When you think about great moments in All-Star games, there’s one that quickly comes to mind for me. In Seattle, in 2001, Baltimore shortstop Cal Ripken was playing in his final All-Star game. In his first plate appearance, he took the first pitch from Dodger pitcher Chan Ho Park and crushed it out of the park. Members of both teams applauded. Ripken would be named the MVP. Whether or not Park laid in a meatball for Ripken has turned into one of the great unanswered questions in baseball history, though as Yasiel Puig and every other Dodger in a Home Run Derby would tell you, it’s not easy to hit a homer even if the pitcher is trying to help you.

National American 5:00pm PT Minneapolis, MN CF McCutchen SS Jeter RF Puig LF Trout SS Tulowitzki 2B Cano 1B Goldschmidt 1B Cabrera DH Stanton RF Bautista 3B Ramirez DH Cruz 2B Utley CF Jones C LuCroy 3B Donaldson LF Gomez C Perez

I’m thinking about this, because tonight in Minnesota, Derek Jeter is going to lead off for the American League in his final All-Star Game, and wouldn’t it be a story if Adam Wainwright laid one in there for him? Not that I think Wainwright will, or that Jeter, with three homers in the last two seasons, would be able to do a damn thing about it anyway. But part of me really hopes that Wainwright does and then admits to it later, if only to further prove that having the All-Star game be about anything meaningful is ludicrous. If it was really about winning, Jeter wouldn’t be starting, and he certainly wouldn’t be hitting leadoff. Really, I can’t even be mad at fans for voting in a living legend in his final year, especially when the AL hardly has a great shortstop being overlooked here. Jeter deserves this sendoff. But baseball deserves better than pretending this stupid thing counts.

And remember, this impacts the Dodgers this year. This team hopes to get to the World Series. Suddenly, it matters whether or not Henderson Alvarez can get Kurt Suzuki out late in a game — to use a totally made-up example — and lord, how dumb is that? I don’t want to watch this game and care about the score, and judging by declining ratings, no one else does either.

For Dodger-related items: Puig starts in right field, batting second, which means he’ll at least face Felix Hernandez. Clayton Kershaw will enter the game in the second inning and shouldn’t pitch more than two at the most. Zack Greinke should appear at some point, and if I’m Mike Matheny, I’m pinch-running Dee Gordon at some point and having him steal no matter what the situation is.

Anyway, take this game for what it is: a fun, over-produced Jeterian nightmare. Enjoy, I guess.