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"I didn't know how many strikeouts I had. I knew I had already given up a hit in the third inning," Wood later recalled. "I was just trying to get my first complete game."
He added: "I'll never forget it. It's a great moment in my life and my career."
Wood said his slider was his main weapon that day as he struck out the side in the first, fifth, seventh and eighth innings, and fanned two each in the second, fourth and ninth, and one each in the third and the sixth. Wood threw 122 pitches, 84 for strikes, and got a congratulatory phone call from Clemens afterward.
"The age, as hard as he threw, the command and the poise that he had on the mound, nothing bothered him that day," Gutierrez recalled. "After the game, we just took our hats off to him. He did a great job. There's nothing you can take away from him."
Wood struck out 13 in seven innings in his next outing, setting a major league record for strikeouts in back-to-back games. Clemens and Nolan Ryan, whose No. 34 Wood wore on his back, are fellow Texans and the pitchers who most inspired the 6-foot-5, 225-pound Wood, who is from Irving, Texas.
Wood finished the 1998 season ranked third in the NL in strikeouts and won the league's Rookie of the Year award. He missed the final month with a sore right elbow, then had reconstructive elbow surgery the next April, starting a run of arm and shoulder problems that undercut his career. He missed the entire 1999 season.
He had three double-figure victory seasons from 2001-03, and in 2003 he helped the Cubs reach Game 7 of the NLCS, where he was the losing pitcher despite hitting a home run against the Florida Marlins.
Shoulder problems nearly ended his career, but he made a stirring comeback and a successful transition to the bullpen, emerging as the Cubs' closer in 2008 and converting 34 of 40 save opportunities.
"The shoulder was a lot tougher in the end there, in `05 and `06, was the toughest thing to come back from," Wood recalled. "But you come back from it because you love the game of baseball and you love competing. You love being in that clubhouse with 24 other guys."
Steve Stone, the Cy Young winner who has been a broadcaster for both the Cubs and White Sox, said Wood threw across his body and that put undue stress on his arm.
"He came up with as good of stuff as anyone who ever came into this league. You talk about (Stephen) Strasburg and the impact (Doc) Gooden had, the reality is Kerry's stuff was better than both of those guys," Stone said.
"Kerry had the 100 mph fastball. He had an unhittable curveball. He had an unhittable slider. And that day in his fifth major league start he got them all over the plate. He didn't walk anybody. It was absolutely phenomenal," Stone said. "I think the hopes and prayers of the Cubs fans, seeing that, said, `this is a guy that's going to rival Ferguson Jenkins.'... But it was a fatal flaw in his delivery that was his undoing."
Cubs starter Jeff Samardzija said Wood's influence was heavy on him as he grew up in Indiana.
"I remember being a kid and my dad reading an article about Kerry working out in the pool and that's why he threw 98. So my dad, the next day, has me in the pool kicking floaties around," Samardzija said. "For a kid growing up in the Midwest, that's what Kerry was to us kids.
"When we were coming up, that's the dude you wanted to be. That's how you wanted to throw."
[Associated Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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