLB International (International)
    TV announcersJoe Buck and Tim McCarver (Fox)
    Gary Thorne and Ken Singleton (MLB International)
    RadioESPN
    Radio announcersDan Shulman and Dave Campbell

    The 2003 Major League Baseball All-Star Game was the 74th midsummer classic between the all-stars of the American League (AL) and National League (NL), the two leagues constituting Major League Baseball, and celebrated the 70th anniversary of the inaugural All-Star Game played in Chicago, Illinois in 1933.

    The game was held on July 15, 2003 at U.S. Cellular Field, the home of the Chicago White Sox of the American League. The game resulted in the American League defeating the National League 7–6, thus awarding an AL team (which was eventually the New York Yankees) home-field advantage in the 2003 World Series. This game was the first All-Star Game to award home-field advantage in the World Series to the winning league, a rule that stemmed from a controversial 7–7 tie in the previous year's edition. In the days leading up to the game, Fox advertised it with the tagline: "This time it counts." Subsequent editions altered the slogan to "This one counts" to reflect the new method of determining the World Series' home-field advantage; that arrangement ended with the 2016 edition, where the AL team (which became the Cleveland Indians, now the Cleveland Guardians) also won home-field advantage; the AL would win the next six years, as well as the last four. The winning league had a 9–5 record in the corresponding year's World Series, with the AL going 6–5 in the 11 years it won the All Star Game and the NL going 3–0 in the three years it won the All Star Game.

    This All-Star Game marked the seventh All-Star appearance for the Naval Station Great Lakes color guard from Waukegan, Illinois, who this year was joined by police officers from the Kane County Sheriff's Department who presented the Canadian and American flags in the outfield. Both the five-man color guard and the sheriff's department officers accompanied jazz singer-songwriter Michael Bublé, who sang O Canada, and singer-songwriter Vanessa Carlton, who sang The Star-Spangled Banner accompanied by a celloist. Contemporary Christian music singer Amy Grant performed "God Bless America during the seventh inning stretch. Bublé's performance of "O Canada" was not televised until after the game in the Chicago area, while Carlton's performance was followed by fireworks that shot off the U.S. Cellular Field scoreboard. This was also the last All-Star game to have the stadium's public address announcer announce the all-star rosters and coaches; the game's play-by-play announcer (in this case, Joe Buck) proceeds that custom starting the next year's game and onwards.

    Rosters

    Players in italics have since been inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame.

    Notes

    • a Player was unable to play due to injury.
    • b Player was selected to start, but was unable to play due to injury.
    • c Player replaced an injured player.
    • FV Player was selected by the fans through the All-Star Final Vote.

    Game

    Coaching staffs

    Umpires

    Home PlateTim McClelland
    First BaseLarry Young
    Second BaseGary Darling
    Third BaseGary Cederstrom
    Left FieldMark Carlson
    Right FieldBill Welke

    Starting lineups

    National LeagueAmerican League
    OrderPlayerTeamPositionOrderPlayerTeamPosition
    1Édgar RenteríaCardinalsSS1Ichiro SuzukiMarinersRF
    2Jim EdmondsCardinalsCF2Alfonso SorianoYankees2B
    3Albert PujolsCardinalsLF3Carlos DelgadoBlue Jays1B
    4Barry BondsGiantsDH4Alex RodriguezRangersSS
    5Gary SheffieldBravesRF5Garret AndersonAngelsLF
    6Todd HeltonRockies1B6Edgar MartínezMarinersDH
    7Scott RolenCardinals3B7Hideki MatsuiYankeesCF
    8Javy LópezBravesC8Troy GlausAngels3B
    9José VidroExpos2B9Jorge PosadaYankeesC
    Jason SchmidtGiantsPEsteban LoaizaWhite SoxP

    Game summary

    Tuesday, July 15, 2003 7:38 pm (CDT) at U.S. Cellular Field in Chicago, Illinois
    Team123456789RHE
    National League0000501006111
    American League00100213X790
    WP: Brendan Donnelly (1–0)   LP: Éric Gagné (0–1)   Sv: Keith Foulke (1)
    Home runs:
    NL: Todd Helton (1), Andruw Jones (1)
    AL: Garret Anderson (1), Jason Giambi (1), Hank Blalock (1)

    Starters Esteban Loaiza and Jason Schmidt were sharp early on, each throwing a scoreless couple of innings to start the game. In the third, Roger Clemens relieved Loaiza and threw a scoreless inning himself. Randy Wolf could not do the same, allowing Carlos Delgado to single home Ichiro Suzuki with the game's first run, and a 1–0 lead for the AL.

    The lead would stand until the fifth inning, when Todd Helton gave the NL the lead with a two-run homer off Shigetoshi Hasegawa. The National League would go on to score three more runs that inning, on the strength of a two-run double from Andruw Jones and an RBI single from Albert Pujols, giving the NL a 5–1 lead.

    In the sixth, Garret Anderson hit a two-run homer off Woody Williams to bring the AL back within two. Andruw Jones would get one of those runs back the next inning by hitting a solo shot off Mark Mulder. Jason Giambi got the run right back with a solo shot off Billy Wagner in the seventh.

    In the eighth came Éric Gagné, who did not blow any saves in the 2003 regular season. The All-Star Game would prove to be the one blemish on his record for the year. Staked to a 6–4 lead, Gagne gave up a one-out double to Garret Anderson, who was replaced by pinch-runner Melvin Mora. Vernon Wells singled Mora home to make it a one-run game. Then Hank Blalock hit a dramatic, two-out go-ahead home run to put the AL up 7–6.

    Keith Foulke came in the ninth to try to earn the save. Foulke closed the door and set the side down 1-2-3. Garret Anderson, who batted 3–4 with a double, home run and two RBI, was awarded the game's MVP honors, a night after winning the 2003 Home Run Derby.

    Home Run Derby

    U.S. Cellular Field, Chicago—A.L. 47, N.L. 39
    PlayerTeamRound 1SemisFinalsTotals
    Garret AndersonAngels76922
    Albert PujolsCardinals414826
    Jason GiambiYankees121123
    Jim EdmondsCardinals448
    Gary SheffieldBraves44
    Carlos DelgadoBlue Jays22
    Richie SexsonBrewers11
    Bret BooneMariners00
    SemifinalsFinals
          
    1Jason Giambi11
    4Albert Pujols14
    4Albert Pujols8
    2Garret Anderson9
    2Garret Anderson6
    3Jim Edmonds4

    Notes

    • For the first time since 1978 (Reds: Pete Rose, Joe Morgan, and George Foster) an all-star team had the first three hitters from the same regular season team (Cardinals: Renteria, Edmonds, and Pujols).
    • From 1997-July 1998, Jason Schmidt and Esteban Loaiza were teammates in Pittsburgh.
    • The honorary captains for the game were Hall of Famers Gary Carter (N.L.) and Luis Aparicio (A.L.).
    • This was Eric Gagné's only blown save of 2003, as he went a perfect 55 for 55 in save opportunities in the regular season.
    • This was the first All-Star Game in which one of the managers was not the manager of the team he had taken to the World Series the year before. NL manager Dusty Baker had led the San Francisco Giants to the NL pennant in 2002, but during the offseason had left the Giants to become manager of the Chicago Cubs. Baker, and not his San Francisco replacement, Felipe Alou, still managed the team.
    • All-Star Game Home Page
    • Home Run Derby
    • Boxscore
    • Game Recap
    Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2003_Major_League_Baseball_All-Star_Game&oldid=1303750153"