 the coolest part of this night was his family coming down next to the on-deck circle and he had a moment with them. His teammates loved it. His family loved it. Great moment for Sabathia. Now we take a look at the Toyota leaders. When you look at MLB history, 17 of the 9,653 pitchers in the history of this game have gotten to 3,000 strikeouts. 14 of them in the Hall of Fame. Kurt Schilling, Roger Clemens, the two that are not. It's 0.18% of pitchers that have reached that milestone. For hitters, very similar. 0.19% of hitters that have reached 3,000 hits. 25 of those 32 are currently in the Hall of Fame. You know John, this is not a number that necessarily was talked about as much as we hear 3,000 hits talked about but it's been just as rare, even more rare in the history of this game. Just an incredible milestone when you look at the scope of baseball history. Yeah, I think that graphic puts it in great perspective, right? I mean, you think about 3,000 hits, automatic Hall of Famer. You don't think the same way about the 3,000 strikeouts. Maybe we should change our thinking about that. But if you're talking about Sabathia, he gets to 250 wins over 3,000 strikeouts. In my opinion, he's the first ballot Hall of Famer. It turned into a pitchers duel for sure as we take a look at our stars of the game presented by Heineken, C.C. Sabathia goes to five and a third allows just five hits. Two runs becomes the 17th player with 3,000 strikeout. Zach Granky, seven and two thirds allows just the five hits. The one run economical as well. 102 pitches to get through those two outs into the eighth inning. You know, a lot of times we do see this in the National League game, right, John? And this was just both pitchers locked in. Granky obviously going deeper in the Arizona offense doing a little bit more. I thought Jeff Nelson did a great job during the broadcast of breaking down. Granky how we got ahead and counts early with his threat fastball.