ANAHEIM, Calif. |  Yovani Gallardo is firm. Even if he’s fortunate enough to make the  All-Star team again next summer, he’ll skip it. “If the game is in  Arizona, I will totally boycott,” the Milwaukee Brewers pitcher said  Monday. A year before Phoenix is set to host baseball’s big event,  the state’s new immigration law kept drawing the attention of major  leaguers. Kansas City reliever Joakim Soria, who leads the majors  with 25 saves, said he would support a Latino protest and stay away.  Detroit closer Jose Valverde can see himself steering clear, too. “It’s  a really delicate issue,” said Toronto outfielder Jose Bautista, who  leads the majors with 24 home runs. “Hopefully, there are some changes  in the law before then. We have to back up our Latin communities.” “If  I do get chosen, I don’t know what I’m going to do,” he said. About  three dozen protesters held signs Monday one block from the hotel where  Major League Baseball held its welcoming news conferences. The  demonstrators said they had over 100,000 petitions asking commissioner  Bud Selig to move the 2011 All-Star game out of Arizona. Another  protest was planned outside Angel Stadium before Tuesday night’s game. Selig  has not spoken directly on the subject. Asked in May about calls to  shift next year’s game, he gave a defense of baseball’s minority hiring  record. Selig did not take questions at Monday’s All-Star introductory  event. Arizona’s much-debated measure takes effect July 29. The  statute requires police, while enforcing other laws, to ask about a  person’s immigration status if there is reasonable suspicion that the  person is in the country illegally. “They could stop me and ask to  see my papers,” Soria said. “I have to stand with my Latin community on  this.” The Mexican-born Gallardo said he’s talked with Soria and  San Diego’s All-Star first baseman Adrian Gonzalez about the Arizona  law. “We don’t agree with it,” Gallardo said. St. Louis slugger  Albert Pujols said he opposed the law and Valverde called it “dumb.” Several  All-Stars avoided the topic. “That’s a political thing,” New York  Yankees second baseman Robinson Cano said. “I don’t have anything to  say about it. They already made a decision. If I say anything it’s not  going to make any difference.” “Wrong guy,” teammate Alex  Rodriguez said, pointing to other players in the interview room. Los  Angeles Dodgers shortstop Rafael Furcal said he would wait for guidance  from the players’ union. “The game is going on at this point,  regardless,” said former All-Star Tony Clark, who played for Arizona  last season and now works for the union. “Whatever decision an  individual player makes, they would have the full support of the union.” The  union has already condemned the law and said that if it is not repealed  or modified additional steps would be considered. Oakland closer  Andrew Bailey, whose team holds spring training in Phoenix, said his  sport was caught in a crossfire. “The Arizona Diamondbacks and  Major League Baseball had nothing to do with making the Arizona  immigration laws,” he said. “I know there are discrepancies. Hopefully,  things can get resolved.” ___ Associated Press Writer  Dionisio Soldevila and AP Baseball Writer Janie McCauley contributed to  this report.
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