Dodgers' De Paula hits 3-run HR, NL wins All-Star Futures Game
ATLANTA (AP) — Josue De Paula hit a three-run homer in a four-run fourth inning and the National League beat the American League 4-2 on Saturday in the All-Star Futures Game featuring top prospects.
Josue De Paula (@Dodgers No. 1 prospect) demolishes this ball and gives the NL the lead! 💥 pic.twitter.com/lXyNZiZW8G
— MLB Network (@MLBNetwork) July 12, 2025
The National League is 4-1-1 since the Futures Game moved from a U.S. vs. World format to AL vs. NL in 2019.
Noah Schultz, a left-hander in the Chicago White Sox's organization, gave up four hits and four runs, including the line-drive homer by De Paula that traveled 416 feet to right-center. De Paula, an outfielder, plays for Class A Great Lakes in the Los Angeles Dodgers' organization.
Schultz then gave up a single to LuJames Groover, who scored on Owen Caissie's double to left field.
Josue De Paula wins the 2025 Larry Doby Most Valuable Player Award in this year's Futures Game! 🏆 pic.twitter.com/JD9wcq0XBo
— MLB Network (@MLBNetwork) July 12, 2025
New York Yankees infield prospect George Lombard Jr., the son of Detroit Tigers bench coach George Lombard, walked, stole second base and scored on Braden Montgomery's groundout in the third to give the AL a 1-0 lead. Lombard also had a double.
Josue Briceño, a Double-A catcher for Detroit, tripled and scored on Sebastian Walcott's sacrifice fly in the fourth to push the lead to 2-0.
For starters
Right-hander JR Ritchie, an Atlanta prospect who has pitched for High-A Rome and Double-A Columbus this season, became the 10th pitcher to start a Futures Game in his organization's home park. Ritchie had two strikeouts in a scoreless first inning.
Left-hander Parker Messick, who is with Cleveland's Triple-A Columbus, had a scoreless first inning for the AL.
Chill bumps for Chipper
Two former Atlanta stars, Chipper Jones and Marquis Grissom, were the managers for the NL and AL, respectively.
Jones was an eight-time All-Star third baseman who spent his entire career with Atlanta before becoming a first-ballot Hall of Fame inductee in 2018.
Jones and Grissom were teammates on Atlanta's 1995 World Series championship team. Grissom caught a fly ball in center field for the clinching final out in the win over Cleveland.
"You can't measure my chill bumps right now with a yard stick," Jones said when asked about the memory of watching Grissom "just glide to it and knowing that he's got a bead on it and this puppy's over, it was like it was happening in slow motion."
Father and son
Grissom's son, Marquis Grissom Jr., a right-hander for the Washington Nationals' Triple-A Rochester, gave up one run in one inning for the NL while his father was in the opposing dugout.
"I'm just happy to be a part of this, and get a chance to see my son, all the work he's put in to be a part of this and excel his baseball career," the elder Grissom said, adding the chance "to be around the future stars of the game, it doesn't really get any better than that for me."