In City of Brotherly Love, AL rides 3-run 1st to win All-Star Game

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PHILADELPHIA -- It was a celebration of America. And a celebration for the American League.

The 2026 All-Star Game defied the regular-season standings that have been marked by unassertive AL teams. The 4-0 AL win in the 96th staging of the Midsummer Classic was more in keeping with a decades-long trend in which the younger of the two leagues has, save for last summer’s “swing-off,” pretty much dominated.

Jumping all over a humbled host in Phillies ace , the AL went up early and stayed there.

This was the AL’s 23rd win in the last 29 games.

The scoring in an exhibition honoring the United States’ 250th birthday and birthplace was, perhaps fittingly, provided primarily by a couple of Yankees. And one of them, , emerged with the Ted Williams Most Valuable Player Award.

In the town in which the fictitious character Rocky Balboa is so beloved that his statue sits outside the Museum of Art, the AL came out swinging.

The bases were loaded by a Yordan Alvarez single and walks from Shea Langeliers and Bobby Witt Jr. And with two outs, it was time for some Yankee doodle dandies.

Bellinger lined a sharp single to center to score a pair, then teammate Ben Rice grounded one through the middle to send home another. Just like that, it was 3-0 AL, and the Philadelphians frustrated by Kyle Schwarber’s second-place finish in the Home Run Derby had just watched Sánchez suffer a rare hiccup at home.

The Yankees joined the 1977 Reds (Joe Morgan and George Foster) to have two different players drive in a run in the first inning of an All-Star Game, according to Stats Perform.

The AL added insurance lumber in the eighth when Miguel Vargas of the surprise White Sox sent a solo shot to the second deck in left.

No such broad stripes and bright stars for the NL bats, which didn’t notch so much as a single against AL arms Dylan Cease, Parker Messick and Michael Wacha. Juan Soto broke up the early no-no bid reaching against Joe Ryan to open the fourth, but he was stranded by his fellow Senior Circuit stars. They continued to be held in check as Blue Jays skipper John Schneider trotted out his army of strike-throwers, as the AL racked up 15 K’s.

As good as things went for the AL, there was a major scare for the league’s best team in the third. A 97-mph sinker from Riley O’Brien struck growing legend Junior Caminero on the outside of his left hand, and he crumbled to the ground in pain before departing for X-rays. Thankfully, the scan was negative, and you could practically hear the sigh of relief from St. Petersburg.

Unlike in Jordan Walker’s epic Derby finish a night earlier, there were no bombs bursting in air in this one. But of course, this being America, there were pyrotechnics. In this case, a vivid fireworks display prior to the fifth inning that was set to Ray Charles’ stirring rendition of “America the Beautiful” from the 2001 World Series. (A pregame live take on the “Star-Spangled Banner” from Philly’s own “Godmother of Soul,” Patti LaBelle, was itself an all-timer.)

With its mic’d-up stars, its “Stand Up To Cancer” mid-game moment (punctuated by a live Boyz II Men rendition of “I’ll Be There”) and its substitutions aplenty, the All-Star Game was, as always, a time to pause and appreciate the game’s place in our lives. But the patriotic imbuement also made for a time to appreciate the sport’s special role in the evolution of the Republic itself.

The game was a birthday bash, and the result was American-made.