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BOSTON (AP) – Roger Clemens’ final regular-season start at Fenway Park could bring another milestone in a season filled with them: His 100th win at the stadium.

What does that mean to a pitcher who got his 300th victory and 4,000th strikeout June 13 against St. Louis?

“It means I won a lot of games here,” he said in the New York Yankees’ dugout Friday night before the opener of a three-game series with the Boston Red Sox. “I didn’t know that was the number.”

Clemens, who plans to retire after this season, spent 13 years with Boston, from 1984 through 1996, and compiled a 192-111 record. He played for Toronto the next two seasons and is in his fifth season with the Yankees. His career record at Fenway is 99-55.

On Sunday, he’s scheduled to pitch against Tim Wakefield. That would be his last start at Fenway unless the teams meet there in the playoffs.

Clemens appreciates the Boston fans and said they were “great” to him and his family. But he knows he won’t be a fan favorite Sunday.

In his only appearance this season at Fenway, Clemens got the victory in a 4-2 win over Wakefield on May 21. Clemens allowed two runs, nine hits and one walk and struck out seven in six innings.

But he knows he’ll be facing the best-hitting team in baseball Sunday.

They’re “a great hitting ballclub and (Fenway is) a ballpark that’s conducive to hitting and scoring runs, so it won’t take much to get my attention,” Clemens said.

He recalled his first trip to Fenway Park when a cab driver dropped him outside the old brick edifice.

“I didn’t think I was in the right place” Clemens said. “I saw the concrete bricks and said, “no, I’m going to a baseball stadium.”‘

That’s the stadium where he’ll pitch Sunday and will be more concerned about recent history – his 13-2 loss Tuesday to the Chicago White Sox in which he allowed four homers and nine runs.

– than to his legacy.

“What weighs on me is the way I pitched the other night,” he said. “You never want to get embarrassed or perform poorly.”

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