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  Tuesday, May 2 8:05pm ET
Wood adds home run in pitching comeback
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

CHICAGO (AP) -- New elbow, same old Kerry Wood. Or close enough, anyway.

Pitching in a major league game for the first time in almost 19 months, Wood gave up just one run -- a homer -- and three hits in six innings Tuesday night as the Chicago Cubs routed the Houston Astros 11-1.

Kerry Wood
Everyone checking Kerry Wood out Tuesday night had to be impressed.

"It felt great to get back out there. A little butterflies in the first inning, but I was able to settle down," Wood said. "We've still got a little work to do, but I'm very pleased with the way I threw tonight."

The Astros didn't come close to touching him until Daryle Ward's homer to right in the sixth, putting just six others on base and getting only one past second.

And the elbow that was surgically repaired April 8, 1999, after he blew it out in spring training? Just fine, thank you very much. Wood even hit the third home run of his career.

"A night game, the electricity in the air and Kerry on the mound, it was better than scripted for me," Cubs manager Don Baylor said.

Wood wasn't the same, dominating power pitcher he was the last time he faced the Astros at Wrigley Field, when he tied a major league record with 20 strikeouts in just his fifth career start.

The 1998 NL Rookie of the Year returned to the mound just four days shy of the two-year anniversary of that May 6, 1998 game.

He struck out four, but only one in the first four innings. Most of his outs were on fly balls to the outfield, and he got some help from his teammates, including a jaw-dropping, diving, backhand catch by Sammy Sosa in the second inning. He threw one wild pitch, walked four and sent a couple Astros jumping out of the way of wicked inside pitches.

"He's not close to where he was two years ago," Astros manager Larry Dierker said. "He's still got an explosive fastball, but his breaking ball wasn't much of a factor."

But that's just Dierker's opinion.

"Larry can say what he wants, he doesn't have to hit it," said Craig Biggio, who went 0-for-3 against Wood. "He threw as hard as he always does. He has something for us, I don't know what it is."

Great command or not, the Astros had about as much luck against Wood as they did in 1998, when he had a 0.53 ERA against them.

"Very encouraged," catcher Joe Girardi said. "I think I was most encouraged because I thought he got better as the night went on."

Wood showed he can hit the ball almost as well as he throws it, too. He hit a two-run homer just over the left-field fence in his first at-bat, the 11th home run allowed this year by Jose Lima (1-5).

The Cubs rocked Lima for four runs in the second inning, and chased him in the fifth after five more. Lima, whose ERA swelled to 9.59, tipped his cap to the crowd as he left the field after giving up 10 runs -- nine earned -- and 13 hits in 4 2/3 innings.

"It can't get any worse. Nothing is going my way right now," Lima said. "I've got many more starts and things have to change. I didn't win 21 games last year by luck."

While it takes most pitchers about 18 months to recover from "Tommy John" surgery, that hasn't tempered the expectations for Wood. Fans can't see the scar on his right elbow, and most expect him to come back just as scary-good as he was in 1998, when he drew comparisons to Nolan Ryan and Roger Clemens.

"I knew eventually I would be back," Wood said. "From day one, after the surgery, I didn't have a second thought in my mind I could make it back to the same level I was."

The media contingent was as big as it was for the Cubs' home opener. Cameras followed Wood everywhere he went before the game. When he walked out of the dugout, there were cameras. When he took batting practice, there were cameras. And when he stretched, there were the cameras again.

If anything, the fans were even more excited. Wood got a standing ovation as he left the dugout before the game, but he didn't show any reaction or do anything to indicate this game was special. He tip-toed over the third baseline as he walked to the mound, but he does that before every inning.

The sellout crowd of 38,121 cheered every warmup pitch, and there was a huge roar when Craig Biggio fouled off the first pitch of the game for a strike. There was another big cheer when Ken Caminiti swung and missed for the first swinging strike.

Wood didn't get two strikes on anyone until Mitch Meluskey, the second batter in the second inning. And he didn't get his first strikeout until Lima came up in the second inning.

Lima went down on a called strike, and the fans cheered and waved the "K" signs they've had in storage the last 19 months.

"I got chills," Mark Grace said. "I've been through a lot of exciting stuff before, but the fans really get behind this kid and it's fun to play behind him.

"As a friend, I'm real proud of him and ecstatic at what he accomplished -- four months before he was supposed to."

Game notes
Willie Green went 4-for-4, tying his career high. It was the first four-hit game by a Cub this season. ... Tuesday's game was the first night game of the season at Wrigley Field. ... Mel Gibson was the guest conductor for the seventh-inning stretch. ... Wood's previous home run was in his last regular-season appearance, on Aug. 31, 1998.
 


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AUDIO/VIDEO
audio
 Kerry Wood admits he was somewhat nervous.
wav: 96 k
RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6

 Wood is pleased with his performance.
wav: 75 k
RealAudio: 14.4 | 28.8 | 56.6