Snow's sacrifice lifts San Francisco

HOUSTON (AP) -- Say hey, Willie. Barry is about to catch you.

Barry Bonds hit his 659th home run Monday night, moving within

one of Willie Mays for third place on the career list and helping

the San Francisco Giants rally for a 5-4 victory over the Houston Astros.

With "The Say Hey Kid" in attendance, Bonds lined a

first-pitch fastball from Roy Oswalt over the right-field fence in

the eighth inning for a three-run shot that tied it at 4.

"It was great to have a game like this early," said Bonds, who

went 3-for-3 with two doubles and a walk. "I just wanted to hit

the ball hard like Willie told me to do and not to think about

it."

San Francisco completed the comeback in the ninth against loser

Octavio Dotel, now the Astros' closer after the offseason trade of

Billy Wagner to the Phillies. Dotel hit Tony Torcato with a pitch,

and he advanced to second on a bunt and third on a wild pitch

before pinch-runner Cody Ransom scored on J.T. Snow's sacrifice

fly.

Bonds begins his 19th season dogged by questions about steroids,

which he has repeatedly denied using. His personal trainer was

among four men indicted last month on charges of illegally

supplying performance-enhancing drugs from a laboratory in the San

Francisco area. All four have pleaded innocent.

On Monday, he returned to the field, the one place where he can

get away from all the whispers.

"I just wanted to play baseball," Bonds said. "I didn't have

any fun hearing things about me when I know it's not right."

Bonds' blow ended what had been a top-notch outing by Oswalt,

chosen to start on opening day over former Yankees Roger Clemens and Andy Pettitte.

Oswalt had scattered seven hits and a run over seven innings

when he allowed two hits in the eighth before facing Bonds. Manager

Jimy Williams conferred with Oswalt before allowing him to pitch to

Bonds, who promptly laced a pitch just over the fence.

"I threw the ball outside. I thought I was going to get him to

hit to center field, but you throw it away and he [pulls] it to

right field. What are you going to do?" said Oswalt, who chastised

himself for throwing a "dumb pitch."

Williams, whose team broke camp without a left-hander in the

bullpen to face Bonds, said he believed Oswalt was his best option

in that situation.

"You can't lose sleep over it," catcher Brad Ausmus said.

"Roy was fine. He was still pitching in the low 90s. He's as good

a pitcher as we have on the team and I felt very comfortable with

him out there."

It was Bonds' sixth Opening Day homer, and it came in the same

building where he tied Mark McGwire's single-season mark of 70 in

2001. Bonds went on to set his own standard at 73.

Only Ken Griffey Jr., with seven, has more opening day homers

among active players.

Once Bonds, 39, passes Mays, his godfather, only Babe Ruth (714)

and Hank Aaron (755) will lie ahead on the hallowed homer list.

Bonds, whose father, Bobby, died last year, had Mays with him

throughout spring training for moral support. When Bonds hits No.

661, Mays will present his godson with the diamond-augmented torch

he carried for the 2002 Olympics.

Until Bonds' homer, Oswalt showed why Williams named him the No.

1 starter before spring training started. The right-hander retired

11 of his first 12 batters, with Bonds' first double being the only

blemish and Bonds' second double ending the run in the fourth

inning.

Bonds scored on new catcher A.J. Pierzynski's single.

Then Oswalt got back to business, throwing three more scoreless

innings before things unraveled in the eighth.

Kirk Rueter, starting his second straight opening day for the

Giants, escaped back-to-back bases-loaded jams in his first two

innings, giving up just one run on Ausmus' RBI single in the

second.

Rueter, who missed several starts last year because of shoulder

problems that put him on the disabled list twice, settled in nicely

after that. He retired 10 straight until Richard Hidalgo led off

the sixth with a homer to right.

Felix Rodriguez earned the win with a scoreless eighth, and Matt Herges pitched a perfect ninth for the save.

Houston built a 4-1 lead in the seventh when Craig Biggio, Adam Everett and Jeff Bagwell reached on consecutive singles. Jeff Kent

drove in Biggio with a sacrifice fly and Hidalgo singled to score Everett and give Oswalt a 4-1 cushion.

Game notes

Herges got his first save with the Giants. Regular closer

Robb Nen is out with a sore shoulder. ... The Astros' seven

All-Stars -- Ausmus, Bagwell, Biggio, Clemens, Kent, Pettitte and

Lance Berkman -- each threw out a ceremonial first pitch to one of

their children. ... Rueter became the first Giants left-hander to

start back-to-back opening days since the club moved to San

Francisco. ... Twice an Astros batter was called out for touching a

foul ball just in front of home plate: Kent in the second and

Biggio in the ninth. "I've never seen it happen before, much less

twice," Williams said. ... Ailing Giants ace Jason Schmidt threw

four innings in Triple-A Fresno's intrasquad game, making 61

pitches. Trainer Stan Conte said he consistently threw 94-95 mph

and reported no problems.