
Meet the ‘Old Guys Without a Stanley Cup’ of the 2024 Final
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Greg Wyshynski, ESPNJun 10, 2024, 07:00 AM ET
Close- Greg Wyshynski is ESPN’s senior NHL writer.
SUNRISE, Fla. — Kyle Okposo doesn’t see himself as “the old guy without a Stanley Cup.”
Even if everyone else does.
“I don’t look at myself like I’m Joe Pavelski or all of these other guys that have been around for a long time. I just don’t see myself like that,” the 36-year-old Florida Panthers forward said, citing the recently retired 39-year-old Dallas Stars center. “I just see myself on the team. I am going to go pick up pucks after practice if there’s a puck standing there. That’s just kind of how I live my life.”
But in every playoff series the Panthers have won this postseason, Okposo has gotten the questions. About playing 17 seasons and 1,051 games in the NHL without winning the Cup. About joining Florida at the trade deadline from the Buffalo Sabres, going from a team that never made the playoffs with Okposo on the roster to one returning to the Stanley Cup Final for the second straight season.
About being closer than he’s ever been before to being an old guy with a Stanley Cup.
Okposo understands how others see him. He just doesn’t vibe with it.
“When I don’t have a perception of myself, but other people do of me, that’s where I just … I don’t really get it,” he said. “I just kind of shyly put my head down and walk away. But it’s been a ton of fun for the guys to embrace that aspect of it. I’m just trying to win for them.”
So is it OK if his Panthers teammates bring it up? To use it for motivation?
“Yeah, no, it’s … I mean, it is a little bit weird,” Okposo said. “Like I said, I don’t see myself like that, but I know that the guys do, so I appreciate it. But at the same time, if somebody says something, I’m probably just going to go skate the other way.”
While he’s uncomfortable with having the focus on him, he’s quite candid about how exciting it is to be this close to winning a championship. Even if others aren’t.
“I’m going to talk about it,” Okposo said. “I’m too old for those superstitions like, ‘Oh my gosh, we can’t talk about winning the Cup.’ It’s like, ‘No, it’s our goal. Why wouldn’t we talk about it?’ It’s a ton of fun to be this close. And I feel like we’re here for a reason because we’ve done the right thing. So yeah, we can talk about it.”
But once the game starts, Okposo said, that’s where thoughts of the Stanley Cup are superseded by the moment at hand.
“You consume the moment,” he said. “You don’t let it consume you. I think that that’s extremely important. The second that you start looking around and going, ‘Oh my God, we’re a few wins away from winning the Stanley Cup!’ then you start to do things that you haven’t done all year. So you have to make sure that you are staying in the moment. But you also understand where you’re at and you don’t let that bog you down.”
Okposo is one of many individuals on the Florida Panthers and Edmonton Oilers that are seeking their first Stanley Cup wins. Some are young. Some are stars in their primes. Some have waited many years, many games and many teams to earn the chance to hoist the chalice.
Here are some of the most prominent “old guys without a Cup” in the Final, with the caveat that “old” is a matter of content and perception.
At 37 years old, Ryan is the oldest player on the Oilers’ roster. Yet he’s played fewer career NHL games (570) than Connor McDavid (645).
Ryan is one of the NHL’s quintessential late bloomers. After four seasons in Canadian juniors with the Spokane Chiefs, Ryan then played another four years at the University of Alberta. He embarked on a pro career in Austria in 2011 before moving on to Sweden in 2014, where he was MVP of the Swedish Hockey League.
That season caught the attention of NHL teams, who sought him out as an unrestricted free agent. Toronto, Colorado, St. Louis and Washington were all interested. Ryan signed with the Carolina Hurricanes, reuniting him with Bill Peters, who coached him in Spokane.
(Peters would later resign from the Calgary Flames in 2019, after acknowledging he used a racial slur during a previous coaching stint in the AHL.)
Ryan spent three seasons with Carolina, three with Calgary and is now in his third season with Edmonton, having tallied 12 points in 70 games this season. He’s appeared in 14 games for the Oilers in the postseason, with one assist and a minus-6 rating. While he played in Game 6 of the Western Conference finals, Ryan was replaced in Game 1 against Florida by a returning Warren Foegele.
After the Oilers lost in the playoffs last season, the Spokane native told the Spokesman-Review he was confident they weren’t done.
“Most importantly now at this point in my career, I want to win,” Ryan said. “I feel like Edmonton is building toward something special.”
Ryan said playing playoff hockey as an Oiler is a singular experience.
“It’s amazing. This time of year, it’s an amazing place to play,” he said. “Everyone on our team knows that and everyone that plays against us knows that. You see the people outside as you’re getting warmed up. You drive around the city and the flags are everywhere. I go to the grocery store and people are coming up to me and thanking me.”
Edmonton coach Kris Knoblauch said Ryan is the type of supporting player a winning team needs.
“He does all those little things,” he said. “He’s not flashy. He’s not the fastest guy out there, but a very smart hockey player and a player that coaches really appreciate.”
One doesn’t need a Stanley Cup ring to be a Hockey Hall of Famer. That’s as true for goalies as it is for skaters. Just recently, Roberto Luongo and Henrik Lundqvist entered the Hall as all-time netminders who never hoisted the Cup.
Bobrovsky, 35, has built a career that will receive Hall of Fame consideration. He’s second in wins among active goalies (396) behind Marc-Andre Fleury (561). He’s won the Vezina Trophy twice. He’s earned a reputation as a clutch postseason goalie, knocking off three different Presidents’ Trophy-winning opponents with performances like the one the Oilers saw in Game 1.
For all the talk about legacies in this Stanley Cup Final, has Bobrovsky thought much about winning one?
“I don’t know. You don’t think much about the Cup when you are in your routines,” he said. “You approach it one day at a time and see what the next moment will bring you. And where you’re going to get with that moment.”
0:57
P. K. Subban: Sergei Bobrovsky covered up the Panthers’ mistakes
P. K. Subban recaps the Panthers’ 3-0 win over the Oilers and looks ahead to Game 2.
Henrique was a postseason legend by his 22nd birthday.
In Game 6 of the 2012 Eastern Conference finals, Henrique’s New Jersey Devils were trying to eliminate their archrivals the New York Rangers. The game went to overtime, but for only 1 minute and 3 seconds: Henrique tucked home an Ilya Kovalchuk rebound to send the Devils to the Stanley Cup Final, where they’d eventually lose to the Los Angeles Kings.
“It’s been a long time in between runs, I guess,” Henrique said.
The Oilers acquired him from the Anaheim Ducks at the trade deadline. As a pending unrestricted free agent, Henrique was fairly certain he would finish out the season with a Stanley Cup contender. He just wasn’t sure if the team that acquired him could go as far as the Oilers have gotten.
“To be able to come back, you don’t take it for granted, obviously,” he said. “You have a much better understanding of how much it takes to get here, and how much you need to go your way and how the team needs to be built to go on a run like this.”
Henrique, 34, played just four playoff games between his run with the Devils and his current one with the Oilers. He’s played 912 games over 14 seasons, the majority of them on rebuilding teams in New Jersey and Anaheim.
What motivated Henrique to play as well as possible for a Ducks team that wasn’t a contender? Knowing that actual contenders were watching.
“You’ve got to find motivation somewhere to have teams like this want you,” he said. “There’s always somebody coming after your job and you have to continue to perform in a way that teams want you.
“Fortunately for me, coming to Edmonton has been a lot of fun. With the team wanting to win now, it’s certainly been different for me. But it’s been refreshing It puts that jump back in your step for the love of the game, really.”
It’s not just players. Coaches can chase the Cup for decades, too.
Maurice, 57, got his start in the NHL watching and cataloguing VHS tapes for the Hartford Whalers. He became an assistant coach in 1995-96 and then replaced Paul Holmgren as head coach that season, remaining behind the bench during the franchise’s relocation to North Carolina before being fired in the 2003-04 season.
Maurice has coached 26 seasons. He’s second all-time in games coached (1,849) behind the legendary Scotty Bowman (2,141), but 17th all-time in playoff games coached (130). He’s also the all-time leader in career losses (736).
At one point, it appeared Maurice might be done with coaching. He stepped away from the Winnipeg Jets after 29 games in 2021-22, citing in part a lack of passion for doing the job. He took some time to clear his mind, get some fishing in and then made a connection with Florida GM Bill Zito, who was interested in hiring him.
“I had given all that I thought I had to give and had certainly been fortunate. I received far more than I gave [the game],” he said. “But there’s just these strange little things that meant Florida was right. That this is where I was supposed to be next.”
He’s been in the Stanley Cup Final twice before: losing 4-1 to the Detroit Red Wings in 2002 with Carolina, and then losing 4-1 to Vegas last season with Florida.
The three coaches ahead of Maurice on the all-time wins list — Bowman, Joel Quenneville and Barry Trotz — have Stanley Cup wins. Does he feel he needs one to validate his legacy?
“I need to win one,” he said. “That’s just the truth. That’s how I feel. I’m thirty years into this thing. I wouldn’t mind winning one.”
That said, Maurice reached a point of understanding with his career when he thought it might be over after Winnipeg, and that it could end without a Cup. He wouldn’t describe it as being “at peace” with not winning; more like a realization of the impact that he’s had since the Hartford days.
“I’m going to know, when this thing’s all over, either how good I got or how good I was,” he said. “I won’t need somebody else to tell me that or how to value my career. I’m not saying I’m going to value it really high. But I have a pretty good idea of the job I’ve done.”
“But yeah,” Maurice said, stretching his arms. “I’d like to win one.”
Like a few other Oilers, Kane entered the NHL quite young. He was drafted No. 4 overall by the Atlanta Thrashers in 2009, and then hit the ice for them the following season. He played 15 seasons and 930 games with the Thrashers, relocating with them to Winnipeg, followed by stints with the Sabres, San Jose Sharks and then the Oilers.
To say Kane’s NHL career has been turbulent would be an understatement. His time in the NHL has been defined by scandals on and off the ice. Kane ended up signing with the Oilers in 2022 after the Sharks terminated Kane’s contract, for what the team indicated was a breach of his contract and for violating COVID-19 protocols.
Game 1 was his first appearance in a Stanley Cup Final.
“Obviously you want to get there as soon as possible, but I had to wait 15 years,” said Kane, 32. “You hear guys talk about getting here in their first two years and then never seeing it again. So I want to make the most of it.”
Kane has been limited by a sports hernia injury this season and has only one assist in his past eight playoff games. But Knoblauch gave Kane credit for helping the team.
“Evander has been good for our team,” Knoblauch said. “He’s maybe not showing up on the score sheet as much as has in the past, but still contributing to our team and I don’t think we’d be where we are today if Evander hadn’t been playing throughout the playoffs.”
Said Kane: “The Stanley Cup is a motivator. Especially when you haven’t won one.”
For 769 games, Ekman-Larsson was often considered the best thing about a bad franchise.
The defenseman was drafted No. 6 overall in 2009 by the Phoenix Coyotes, and spent the next 11 seasons as one of the NHL’s biggest “what if” players — as in, “what if Ekman-Larsson’s puck-moving game and power-play prowess was put to use on a better contending team?”
By the time Ekman-Larsson waived his no-movement clause and left the Coyotes in 2021, his production had slipped due to injuries. He had become the last thing a veteran player wants to become: someone better known for the size of their contract than their achievements on the ice.
When Vancouver swung a blockbuster trade for him in 2021, it was obvious it was eventually going to buy out some years of his eight-year, $66 million contract. That it happened in 2023, after just two years in Vancouver, underscored how bad the fit was for both parties.
Florida started the season with defensemen Aaron Ekblad and Brandon Montour recovering from surgeries. They needed veteran help. Ekman-Larsson, flush with buyout money, agreed to a one-year, $2.25 million deal with the Panthers. And now they’re three wins away from a Stanley Cup.
“That’s why I wanted to play here,” he said. “I’m super excited about this chance and obviously super happy about the way we’ve been playing.”
The 32-year-old defenseman played in 25 postseason games with the Coyotes in two trips to the postseason. He’s appeared in 18 games for the Panthers in their run to the Cup Final.
“Not a lot of playoff games, but a lot of games in the league,” he said. “A lot of hard work to get to this point. A lot of ups and a lot of downs. But you have to go through that to appreciate this opportunity, where you are in life. I’ve been in this league for a long time. To get this opportunity means the world for myself and my family.”
There are few players more beloved in Edmonton than 34-year-old Gagner.
He was drafted No. 6 overall in 2007, embarking on a 17-year career of 1,043 regular-season games. He’s been a Coyote, a Flyer, a Blue Jacket, a Canuck, a Red Wing and a Jet. But he’s always had a dedication to Edmonton, as evidenced by his three different stints with the franchise (2007-2014, 2018-2020, 2023-24).
“I feel like he’s been a part of this organization even when he went away,” said Ryan Nugent-Hopkins, who used to live with Gagner. “He still always felt like an Oiler.”
Few NHL players have a regular-season game that stands the test of time, that lingers in the minds of fans years after it was played. Gagner has one: Feb. 2, 2012, when he scored four goals and four assists against the Chicago Blackhawks.
His eight-point night was the first in the NHL since Mario Lemieux posted an 8-spot in 1989, and no player has done it since. Fans in Edmonton and around the NHL watched him amass five of those points in the third period, wondering if Darryl Sittler’s 1976 record of 10 points in a single game was being threatened.
Off the ice, Gagner’s relationship with Joey Moss crystallized the fans’ admiration for him. Born with Down syndrome, Moss was the Oilers’ dressing room attendant for over three decades. He passed away in 2020.
Gagner wrote a moving piece called “For Joey” in The Players’ Tribune in October 2020. “When I remember Joey, I’ll think about how we believed all along that we were doing all these things to enrich his life,” he wrote. “But the truth is that he was enriching ours. Joey made everyone who spent time with him a better person.”
Gagner joined the Oilers in this season’s training camp on a professional tryout contract, after undergoing a pair of hip surgeries in March 2023. He earned a one-year deal worth $775,000, and scored 10 points in 28 games, bouncing between the NHL and AHL. He’s yet to appear in a playoff game this postseason. Despite playing in over 1,000 regular-season games, Gagner has only 11 postseason games to his credit.
The Edmonton Journal notes that Gagner doesn’t have the requisite number of games (41) for automatic engravement on the Stanley Cup if the Oilers win. He could earn that by playing in one Stanley Cup Final game, which is the other criteria. Of course, Edmonton could petition to have his name added as well.
Whatever happens, Gagner is on this journey with the Oilers. His wife, Rachel, added her voice to a moving video created by the team in which loved ones gave encouragement to the players.
Go show them what Edmonton’s got.#LetsGoOilers pic.twitter.com/TeU3kS9ejD
— Edmonton Oilers (@EdmontonOilers) June 8, 2024
“You’ve been dreaming about a Stanley Cup since you were our kids’ age,” she said. “And now they’re here, watching you in it. Thinking about you being 18 years old. Drafted in Edmonton. Moving here all alone. Standing on the ice, looking up at all those banners, wondering when your Stanley Cup year will be.
“They city has given you so much. It’s been dreaming with you.”
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MLB re-creates Aaron’s record 715th HR at ASG
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22 mins agoon
July 16, 2025By
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Associated Press
Jul 15, 2025, 11:30 PM ET
ATLANTA — Major League Baseball honored late Hall of Famer Hank Aaron by re-creating his record-breaking 715th home run through the use of projection mapping and pyrotechnics during Tuesday night’s All-Star Game.
After the sixth inning, the lights went down at Truist Park and fans stood holding their cellphone lights. The scene from April 8, 1974, at the old Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium was projected on the infield and shown on the video board.
The high-tech images of Aaron and other players were seen before a blaze of a fireball launched from home plate to signify the homer that pushed Aaron past Babe Ruth’s then-record of 714 homers.
Aaron’s widow, Billye Aaron, stood and waved as the cheers from the sellout crowd of 41,702 grew louder.
National League players warmed up for the game in batting practice jerseys with Aaron’s No. 44 on the back
One year ago, MLB celebrated the 50th anniversary of Aaron’s homer with announcements for a new statue at Baseball’s Hall of Fame and a commemorative stamp from the U.S. Postal Service.
Commissioner Rob Manfred also helped honor Aaron in Atlanta last year by joining the Braves in announcing the $100,000 endowment of a scholarship at Tuskegee University, a historically Black university in Aaron’s home state of Alabama.
Manfred noted the Henry Louis Aaron Fund, launched by the Braves following Aaron’s death in 2021, and the Chasing the Dream Foundation, created by Aaron and his wife, were designed to clear paths for minorities in baseball and to encourage educational opportunities.
Aaron hit 755 home runs from 1954 to 1976, a mark that stood until Barry Bonds reached 762 in 2007 during baseball’s steroid era.
Aaron was elected to the Hall in 1982. A 25-time All-Star, he set a record with 2,297 RBIs. He continues to hold the records of 1,477 extra-base hits and 6,856 total bases.
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Schwarber lifts NL in 1st ASG home run swing-off
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22 mins agoon
July 16, 2025By
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Jorge CastilloJul 16, 2025, 12:08 AM ET
Close- ESPN baseball reporter. Covered the Washington Wizards from 2014 to 2016 and the Washington Nationals from 2016 to 2018 for The Washington Post before covering the Los Angeles Dodgers and MLB for the Los Angeles Times from 2018 to 2024.
ATLANTA — The 2025 MLB All-Star Game featured the two best pitchers in the world on the mound to start for their respective leagues and the two best position players in the opposing lineups. It included the first automatic ball-strike system challenges in All-Star Game history, a rousing six-run comeback, a memorable appearance for a future first-ballot Hall of Famer and a beautiful tribute to the late Hank Aaron just miles from where he surpassed Babe Ruth on the career home run list.
But the exhibition, a remarkable show played at Truist Park on a muggy Tuesday night, will be remembered for how it ended.
When it was over, nearly four hours after the first pitch, the National League outlasted the American League behind Philadelphia Phillies slugger Kyle Schwarber in an unprecedented Home Run Derby-style swing-off, with a 4-3 homer edge after the score was tied at 6-6 through nine innings.
Schwarber pulverized three home runs on three swings in the swing-off after going 0-for-2 with a walk during the nine innings, becoming the first position player to win All-Star Game MVP without recording a hit in the game.
The American League leads the National League in the All-Star Game, with a record of 48 wins, 44 losses and 2 ties.
Officially, the result, just the Senior Circuit’s second victory in the past 12 matchups, didn’t have a winning or losing pitcher of record. Unofficially, it was one of the most enthralling endings to any marquee baseball game, exhibition or not.
“It’s like wiffle ball in the backyard,” AL manager Aaron Boone said.
The tiebreaker, a baseball version of a hockey shootout, was established in 2022. On Monday, both managers — Boone and the NL’s Dave Roberts — were required to submit their list of participants and alternates to MLB should the game need the swing-off after nine innings. Knowing starters usually shower and leave the ballpark well before the end of the game, the managers opted for reserves.
The exercise again appeared to be unnecessary once the NL took a 6-0 lead — fueled by New York Mets first baseman Pete Alonso‘s three-run homer — into the seventh inning. But the AL scored four runs in the seventh and tied the game when down to its last out in the ninth to send the 95th All-Star Game to the swing-off.
“Dave asked yesterday, ‘If there’s a tie, would you do it?'” said Schwarber, the only member of the Phillies who participated in this year’s All-Star festivities. “I said, ‘Absolutely,’ not thinking that we were going to end up in a tie when you say yes. And then as the game’s going, you’re looking at the score, you’re not really thinking the game’s going to end in a tie.”
But even that process prompted brief confusion. Roberts originally selected Schwarber, Arizona Diamondbacks third baseman Eugenio Suarez and Alonso, a two-time Home Run Derby champion. But Suarez, who was hit on his left hand by a pitch in the eighth inning, was scratched after being announced and replaced by Miami Marlins outfielder Kyle Stowers.
Boone countered with Athletics designated hitter Brent Rooker, Seattle Mariners outfielder Randy Arozarena and Tampa Bay Rays first baseman Jonathan Aranda.
Los Angeles Dodgers third-base coach Dino Ebel threw for the NL. New York Yankees first-base coach Travis Chapman assumed the pressure-packed duty for the AL.
Finally, the rules: Each player was granted three swings and an unlimited number of pitches to take them.
Rooker, the only participant to also take part in Monday’s Home Run Derby, led off with two homers. Stowers followed with one. Arozarena then extended the AL’s lead to 3-1, setting the stage for Schwarber.
Schwarber, a man seemingly built to smash baseballs over the wall, has never won a Home Run Derby. He lost in the finals in 2018 and failed to advance out of the first round in 2022; he hasn’t entered another one since. On Tuesday, however, he did not falter.
The three-time All-Star, after building some drama with a delayed emergence from the NL dugout, crushed three home runs, drawing louder and louder reactions with each one. The first was a 428-foot laser that traveled 107 mph to straightaway center. Next, he cracked a 461-foot, 109 mph moon shot to right field. He finished the spree with a 382-foot dinger, dropping down to one knee as the ball soared into the right-field seats and eliciting a rambunctious reaction from his temporary teammates.
“I think the first swing was kind of the big one,” Schwarber said. “I was just really trying to hit a line drive versus trying to hit the home run. Usually, that tends to work out, especially in games.”
The pressure shifted to Aranda. Needing one homer to tie, Aranda lifted a fly ball to the warning track before clanking a ball off the top of the brick wall in right field. His last swing produced a weak fly ball to left field, giving the NL the win at eight minutes to midnight.
“First time in history we got to do this,” Roberts said, “and I think it played pretty well tonight.”
By then, the early talk of the night was old news.
This year’s exhibition was the first game at the major league level outside of spring training to feature the automated ball-strike system, an expected precursor to MLB implementing the arrangement for all games beginning next season.
The rules on Tuesday were the same as the ABS challenge rules introduced during spring training. Each team received two challenges for the game. Only the pitcher, catcher or batter could request a challenge, and the request needed to be immediate without help from the dugout or other players on the field.
Five pitches were challenged Tuesday. The first was an 0-2 changeup that AL starter Tarik Skubal threw to San Diego Padres third baseman Manny Machado that plate umpire Dan Iassogna called a ball in the first inning. Skubal and his catcher, Cal Raleigh of the Mariners, didn’t agree and challenged the pitch to make history. The call was overturned, ending Machado’s at-bat with a strikeout.
“I wasn’t even going to use them,” Skubal said. “But I felt like that was a strike, and you want that in an 0-2 count.”
Skubal became the first Detroit Tigers pitcher to start an All-Star Game since Max Scherzer in 2013. Opposite him was the other Cy Young favorite.
A year after starting the All-Star Game for the NL with 11 career outings on his résumé, Pittsburgh Pirates sensation Paul Skenes received the nod again to become the 10th pitcher to start consecutive All-Star Games and the first to accomplish the feat in his first two seasons. Last year, in Texas, Skenes walked one batter in his scoreless inning, a blip that he said “pissed me off” and pushed him to attack hitters for his All-Star Game encore.
“I was throwing every pitch as hard as I could,” Skenes said, “hoping that it landed in the strike zone.”
The result: two strikeouts on 100 mph fastballs to Tigers teammates Gleyber Torres and Riley Greene to open the contest. Skenes admittedly reached back seeking to strike out the side, but Yankees slugger Aaron Judge grounded out on another 100 mph pitch to conclude Skenes’ night.
“That’s what the All-Star Game’s for,” Skenes said. “Every hitter’s trying to hit a home run. We’re trying to strike everybody out.”
In a fitting transition, 11-time All-Star Clayton Kershaw relieved Skenes, 14 years his junior, in the second inning.
Raleigh, Tuesday’s Home Run Derby champion, welcomed the Dodgers’ Kershaw with a 101.9 mph line drive that Chicago Cubs left-fielder Kyle Tucker snagged with a sliding catch. Kershaw then struck out the Toronto Blue Jays‘ Vladimir Guerrero Jr. looking at an 87 mph slider on his sixth pitch, prompting Roberts to emerge from the NL dugout to take the ball from Kershaw and end what could have been the final All-Star Game appearance of his Hall of Fame career.
A legend selection for the game by commissioner Rob Manfred, Kershaw delivered a pregame speech in the NL clubhouse.
“We have the best All-Star Game of any sport,” said Kershaw, who on July 2 became the 20th pitcher to record 3,000 career strikeouts. “We do have the best product. So to be here, to realize your responsibility in the sport, is important. And we have Shohei [Ohtani] here. We have Aaron Judge here. We have all these guys that represent the game really, really well, so we get to showcase that and be part of that is important. I just said I was super honored to be a part of it.”
In the end, Kershaw was part of something never seen before.
Sports
Passan: All-Star Game swing-off captures the beauty of baseball
Published
22 mins agoon
July 16, 2025By
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ATLANTA — Clutching the glass bat given to the All-Star Game MVP, Kyle Schwarber walked through the National League clubhouse and chuckled to himself: He had just won the award without registering a single hit in the game.
“One good BP wins you a trophy these days,” Schwarber said.
What happened Tuesday night at the All-Star Game was unlike anything in the 94 versions that preceded it. Thanks to a rule change three years ago, baseball unveiled its version of penalty kicks in soccer or a shootout in hockey: Break a tie after nine innings via a Home Run Derby-style swing-off. And there was perhaps no one on the planet better to meet the moment than Schwarber, the Philadelphia Phillies slugger, who homered on all three of his swings in the impromptu batting practice session to propel the NL to the win (6-6, with a 4-3 edge in homers) in the Midsummer Classic.
For an All-Star Game that has grown relatively stale in recent years, larded with pitching changes and substitutions, the swing-off lent it an air of freshness and excitement. Amid all of the oddities — Atlanta Braves fans at a sold-out Truist Park cheering on a star from their hated rival, New York Mets players urging on Schwarber, all of it against the backdrop of the NL blowing a 6-0 lead — the one constant was Schwarber playing hero at a time of import.
As the American League blitzed back from a half-dozen-run deficit, the possibility of the swing-off was tantalizingly close — not just for the wide swath of fans who hadn’t known that Major League Baseball and the MLB Players Association had agreed to a sudden-death All-Star Game derby, but for the players who had stuck around until the end of the game to bear witness to a contest teeming with pressure — particularly for an exhibition.
The rules were simple: NL manager Dave Roberts and AL manager Aaron Boone selected three players and one alternate to take three swings. The team with the most home runs wins the game. As nice as it would have been for Shohei Ohtani and Aaron Judge to participate, when they made their choices in the days leading up to the game, both managers selected players they anticipated would be warm from finishing on the field: Schwarber, Mets first baseman Pete Alonso and Diamondbacks third baseman Eugenio Suarez for the NL, countering Brent Rooker of the A’s, Mariners outfielder Randy Arozarena and Tampa Bay first baseman Jonathan Aranda.
Late in the game, with the possibility of a tie three outs away, Los Angeles Dodgers bench coach Danny Lehmann approached Marlins outfielder Kyle Stowers and told him if the game did indeed go extra innings, he would need to hit for Suarez, who was removed from the game after being hit by a 100 mph pitch on his hand.
“You’re f—ing with me,” Stowers said.
“No, I’m seriously not,” Lehmann said. “This is real.”
“You’re kidding,” Stowers said.
“I’m serious,” Lehmann said.
“I thought I was the young guy getting teased,” Stowers later said. “Lo and behold, after the game ends, the managers meet up. And I think, ‘This might be for real.'”
Boone and Roberts had a finite group from which to choose. Around half the players were gone from the stadium, already headed home after a long, hot week here. Those who stuck around were rewarded with an urgent, entertaining gimmick that put players in a crucible, cranked the temperature and challenged them not to melt.
The format differed from the Home Run Derby the previous night, during which Seattle catcher Cal Raleigh won a contest that required stamina to make it through minuteslong rounds. The swing-off was different — reminiscent of the bonus rounds in the Derby during which fans get to admire home runs without the specter of another ball flying off the bat soon thereafter.
Ohtani wasn’t there. Neither was Judge. And it didn’t really matter, because the players were undeniably into the results, the sort of reaction that lent credibility to the format. After the AL tied the game on an infield hit from Steve Kwan with two outs and two strikes in the ninth, reigning AL Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal — already in the clubhouse and in his street clothes — and Kansas City left-hander Kris Bubic were happy to follow the lead of Minnesota right-hander Joe Ryan, who said: “We gotta go out and watch this.”
They saw a show. And showmanship. And a comeback from a 2-1 deficit after Rooker hit two of his three swings out and Stowers parked one home run. And of course it was delivered by the ultimate showman, Schwarber. The 32-year-old introduced himself a decade ago with five home runs in his first postseason and then equaled that number in the 2023 NL Championship Series. All told, he has 21 homers in 69 postseason games. This was nothing, Schwarber being Schwarber, launching titanic shots in the most opportune of scenarios.
Even though he never takes batting practice on the field, Schwarber was perfectly thrilled to break that habit for the sake of the NL. With Dodgers third-base coach Dino Ebel throwing, Schwarber used a brand-new bat — a 99 mph Aroldis Chapman sinker had broken his lumber in the ninth inning — and then lined his first swing over the fence to center field. He followed with a high parabola 461 feet into right-center. His final swing was classic Schwarber, taking him down to his back knee, as if he were proposing the swing-off end right there with his third home run, down the right-field line.
It didn’t, not officially: Aranda, one of the breakout hitters of the first half, stepped up and proceeded to hit one ball off Truist Park’s brick wall in the outfield. He didn’t come close to a home run with two others. NL players rejoiced around Schwarber, leaving Alonso with nothing to do but celebrate the win.
“I don’t think I’d like that in-season if we lost on it,” San Diego Padres reliever Jason Adam said. “But for this setting, it was awesome.”
Almost everyone in both clubhouses shared Adam’s sentiment. The exigency of a limited-swing Derby — and the difficulty in going from game to batting practice with essentially a moment’s notice — transfixed players. And the audience, though understandably lamenting the absenteeism of some of the game’s biggest stars, mostly embraced the idea as novelty done right.
“There’s probably a world where you could see that in the future, where maybe it’s in some regular-season mix,” Boone said. “I mean, I wouldn’t be surprised if people start talking about it like that. Obviously, I don’t think that should happen, necessarily, or would at any time in the near future. But I’ve got to say, it was pretty exciting.”
Already Tuesday had offered an All-Star Game filled with firsts. The inclusion of the automated ball-strike challenge system saw borderline ball-strike calls overturned by a simple tap on the head. Amid an outing in which he threw nine of his 18 pitches at 100-plus mph, rookie sensation Jacob Misiorowski unleashed an ungodly 98.1 mph slider so nasty it awed players in both dugouts.
In the end, it was an electric night for baseball, with Schwarber serving as the conduit. And when Jon Shestakofsky of the National Baseball Hall of Fame went to collect the bat Schwarber used to go 3-for-3 — a decade after Schwarber gave the Hall his bat used to collect the MVP award of the Futures Game — he noticed not a single scratch or sign that the bat had even been used.
“No ball marks when you flush it,” Schwarber said.
He had indeed — and in the process lent validity to the idea that the swing-off could be an entertaining way to cap All-Star week. Players around both clubhouses said they would consider signing up for the swing-off next year — and Stowers said the swing-off made him want to participate in the Home Run Derby in the future. The champion of this year’s Derby was perfectly content to share the spotlight with Schwarber.
“It’s good for the game, it’s good for baseball, it’s good for the fans,” Raleigh said.
And that’s the point, right? All of the consternation over Misiorowski making the NL team after just 25⅔ major league innings ignored a fundamental element of All-Star week — as much as it’s to reward the players, it’s to grow the game’s fandom, too.
Tuesday’s swing-off was baseball balm, surprisingly comforting, and sent the game into its second half with momentum. The trade deadline will provide that tension for the next two weeks and pennant races thereafter. The game is in a good place because it is evermore the realm of the unforeseen and unknowable.
We might not get many of these — only 13 past Midsummer Classics have gone to extra innings — which will only increase its charm, allowing the swing-off to become the most pleasant of surprises. As we saw Tuesday, there is glory in the pressure, the stress, the thrill of knowing you’ve got only three swings. It’s a beautiful little distillation of baseball, exceptional in portioned doses.
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