Bonds, Henderson, Gwynn and the Mariners: Baseball's best on display

<br>Baseball&#39;s weekend to remember started with Barry Bonds&#39; historic homer and ended with Tony Gwynn&#39;s final at-bat. <br><br>Gwynn grounded out sharply Sunday in the ninth inning, closing

Monday, October 8th 2001, 12:00 am

By: News On 6



Baseball's weekend to remember started with Barry Bonds' historic homer and ended with Tony Gwynn's final at-bat.

Gwynn grounded out sharply Sunday in the ninth inning, closing out a 20-year career in which he got 3,141 hits, won eight batting titles and batted .338 _ 17th on the career list.

``It's been unbelievable,'' Gwynn said. ``I feel I've done all I can do as a baseball player.''

Bonds got the weekend of records, milestones and celebrations started on Friday night, hitting his 71st home run to break Mark McGwire's 3-year-old record. He also hit his 72nd that night and pushed his single-season home run record to 73 by Sunday.

Before the end of the weekend, Seattle tied a 95-year-old mark for most wins in a season, Rickey Henderson got his 3,000th hit and baseball also said goodbye to Cal Ripken.

On Sunday, the last day of the regular season, Bonds hit his 73rd and finished a remarkable season. His .863 slugging percentage easily surpassed Babe Ruth's record of .847 set in 1920.

``It seems Babe ain't going to have many records, is he?'' Giants manager Dusty Baker said. ``It's the greatest year I've seen from a single player.''

In San Diego, Henderson hit a bloop double to right for his 3,000th hit. The milestone came in front of more than 60,000 fans, who filled Qualcomm Stadium to say farewell to Gwynn.

Henderson, who had broken Ty Cobb's career runs record Thursday by scoring his 2,246th, was mobbed by his teammates at second base. One of the first to hug him was Gwynn.

``Man, what a sight, Rickey cruising into second base and all his teammates running out there,'' Gwynn said during postgame ceremonies honoring his retirement. ``That's what the game's all about. He's the all-time leader in steals, walks and runs scored, and today, he steps up to the plate and gets it done.''

On Saturday night, fans in Baltimore said farewell to Ripken, who played in his 3,001st and final game in front of a sellout crowd at Camden Yards that included former President Clinton and commissioner Bud Selig.

``Baseball is losing an icon. He's Mr. Baseball,'' Boston Red Sox outfielder Trot Nixon said.

The Seattle Mariners, who lost Sunday to Texas, ended the season with 116 wins _ tying the 1906 Chicago Cubs' team, which went 116-36-3.

``I'm sure everyone here knows this opportunity doesn't come around very often,'' Seattle's Edgar Martinez said. ``But it's still been a great year, and we're still in the record books.''

There was a bit of history for the Atlanta Braves, too. They clinched their 10th straight division championship on Friday with a victory over Florida _ the first pro sports team to win 10 division titles in row. The Boston Celtics (1957-65) and Los Angeles Lakers (1982-90) captured nine straight in the NBA.
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