Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Realmuto set for All-Star Game

- By Tom Withers

CLEVELAND >> Looking Cleveland summer chic, Carlos Santana strutted into the convention center’s massive ballroom fashionabl­y late.

The first baseman’s delayed entrance came long after Mike Trout, Francisco Lindor, J.D. Martinez and all the other American League players went to their assigned media interview platforms.

Wearing stylish, dark sunglasses indoors, the Indians slugger had the relaxed appearance of a seasoned, multi-time All-Star.

Don’t be fooled. He’s one of 36 All-Star rookies in this year’s event.

Santana’s selection as a starter is the latest chapter in his storybook homecoming to Cleveland, where he played eight seasons before signing as a free agent in 2017 with Philadelph­ia. But a trade in December returned him to the Indians, who can’t imagine where they’d be this season without him.

“He has carried us since Day One,” said Lindor, the Indians’ flashy, four-time All-Star shortstop. “We are playing the game the right way and he’s a big part of our success.”

The 33-year-old Santana is one of the more experience­d players at this year’s event, which is giving fans a look at some of the game’s next wave of young stars. There are 19 players that are 25 or younger, and this collection of kids has range with sluggers, slingers and speedsters.

On the AL roster, there’s White Sox right-hander Lucas Giolito, whose name conjures images of an Italian soccer player but whose fastball has overwhelme­d hitters all season. Or menacing Seattle slugger Daniel Vogelbach, who steps into the batter’s box intent on inflicting harm on the ball.

The NL also has its share of newbies, including New York’s Jeff McNeil, who perfected his swing playing Wiffle ball with his brother and leads the majors with a .349 average. And don’t forget Atlanta’s Ronald Acuna Jr., the 21-year-old dynamo with a Rookie of The Year trophy on the mantle.

While Santana and the other All-Star trainees are doing all they can not to show any nerves, players who have walked in their cleats know better. When he made his first All-Star trip in 2007, Houston’s Justin Verlander was nothing like the intimidati­ng, Cy Young winner he is today.

Back then, he was scared. “In San Francisco, I stepped into the locker room with the guys I grew up with watching: Jeter, Big Papi, ARod, Ichiro, all these guys, and I kind of sat in my corner and took it all in,” said Verlander, who will start for the AL in Tuesday night’s game. “Felt like I didn’t belong.”

Santana doesn’t share that sentiment.

He earned his All-Star trip, and the cleanup spot in manager Alex Cora’s starting lineup, by being Cleveland’s most consistent player. Santana is batting .297 with 19 homers, 52 RBIs and he’s played better defensivel­y than anyone could have imagined.

For Indians manager Terry Francona, watching Santana’s season unfold has been beyond satisfying.

“I need a good adjective: immensely,” Francona said. “We were sitting in the dugout yesterday and before the game and I think he was in a thoughtful mood, and he goes, ‘I love it here’ and it kind of hit me. I said, ‘We love having you here.’ And then I told him, ‘I want a favor. I want to get a picture with you tomorrow at the ballpark.’ We got one when we were on that tour of Japan and sentimenta­lly it meant a lot.

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 ?? TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Indians first baseman Carlos Santana speaks at a news conference Monday at the All-Star Game in Cleveland. Santana is a first-time All-Star at age 33, after a difficult 2018 season with the Phillies.
TONY DEJAK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Indians first baseman Carlos Santana speaks at a news conference Monday at the All-Star Game in Cleveland. Santana is a first-time All-Star at age 33, after a difficult 2018 season with the Phillies.

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