President was true to his word
President Barack Obama was true to his word: He didn't bounce it.
Obama's ceremonial first pitch at the All-Star game barely reached the plate Tuesday night. St. Louis Cardinals star Albert Pujols helped the president, moving up on the plate and reaching out to scoop the low toss.
Obama had warmed up on the White House grounds Monday night, and was determined his pitch would get there on a fly.
"We did a little practicing in the Rose Garden," he said during a halfinning with the FOX broadcasters. "This is as much fun as I've had in quite some time."
Wearing a Chicago White Sox jacket, jeans and sneakers, and cheered by the sellout crowd at Busch Stadium, Obama walked out of the National League's dugout on the first-base side, shook hands with Cardinals Hall of Famer Stan Musial and trotted to the mound.
From right on the rubber, 60 feet and 6 inches away, Obama wound up and bit his lip as he let go.
The left-hander grimaced slightly, and gave a fist pump when Pujols - a Gold Glove first baseman - made the neat grab with a specially made black mitt with "Obama %44" and an American flag on it.







