Fever BaseballFuture Value Radar (FVR) · On the record
RECORD: 0 HIT · 0 MISS · 11 OPEN · FIRST CALL RESOLVES AUG 12

The Scorecard ·

The 2026 All-Star Game, Scored

The American League jumped the National in the first inning and never gave it back. We scored all nine — every mark reconciled to the official line, or the card doesn't print.

Fever Baseball · Scored on the record

The 2026 All-Star Game

Citizens Bank Park · July 14, 2026 · Final: AL 4, NL 0 · W: Dylan Cease
Scored play-by-play by the FVR engine from the official MLB feed — every mark reconciled to the official line (runs, hits, three outs an inning) or this card refuses to print.

American League All-Stars

4R7H0E6LOB
Batter
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
1
K1
4-32
5-33
K1
K3
4
1-32
HBPPR Vargas
L83
HR7
5
BB
FC 5
4-31
K 2-32
6
1B8
F72
L72
7
1B8
K3
FC 6
1B824-6
9
3U1
5-32
K1
FC 4
Runs
3
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
PitchersIPHRERBBSO
Dylan CeaseW1.000013
Joe Ryan1.010002
Cade Smith1.000002
Jacob Latz0.100001
Bryan Baker0.110000

National League All-Stars

0R3H0E5LOB
Batter
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
K2
FC 5
2
K2
1B8
F71
P62
4
K3
K2
K2
1B9
5
P51
P63
BB
1-33
6
6-32
3U1
8
K1
4-33
Runs
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
PitchersIPHRERBBSO
Mason Miller0.100001
Jhoan Duran0.210000

Reading the marks · no black boxes

1–9 the nine fielders (1 P, 2 C, 3 1B … 9 RF)
6‑3 ground out, shortstop to first
3U put out unassisted
K strikeout · K called (backward)
F8 fly · P6 pop · L7 line (to that fielder)
1B8 hit, with where it went
BB walk · HBP hit by pitch
FC 6fielder’s choice, fielded by 6
diamond fills = run scored
the out it made (1, 2, or 3), in that runner’s box
The diamond fills teal when the run scores; the out lands in the box of the runner it was made on. Names link to their pages at feverbaseball.com.

Paste the link anywhere — the card previews on its own.

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The National League gave the ball to Cristopher Sánchez to start the All-Star Game — a Phillie, on the Phillies' own mound, in front of a Philadelphia crowd. The American League did not let him enjoy it. Yordan Alvarez singled to open the top of the first. Shea Langeliers walked, Bobby Witt Jr. walked, and Cody Bellinger lined a single that scored two. Ben Rice singled home a third. Five batters in, the American League led 3–0, Sánchez was gone before he got a second inning, and that was the ballgame — the National League never got even one of the three back.

What followed was the part the box score flattens: a long, quiet pitchers' clinic. Dylan Cease, who got the win, and the arms behind him held the National League to three hits and no runs across nine innings. For six of them the scorecard is a column of empty diamonds, which is its own thing to look at — a lineup of the best hitters in the world, retired in order, inning after inning.

The only ball to leave the yard came in the eighth, off the bat of Miguel Vargas — a solo home run from the Havana-born third baseman, who had done nothing all night until he did that. It was the fourth run in a 4–0 game, and the last mark of consequence on the card. It didn't change the outcome. It rounded it off.

That is the whole game. The reason we are showing it to you is the card itself.

Every other box score online tells you what happened. This one shows its work. The engine scored all nine innings from the official league feed, mark by mark — the fielder's-choice fed by the third baseman, the out recorded in the box of the runner it was made on, the diamond that fills teal only when the run actually scores. Then it did the thing no box score bothers to do: it added its own marks back up. Runs, hits, and three outs in every half-inning, re-derived from the scoring and checked against the official line. If a single number disagreed, the card would not have printed. This one printed.

That is the same contract as everything else here. We file a claim, we timestamp it, and we let a machine grade it in public. A scorecard is that contract at the smallest possible scale — one game, every plate appearance, no black boxes and nowhere to hide a guess.

This is the first game we've scored this way. It will not be the last. We'll see you at the ledger.

Collect this game

The players who decided it — a door to each one’s cards. The scorecard stays a clean record; the shopping lives here.

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