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  Friday, Jun. 9 7:05pm ET
Nine runs most Clemens has ever allowed
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE | GAME LOG

NEW YORK (AP) -- Mike Piazza took Roger Clemens for a ride on his own personal No. 4 train.

Al Leiter
Mets pitcher Al Leiter delivers in the first inning at Yankee Stadium on Friday night. Leiter is now 7-1 with a 3.18 ERA.

Piazza hit a grand slam as the New York Mets bombarded Clemens for nine runs -- matching the most he's ever allowed in a game -- in routing the New York Yankees 12-2 Friday night in the opener of this year's Subway Series.

"I've always enjoyed the tradition of Yankee Stadium," Piazza said. "Just getting your name read over the public-address system gives you a shot of adrenaline."

Slumping Derek Bell homered and drove in five runs and Edgardo Alfonzo also connected as the Mets closed their deficit to 7-6 against the Yankees in four seasons of interleague play. Easily, it was the most lopsided.

Al Leiter (7-1) beat Clemens (4-6) for the third time in two years. And in all three games, Piazza provided a big home run -- this time, launching a long drive to dead center field, toward the tracks of the elevated No. 4 Lexington Avenue subway line that carried many fans to Yankee Stadium.

"I've been fortunate to have some success in this series," Piazza said. "These games are exciting and electric."

With a sellout crowd of 55,822 all together standing and chanting, cheering and booing, Piazza slowly strode to the plate with the bases loaded and no outs in the third inning of a scoreless game.

On a 1-0 pitch, he seized the moment.

Piazza stood to watch the ball sail for his 11th career slam and second this year, while Clemens kicked at the rubber. It was only the second slam Clemens had ever given up.

"Not a bad pitch, really," Clemens said. "But he got more of it than I thought he did.

"I felt I had better stuff than the final score says it was," he said.

It was Piazza's third home run in 11 career at-bats against Clemens. The first homer came last June and helped reverse the fortunes of both the Mets and Clemens.

The Mets ended an eight-game losing streak that night, a day after firing three coaches, and reached the .500 mark on their way toward making the NL playoffs. Clemens, meanwhile, had his AL-record 20-game winning streak stopped and has been a sub-.500 pitcher since.

Alfonzo's two-run homer with no outs in the sixth made it 9-2 and finished Clemens. The Rocket walked off to loud booing from Yankees fans, who seemed to comprise about two-thirds of the crowd.

Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, wearing a Yankees cap and a big-time booster, stood and applauded from next to his favorite team's dugout.

"I was ashamed that any Yankee fan would boo him. He's pitched some great games for us," Giuliani said.

"It wasn't my happiest night here tonight, but I'll be back Sunday," he said.

Clemens, originally selected by the Mets in the June 1981 amateur draft, fell to 1-4 with a 9.10 ERA against them. He also started against them twice for Boston in the 1986 World Series, and did not get a decision.

Clemens has allowed nine runs on five occasions, mostly recently on May 18, 1998, for Toronto against Seattle. The Mets tagged him for eight earned runs and 10 hits.

As Yankees manager Joe Torre removed Clemens, he told him, "We'll get this thing figured out."

Leiter, the only Mets player who also spent time with the Yankees, was able to coast with the large lead. He allowed two runs in seven innings.

"If you're facing a quality pitcher like Roger, you realize you might have to throw a shutout to win," Leiter said.

The Mets, who took early batting practice at Shea Stadium in Queens before busing over to the Bronx, finished with 15 hits in winning their third in a row overall.

Bell, who began the night in a 3-for-53 rut, Piazza and Jay Payton each had three hits.

Rookie Jason Tyner led off the game with a double and later singled, scored twice and made a diving catch in left field.

"I stepped in the box and looked up and it was like, 'Geez, that's Roger Clemens,' " said Tyner, who grew up in Texas, where the Rocket is revered. "My first week in the big leagues and I'm facing Roger Clemens and Yankee Stadium."

Game notes
Clemens gave up a slam to Gary Gaetti in 1993. ... Leiter made his major league debut for the Yankees in 1987. ... Derek Jeter batted leadoff for the first time since May 5, 1999. ... Chuck Knoblauch, the Yankees' usual leadoff man, has not played since last Sunday because of a sore left forearm. He rode the No. 4 subway to the stadium. ... Mets SS Kurt Abbott was ejected in the second inning. He thought he had avoided a tag by Tino Martinez in a play at first base -- replays showed he was right -- but was called out by first base umpire Marty Foster and slammed his helmet.
 


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