10 Jul 2001: Cal Ripken Jr. of the Baltimore Orioles is congratulated by third base coach Willie Randolph of the New York Yankees after hitting a home run in his first at bat during the 2001 Major League Baseball All-Star game at Safeco Field in Seattle, Washington, won by the American League 4-1. DIGITAL IMAGE Mandatory Credit: Otto Gruele/Allsport

WATCH: Classic ⚾: Ripken's glorious final All-Star Game

Otto Greule Jr / Getty Images Sport / Getty

Cal Ripken Jr.'s farewell tour at the end of a 21-year career provided the Hall of Famer with the ultimate curtain call at the 2001 All-Star Game.

The legendary Baltimore Orioles infielder shifted almost exclusively from shortstop to third base from the 1997 season onward, but Texas Rangers superstar Alex Rodriguez insisted that Ripken switch spots with him.

As nice a gesture as that was, Ripken's solo home run off Chan Ho Park to lead off the third inning felt even more like something out of a storybook - or a less bittersweet version of 1984 film "The Natural."

Ripken's exit coincided with Ichiro Suzuki's arrival. The outfielder appeared in his first All-Star Game hosted at his Seattle Mariners' home ballpark, Safeco Field.

Watch live as MLB streams the 2001 Midsummer Classic here:

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