BOSTON — Kody Clemens, the son of former Red Sox pitcher Roger Clemens, homered into the right-field seats in the sixth inning during his first game at Fenway Park on Saturday.
With his seven-time Cy Young Award-winning father watching from a luxury box along the first-base line, Clemens hit an 0-1 slider from Hunter Dobbins over the short wall in the right-field corner.
“It was amazing,” Roger Clemens said, standing in the box during a rain delay with his wife — Kody’s mother, Debbie — and Kody’s wife, Jessica.
“Just think about — I put myself in his shoes — even though he’s my kid, he’s here at Fenway, and he obviously wants to perform well, hitting a home run would be the ultimate thing to do, and he goes up there up in a clutch situation and does it. Just a great moment and I’m glad we’re here.”
A fan threw the ball back onto the field, and the ball attendant retrieved it in shallow right before tossing it into the stands behind first base.
“We got the ball,” Roger said after the Twins’ 4-3 win.
He said a friend of his saw where the attendant threw it, then that friend went down and got the fan and his family to bring the ball up to the luxury box. Roger took a photo with them and also said he would send the fan some things.
“It was so crazy,” Debbie said of what the three of them did, celebrating in the box. “It was just great being here and for his first time being able to play.”
Jessica made her first trip to Boston. She’s going home with an extra gift.
Debbie said the ball was going to “Kody and Jessica.”
Kody Clemens, 28, who has 15 career homers, was acquired from Philadelphia on April 26 after being designated for assignment by the Phillies.
It was just his third at-bat in Fenway and gave Minnesota a 3-1 edge.
In his first at-bat Saturday, Red Sox shortstop Trevor Story made a diving catch of his inning-ending liner in the second.
Roger Clemens, who was inducted into the Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2014, went 192-111 over 13 seasons with Boston and won the AL MVP and Cy Young Award in 1986.
In April 1986, he became the first pitcher to strike out 20 in a game.
He had a career record of 354-184 with a 3.12 ERA over 24 seasons. He is not in the Baseball Hall of Fame after falling short of the required 75% vote and running out of eligibility to be on the ballot. He maintains he never used performance-enhancing drugs despite being accused of doing so.
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