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Big Unit's Quest for 300 Stalls

SAN FRANCISCO -- Wonderful coincidence as it would have been -- Randy Johnson winning No. 300 in Seattle -- it's not going to happen.

Johnson was pounded for seven runs in four innings on Saturday afternoon, taking the 9-6 loss against the the Mets and Johan Santana, so he'll still be on 298 victories when he makes his next start in an interleague game on Friday at Safeco Field.

Neither pitcher was sharp in this matchup of seven Cy Young Awards (five for Johnson), but Johnson definitely took the worst of it.

Worrying Less Equals Success for Zito

SAN FRANCISCO -- Remember Barry Zito?

Quirky lefty. Big curve ball. Part of the Big Three that carried the A's all those years. Signed ginormous contract with the Giants. Became the highest-paid fifth starter in baseball.

You can forget that last part.

Now into Year 3 of that $126 million deal, Zito finally seems ready to deliver.

"Barry is back," a National League scout told FanHouse. "He's pretty close to what he was. I'd say he's 80 percent of what he was, at least. He's got his velocity back. He's not back to 2002, when he won the Cy Young, but he's a competitive, championship-level pitcher again."

Boston Bids Adieu to House That Ruth Built


Later today, the Red Sox will stroll out of the visitor's dugout and face the Yankees for the final time at venerable Yankee Stadium. There will be other goodbyes to the House That Ruth Built in the coming weeks, but with the Bronx Bombers a major longshot to play into October, this series seems to have taken on special significance.

Here are a dozen of the finest moments in the best rivalry in American sports, all of which took place at Yankee Stadium. Even Red Sox fans have to be feeling a little nostalgic about their team's final visit. After all, the franchise's finest hour took place there.

1. Oct. 16, 2003: The ghosts strike one last time. After Red Sox manager Grady Little leaves Pedro Martinez in well past the 100-pitch mark with a 5-2 lead in the eighth inning, the Yankees rally to force extra innings. In the 11th, Aaron Boone sends a deep fly into the Bronx night, sending New York to the World Series and crushing Boston's dreams of ending the Curse of the Bambino again.

Rick Peterson Might Not Be Unemployed Long


You clearly heard about all the drama surrounding Willie Randolph and the wrongful axing peaceful separation of the Mets organization and most of its coaching staff. One of the men without a job is Rick Peterson, the former pitching coach. But Peterson might not be out on the streets for too lengthy a time.

This is because a previous stop on his resume -- Oaktown. Namely because of a certain pitcher he coached there.
However, when asked what type of relationship they had, Zito noted that as far back as college, he and his family hired Peterson for private coaching. When the A's drafted Zito, Peterson was their pitching coach.

"I had success from the start there in Oakland," Zito said. "There's a lot to be said for your first coach in the big leagues, too. He moved me on the mound and did something also with my hands, stuff like that, stuff I still do today."
Now, this is primarily speculation, as noted by a no comment from Zito. However, it does make a ton of sense. The likely move -- because clearly Dave Righetti is doing a good job -- would be to pay Peterson to coach Zito, and Zito only.

Brian Fuentes Lives in Blown Save Infamy

This is almost getting old and tiresome for the Rockies. Eight straight losses complimented by four consecutive blown saves from closer Brian Fuentes. According to ESPN researchers, it's the first time that a closer has blown four straight saves since Dave Righetti in 1988. Sure, Fuentes hasn't been his sharpest over the past week, but he's really getting a bad rap for the recent run of bad luck.

A week ago Friday, it was three runs scoring on a hit by John McDonald that accounted for the first blown save. The game-winner scored on an errant throw by catcher Chris Ianetta. Monday, it was a two-run single by Alfonso Soriano to win it. Both runs were unearned because Kaz Matsui booted what would have been the game-ending ground ball. Thursday, Carlos Lee hit a grand slam in the 11th to end it. Craig Biggio reached on a roller up the middle that went in between Troy Tulowitzki and Matsui, neither of whom could figure out who would make the play. The grounder would have ended the game.

Then came Friday night. After getting two outs, Fuentes walked Lee, and then allowed the game-winning walk-off home run to Mark Loretta. The recent string has manager Clint Hurdle worried. I'm not; most of those outings look worse because of the "blown save" title they have acquired. In reality, two of those games should have been saves. The bright side, at least Fuentes hasn't gone Armando Benitez yet. He elected not to speak with the media instead after Friday's 9-8 loss.

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