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The 1955 Major League Baseball All-Star Game was the 22nd playing of the midsummer classic between the all-stars of the American League (AL) and National League (NL), the two leagues comprising Major League Baseball. The game was held on July 12, 1955, at Milwaukee County Stadium in Milwaukee, Wisconsin the home of the Milwaukee Braves of the National League.
The National League overcame a five-run deficit to defeat the American League, 6–5, in this edition of the midsummer classic. Stan Musial led off the bottom of the 12th inning by drilling a home run to deep right field on the first pitch he saw from Frank Sullivan, pulling off one of the greatest victories in All-Star Game history.
The National League began their comeback in the bottom of the seventh inning. Willie Mays led off the frame with a single off Whitey Ford, and after two outs, Hank Aaron walked and Johnny Logan singled to drive home Mays and make it a 5–1 game. Next batter Stan Lopata reached base on an error, and Aaron scored the second run off the inning before the third out was made.
With two outs in the eight inning, Mays, Ted Kluszewski and Randy Jackson hit consecutive singles for a run, and Ford was replaced by Sullivan. Aaron greeted him with an RBI single scoring Kluszewski to knot the game at 5–5.
The American League quickly took the lead in the top of the first inning when Harvey Kuenn and Nellie Fox hit consecutive singles against Robin Roberts, with Kuenn advancing to third base from first and later scoring on a wild pitch. Then Ted Williams walked and Mickey Mantle hit a three-run home run, before Roberts recorded his first out. In the sixth inning, Mickey Vernon grounded out to drive home Yogi Berra to give the American League a five-run cushion.
In the ninth inning, Joe Nuxhall and Sullivan matched strikeouts as the All-Star Game went into extra innings for only the second time since 1950, which turned out to be the first year the game went more than nine innings.
The contest remained tied until the top of the eleventh inning, when Gene Conley struck out all three batters he faced. Then came the walk-off of Musial, which was his fourth homer in All-Star games, breaking a tie with Ted Williams and Ralph Kiner.
It was the fifth victory for the National League in the last six All-Star games, even though the American League still leading the contest 13-9.
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New York Yankees, Babe Ruth, Mickey Mantle, New York Mets, Casey Stengel
Boston Red Sox, Minnesota Twins, Pitcher, Philadelphia Phillies, Strikeout, Earned run average
Babe Ruth, New York Yankees, Ted Williams, Joe DiMaggio, Ty Cobb
New York Yankees, Oakland Athletics, Baltimore Orioles, Cleveland Indians, Minnesota Twins
Atlanta, Mobile, Alabama, San Francisco Giants, Atlanta Braves, Milwaukee Brewers
Barry Bonds, Roberto Clemente, Jackie Robinson, Hank Aaron, Stan Musial
New York Yankees, Walter Johnson, Boston Red Sox, Bob Feller, World Series
Cincinnati Reds, World War II, Hamilton, Ohio, Oakland Athletics, Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim