ATLANTA — Kyle Schwarber was nervous.
He had played in Game 7 of the World Series, homered for the United States in the World Baseball Classic.
But he had never walked up to the plate in an All-Star Game swing-off.
No one had.
''That's kind of like the baseball version of a shootout,'' he said after homering on all three of his swings, going down to his left knee on the final one, to overcome a two-homer deficit. That held up when Jonathan Aranda fell short on the American League's final three swings, giving the National League a 4-3 swing-off win after a 6-6 tie Tuesday night in which it wasted a six-run, seventh-inning lead.
Schwarber earned the MVP award, going 0 for 2 with a walk as the NL won for the second time in its last 12 tries. He became the first non-pitcher MVP without a hit.
''It will be interesting to see where that goes,'' said AL manager Aaron Boone of the New York Yankees. ''There's probably a world where you could see that in the future, where maybe it's in some regular-season mix. I wouldn't be surprised if people start talking about it like that.''
Concerned about running out of pitchers in an era when no All-Star throws more than one inning, Major League Baseball and the players' association made the change in 2022.