Sunday, September 26, 2021

One For The Road


No, we're not leaving you. But there is only one week left in the regular season, so we've got to look ahead to last call and start wrapping this whole thing up. Many teams wrapped up their 81-game home schedule this weekend. We're down to only 15 teams who can mathematically fill the 10 playoff spots, so half of them are just going through the motions. So we'll carry on with finishing out all 2,430 regular-season games, but as a former co-worker once declared between 3:45 and 3:50 every afternoon, "it's pack-up time" because we're punching out at 4:00, darn it.


1-0 For The Road

Just last week we elaborated on how no-hitters aren't our thing. Everyone's obsessed with them (although maybe not after this year), and it's hard to write about a game where nothing happens. Give us a game where one thing happens anyday.

That day would be Friday, when remarkably we had the only 1-0 score of the entire week, and it couldn't have happened to a nicer team. In case this is the last time we write about the "Cleveland Indians", don't forget that they've been no-hit four times this season, even though MLB only counts three of them. Either way that's a record, and while they did muster a whopping six hits in this one against the White Sox, they weren't the ones with the run. Nope, that would be Luis Robert's solo homer in the 5th. Only twice before in team history have the White Sox beaten Cleveland on a lone solo homer: Daniel Palka hit a walkoff version on August 10, 2018, and Carlton Fisk did the honors on July 19, 1985. Their last 1-0 win in Cleveland via any method was September 30, 2009, on a Paul Konerko single in the 6th.

Shane Bieber, meanwhile, in his return from a months-long injury, actually didn't give up a hit, although he lasted only 3 innings and 34 pitches. He's the first Indians starter to get "pulled" from a no-hitter since Zach Plesac got a spot start coming out of the All-Star break in 2019.

And maybe that name change will help. After all, there's no point in becoming "Guardians" over a bunch of goose eggs. Friday was the eighth home game this season where Cleveland got shut out. In 27 seasons at Jacobs/Progressive Field, that's only happened one other time, when they had nine such defeats in 2009.


#1 For The Road

Friday was just a continuation of the White Sox/Indians adventures, however. Way back on June 2, the final game of their prior series got rained out, and-- never one to miss a chance to get shut out in a home game-- Cleveland held off rescheduling it until September. That meant that we started this weekend's series with a 1:00 game on Thursday. And that usually means it's going to be 1-0 or 2-1 because nobody's awake until the 5th inning.

Apparently Tim Anderson had a couple extra cups of coffee on the way to the stadium. While it won't be his most memorable home run of the year, he opened the game by driving Aaron Civale's third pitch into the seats in right-center. Anderson also hit Chicago's previous leadoff homer at Progressive, back on April 13, 2017; he's the only White Sox batter to hit two there.

And soon it became apparent that Civale was the one who was having trouble waking up. Luis Robert starts the 2nd by homering against him. Four pitches later, so does Eloy Jimenez. Jimenez was also the back end of the previous back-to-back homers for the White Sox in Cleveland; James McCann provided the front half on September 3, 2019. Civale gives up two more singles to bring up Anderson again. The coffee musta been a double shot. Because he sends another one out of the park to right to make it 6-0 already. Turns out only one other batter in White Sox history has led off a game with a home run, and then gone deep again in the 2nd inning of the same game. And that batter... is Tim Anderson. He did it against Detroit on August 17 of last year.

The damage is done, and this game limps along to a 7-2 final, but it also puts Civale in some interesting company. Only two other Cleveland pitchers have given up 4 homers while getting no more than 5 outs. Tom Hilgendorf, who is from eastern Iowa right near Tim Anderson's Field Of Dreams (and who passed away earlier this year), did it on April 14, 1974. And Cal McLish-- who holds the distinction of being the only person to pitch for both Illinois teams, both Ohio teams, AND both Pennsylvania teams-- pulled it off in Boston on May 22, 1957.

Now there is another game to be had, and since the White Sox were awake for the first one, they obviously went and took a nap in between. (Picture this. In the clubhouse. On their little mats like preschoolers.) Because this is the game where nothing really happens until the 6th inning. Mike Wright has uncorked a wild pitch to give Cleveland a 1-0 edge, but then Zach Plesac loads the bases before departing. Then Andrew Vaughn unloads them in multiple ways. He bloops one to left which easily scores one run, then Brian Goodwin gets hung up in a rundown between second and third, but long enough for Yasmani Grandal to also score and give Chicago the lead. That would be the first blown save.

Owen Miller counters with his own bases-loaded single in the bottom half and now Cleveland is up 3-2 again. That's the third time in Progressive Field history that both teams hit a lead-flipping single; Victor Martinez and Boston's Jed Lowrie matched them on April 15, 2008, and Julio Franco cancelled out Damon Buford of the Rangers on May 18, 1996.

Enter Emanuel Clase for the 7th. All he does is give up three straight singles to start the inning and somehow escape with only one run. But that's a second blown save and another tie game. Bryan Shaw, who blew the first one, was also part of the last time the Indians blew two saves in a win; he did with Cody Allen against Detroit on September 10, 2015.

In a win, you say? Ah-yup. Remember The New Rules (when we choose to enforce them, see next item). MLB considers this a doubleheader, even though you have to pay separate admissions and there's nap time in between. That means it's a 7-inning game. And Oscar Mercado says we don't need no stinkin' free runners. He's going to crank a walkoff homer for a 5-3 win. If you guessed it was the first walkoff homer in Cleveland history hit prior to the 9th inning, you'd be correct, although technically it could have happened prior to last year. In the old days, games were frequently shortened by agreement for travel reasons, or just like beer-league softball, it's starting to get dark so we just declare this is going to be the last inning.


Two For The Road

But when is the last inning really the last inning? Well, maybe when it happened on July 19? Let's flash back to a rainy night in Atlanta on that Monday when the opener of a series with San Diego got postponed. No worries, we'll play two on Wednesday. And thanks to The New Rules, both of those will be 7-inning games.

Now, even a 7-inning game still requires each team to bat 5 times to be official. So what to do when the tarp comes out in the middle of the 5th and the Braves haven't had their final turn yet? (And they're trailing, so they need to play it.) Why, suspend the game and wait two months, of course.

This is a slightly different oddity than the Mets/Marlins game that lingered in baseball limbo for 142 days. Because that July 21 game was the Padres' only trip to Atlanta this season. There is no remaining game before which to finish it. So we go to Plan B (actually B-3 in the rulebook), which is to finish it at the opposite site. The Braves do have one trip to San Diego coming up... a mere 64 days from now. Heck, that's less than half as long as the Mets' one. What could go wrong.

Ever heard the song "It Never Rains In Southern California"? Turns out that's a song. Using a fairly loose definition of "never". Granted, it is not frequent, to the point where the Padres have a list in their media guide of all 18 rainouts in their 53-year history. Plus the eight delays since Petco Park opened in 2004, two of which were for bees and not rain.

So does it count as nine delays if this game is technically still on July 21 in Atlanta? Because our resumption of a game that was postponed by rain, then delayed by rain when it got played, then suspended by rain and moved to the opposite site, is now delayed by rain at said opposite site where it "never" rains. Got that? The 5:00 scheduled restart ended up occurring a little after 6 and not ending until almost 7:30. How does it end, you ask? Naturally, in completely-backwards fashion.

Adam Duvall bats for the Braves in the bottom of the 6th. He hits a solo homer off Daniel Hudson to tie the game. Even though the record's going to show him hitting it on July 21 in Atlanta, he actually did hit it at Petco Park in September. Only two other Braves batters have hit one of those in the 6th or later: Ronald Acuña in July 2019, and Jorge Sosa in May 2006. Care to know what else Adam Duvall did on July 21? Oh yeah, he started for the Marlins. At Nationals Park. With Daniel Hudson in the other bullpen. That's the Nationals' bullpen, not the Padres'. They both got traded at the deadline, with this suspended game still looming. In fact, that trade is why Duvall couldn't also stay in that Marlins suspended game from April. So he lost the chance to finish one suspended game but picked up a chance to finish a different one. And that's not the weird part. Duvall and Hudson technically played in two games against each other on the same day, but each for different teams in both games. According to Elias, the closest anything like that has come to happening was on May 30, 1922, when Cliff Heathcote of the Cardinals and Max Flack of the Cubs got traded for each other in between games of a doubleheader.

By the way, our 66-day adventure of a 7-inning game is still tied. We now have Fernando Tatis at the plate at Petco Park in the 7th. And he's going to whomp his 41st homer of the year, which will retroactively go down as his 30th. And wait, if Tatis just homered at Petco in the last inning, that should be a walkoff, no? Nope. Because he's batting in the top half. Since a 7th-inning homer wouldn't be a walkoff anyway in Normal Times, we have to phrase this one just right: Tatis is the first batter in Padres history to hit a go-ahead homer in the final scheduled inning of a game in their own park and have it not be a walkoff. And even better, Tatis's 29th homer... was in the first game of this same messed-up DH back in July. He's the first Padres batter to go yard in both games of a road doubleheader since Ryan Schimpf in St Louis on July 20, 2016. And he hit them 64 days and 1882 miles apart, one of them in his home stadium. Uh-huh. Okay.

In similar time-traveling news, Mark Melançon got the save on Friday by finishing off the Braves in the bottom of the 7th. That happens to be the 2,000th save in Padres history, which began in the same year as the official save rule. Except it kinda wasn't because it happened on July 21. So it will appear to be their 1,991st. (Turns out Melançon has all nine in between, so he gets the honor either way.) Guess who got team save 1,990? That was Melançon in the first game back on July 21. It took him over two months, but he'll go down as the third pitcher in Padres history to get a save in both games of a doubleheader. The others are Fernando Rodney on May 11, 2016, against the Cubs, and Rollie Fingers on May 30, 1977, against the Giants.


Rules Of The Road

Yeah, the recap of that game felt like it took 64 days too, didn't it? To the point where you almost forgot that we're resuming this suspended game before another regularly-scheduled Braves/Padres tilt. Which was supposed to start at 7:00. Suspended game didn't end until 7:30. So the "real" game doesn't start until 8:05. (That's 11 back east for you Braves fans.) Though there is still the lingering question of how many innings we're going to play. Because MLB wants doubleheaders to be 7 innings. Has this suddenly become one? Also, there's long been a minor-league rule that if a suspended game is continued prior to a regularly-scheduled contest, the suspension is played out to 9 but then the regular game gets shortened to 7. But what if the suspended game was only 7 to start with?

(The "exception" that's cited is the one allowing any minor-league DH to be 7 innings each. Nowhere do we allow for a 7 followed by a 9. But, hey, who cares?, New Rules!)

In another variation of going outside its own rule book, MLB apparently decreed back in July when the game was suspended that the regular September 24 game would still be 9 innings. Starting at 11 pm back east. Oof. Fortunately the players had some sympathy, or were just jealous of the White Sox and their nap time, and ripped through this one in a tidy 2 hours 28 minutes. That's largely because Max Fried ripped through the Padres lineup, facing just 29 batters and allowing 3 hits (plus one double play). He's the first Braves pitcher to throw multiple shutouts in a season since Shelby Miller in 2015, and the first to throw one in San Diego since Tom Glavine 2-hit the Padres on August 13, 1998.

Dansby Swanson tacked on his 27th double in the 4-0 win, and while everyone usually likes round numbers, it made him, Ozzie Albies, and Austin Riley the first trio of Braves players with 27 homers and 27 doubles in the same season since Gary Sheffield, Chipper Jones, and Javy Lopez all did it in 2003.

The teams then proceeded to play a little back-and-forth affair on Saturday that finally ended when Jorge Soler doubled home free runner Travis d'Arnaud in the 10th. It was just the third go-ahead double the Braves had ever hit in extra innings in San Diego; the others were by Bill Pecota in April 1994 and Jeff Treadway in June 1990. Soler also became the first Braves leadoff batter with a 4-RBI game in San Diego since Kenny Lofton did it on May 27, 1997.

Manny Machado also came away with 4 RBIs after hitting a grand slam in the 5th for a temporary Padres lead. The Padres had never hit a slam against the Braves at Petco Park before Saturday. And the only one they hit at The Murph was back when it was still called The Murph-- Marvell Wynne off Charlie Puleo on September 11, 1988.


If you actually haven't heard the 1970s folk classic "It Never Rains In Southern Calfornia", well, don't let us deprive you of that opportunity. Intermission!


All Roads Lead To First

You see a trivia question sometimes about the number of possible ways for a batter to reach first. The answer always varies depending on how you count "uncaught third strike" (is it one category, or does wild pitch vs passed ball count as two?), whether sacrifice bunts and dropped sacrifice flies get lumped together, etc. Usually the "answer" is around seven or eight ways. But one of those is hovering on the verge of a record-setting season.

If you've ever kept score-- and then tried to balance the sheet afterwards-- you know the one. The one which never happens and which causes fits over runs being earned or unearned. "Interference or obstruction".

By "never" happens, we mean, in the same way that it "never" rains in southern California. With a week to go in the season, catcher's interference has been called 61 times in the majors this year, matching the number from the 2019 campaign. But as far as we know, that's a record. Even with Jacoby Ellsbury earning half of them, most of the previous decade hovered in the 40s as far as CI counts. As recently as 2008 it was in the 20s. Before the 1960s we don't have good data because the call was so rare that the leagues didn't even report it consistently. But the last two of our 61 from this year are going to take us right back to Petco Park.

Before the Braves arrived from their 2-month holding pattern, the Giants were in town for the first part of the week. Tuesday saw Tommy La Stella hit a leadoff homer against Kevin Gausman, joining Donovan Solano (2019) and Ray Durham (2004) as the only Giants batters to hit one at Petco Park. And then Wednesday saw La Stella make even more Giants history, becoming their first known batter ever to lead off a game with a catcher's interference award. The last time the Padres committed one against the first batter of a game was on July 1, 2016, by Derek Norris against (of course) Jacoby Ellsbury. La Stella's CI would start the path to Kris Bryant's bases-loaded double, the second one the Giants have ever hit in the 1st inning in San Diego. Rob Andrews hit the other against Tom Griffin on July 13, 1977.

Ah, but two teams can play this game. (Actually, the rule kinda says they have to, but you know what we mean.) With the Giants still holding that 3-0 lead in the 5th, Jake Cronenworth steps to the plate with the bases loaded. And is he going to hit a grand slam? Well, we'll never know. (This is why you can't assume an out on a CI call when scoring, because the at-bat never gets a chance to play out.) Because he clips the glove of Buster Posey and gets awarded first base. With the bases loaded. Score a run. Although Posey hasn't been called for a CI since August 2013, a bunch of other Giants catchers have. Since the start of last year, they've committed seven such infractions; the only team to have more is the White Sox (9). The only other one the Padres have ever received with the bases loaded was to Cory Spangenberg (by Atlanta's Christian Bethancourt) on June 11, 2015. And the last one the Giants committed with the bases loaded was by Milt May against the Pirates on August 29, 1981.

And among those 61 occurrences, Wednesday was the first game this season where both teams were called for the infraction. All's fair in "glove" and war?


10 For The Road
(Or, who are you and what have you done with the AL West?)

Let's ask Siri the question in our subtitle. Because the answer will come from Jose Siri, who began the Astros' week by hitting their first-ever leadoff homer in Anaheim. That dinger off Jaime Barria, and the Astros having history in both leagues, leaves only three opponents against whom they've never hit a leadoff homer on the road-- Boston, Kansas City, and Minnesota.

However, this one looked like your typical AL West game after that. Framber Valdez scattered 6 hits across 7 innings. Barria gave up 10 total hits, but four were in that 1st inning and he settled down to get into the 6th. But welcome, September callups. Andrew Wantz, who did a cup of coffee in July but has spent most of this year in Salt Lake City, gets the 8th. Jose Marte, who started the year at the Giants' high-A team in Eugene, Ore., and was in the Tony Watson trade at the deadline (yeah, we didn't hear about it either), gets the 9th. And both of them get lit up for 4 runs and a homer. In the 8th it's a 3-run shot by Martin Maldonado. In the 9th it's a grand slam by Marwin Gonzalez, actually the third one the Astros have hit at The Big A this season. However it's only the second one they've hit in the 9th inning of a road game, along with the one Yordan Alvarez smacked in Detroit on June 24. The only other time they connected for two of those in a season was 1969, and those came in the same game-- Denis Menke and Jim Wynn at Shea Stadium on July 30.

Monday's 10-0 final qualifies as the Astros' largest shutout ever against the Angels, home or road, topping a 7-0 on July 21, 2018. So how to top this one? How about by scoring 10 more runs on Tuesday? Kyle Tucker and Aledmys Diaz go back-to-back in the 2nd. Jose Altuve joins Diaz with multi-run hits in the 5th. Maldonado homers for the second straight day to lead off the 6th, the first Astros #9 batter ever to go deep in consecutive games in Anaheim. Meanwhile, Maldonado also walked twice, something he also did on August 20 against Seattle. He's the only #9 batter in Astros history to have a homer and multiple walks in a game twice.

Things are not as lopsided this time, notably thanks to Phil Gosselin's 3-run homer in the Angels' half of the 6th. Gosselin will end the game as the Angels' first cleanup batter with a homer, a double, and 3 RBI in a loss since Howie Kendrick on September 23, 2013. Tuesday's 10-5 final was just the second time the Astros have scored in double digits in consecutive games in Anaheim; they won by counts of 14-2 and 10-4 on May 4-5, 2019. Houston then added a 9-5 win on Wednesday with a 4-run 12th inning off Sam Selman after neither team scored their first two free runners. That game was the first time Houston had hung a 4-spot or more in an inning numbered 12 or higher since July 27, 1994, in Cincinnati.

The Angels had to wait for Houston to get out of the way, but by Saturday the Mariners had come to town and it was time for their own offense to erupt. Starting pitcher Tyler Anderson decided to help matters by giving up a leadoff single to Brandon Marsh, then a triple to Shohei Ohtani. Then there's the home run to Luis Rengifo in the 2nd. And in the 3rd the proverbial wheels come off. Another leadoff single by Marsh. Another triple by Ohtani, the first Angels batter with multiple three-baggers in a home game since Erick Aybar did it against the Twins on September 2, 2011. Then three more singles and a walk to make it 7-1 and Anderson's evening is done. He's going to become the first pitcher in Mariners history to give up 9 hits and 9 runs while getting no more than 6 outs. That's because Yohan Ramirez didn't fare much batter. He got two outs but also gave up a single to Rengifo to load them back up. Marsh then gets plunked to drive in a run, and then Ohtani walks to close the line. Ohtani has thus become the second batter in Angels history with 2 triples and 3 RBI in a home game; Bobby Knoop, who led the AL in triples in 1966, did it against the Senators on September 2 of that year.

This is eventually going to culminate with an 8-run 3rd inning, the Angels' first since May 30, 2017, against the Braves. That had been the longest drought of any team without posting a "snowman" or more; that "honor" now passes to the Yankees. They'll pile on three more runs in the 5th, two of them on a Jared Walsh double; Walsh would end Saturday as the first Angels batter with 4 hits and 4 RBI in a home game since Mike Trout against Texas on July 26, 2015. And on the other side, the Angels defense used Jaime Barria as an "opener" again and then deployed Jhonathan Diaz to basically go as long as he wanted. They're off scoring 14 runs, he's got kind of a long leash. And that leash lasted for the rest of the game; after Barria gave up three hits but retired two of them on double plays, Diaz worked the last 7 innings and gave up only 3 hits. The last Angels "reliever" to do that was Felix Peña on July 12, 2019. If that rings any halos, it's because Peña threw 7 innings after Taylor Cole threw the first two, in the game where the Angels honored Tyler Skaggs by throwing a combined no-hitter.

Oh, but we still have one more AL West team that's on the road to scoring 14 runs. See, after the Astros finally got done dumping on Anaheim, they headed up to Oakland for their final series of the year against the A's. On Friday they ran into Frankie Montas who held them to just 2 hits. So when Brandon Bielak gives up two walks, two hits, and a sac fly in the 3rd, it's already not looking good for Houston. But we still have Yimi Garcia and Brooks Raley in the bullpen to try and keep it within striking distance. Hmm, if "striking distance" means Sacramento, then maybe. Garcia gives up two singles, a walk, a double before he gets pulled. Raley walks Mark Canha to reload the bases and then meets pinch hitter Chad Pinder. Who sends a ball in the general direction of Sacramento for the Athletics' first pinch-hit slam since Scott Sizemore hit one in Arlington on September 10, 2011.

In the 8th it is Seth Martinez's turn, and let's see how that went. Single, walk, single, walk, RBI single by Starling Marte, 3-run double by Matt Olson. (In other words, it didn't go well.) That single gave Marte 4 hits and 4 RBI in Friday's game, joining Nate Frieman (August 15, 2013) as the only A's hitters to do that against the Astros. Marte, Olson, and Pinder with the grand slam are also the first trio of A's batters with 4 RBI in the same game since Josh Reddick, Brandon Moss, and George Kottaras did it against Boston on August 31, 2012.

The final score of 14-2 matched Oakland's largest win ever against Houston; they dropped a 13-1 to back up Jeff Samardzija on July 24, 2014.


Workin' 8 To 5

Cardinals/Cubs is one of the three big rivalries, right up there with Yanks/Sawx and Dodgers/Giants. That tends to happen when you can almost get from one stadium to the other without changing roads. (And if the Cubs still played at West Side Park, this would actually be true.) This week, not so much given that the Cubs are going to finish around 70-90 and were eliminated 10 days ago. But the Cardinals still have a wild-card spot to play for. And play for it they have been. Two weeks ago they were in a logjam of mediocre NL teams hovering just above .500 while the Dodgers, Giants, and Brewers ran away with three of the five playoff spots. Coming into the Cubs series they had rattled off 12 straight wins to break out of a virtual tie with the Phillies and then jump both the Reds and Padres.

Before we get there, however, we head up the road for Thursday's series finale in Milwaukee, which was decided by a final score of Cardinals 8, Tyrone Taylor 5. Taylor hit a grand slam in the 1st inning, the eighth one they've hit since Miller Park opened in 2001, and one more than they hit at County Stadium. He added a solo shot in the 4th and thus became the third Brewers batter ever to have 5 RBI and account for all the team's runs in a loss. Aramis Ramirez did it in St Louis on May 17, 2013, and Russell Branyan did it against the Cubs on August 18, 2004. However, the Cardinals' "8" was provided largely by Paul Goldschmidt, who hit a tying homer in the 7th and then an insurance homer in the 9th after a passed ball gave them the lead in between. Goldy is only the fourth Cardinals batter to have two homers in the 7th or later of a game in Milwaukee. Albert Pujols (April 11, 2010) and J.D. Drew (October 3, 2001) both did it in losses. And lest you think we forgot the Braves years, the first was Bill White on July 30, 1961.

Friday's opener in Chicago will actually be two openers, because the teams had bagged their last game before the All-Star break rather than wait around in the rain and play it at like 7:00 at night. Places to go. Four-day naps to take. In the first game, Goldy breaks open the scoring again with a 3rd-inning homer. By the 5th, J.A. Happ's day is done and Jose Rondon will pinch-hit for him. And he'll hit a 2-run homer to make it 4-0. Goldy caps another rally in the 6th such that the Cards are ahead 8-0. Meanwhile in the bottom half, Matt Duffy walks and Sergio Alcantara gets sent up to bat. Wham, another 2-run pinch-hit homer, the first game at Wrigley Field where both teams hit one since Dave Rader and the Mets' Ed Kranepool did it on June 26, 1978. But despite a little Cubs rally of their own, this is only a 7-inning game and they just ran out of chances. Final score of the 13th straight Cardinals win: 8-5. Same as yesterday in Milwaukee. The last time St Louis repeated a score starting with a 6 or higher was August 31 and September 1 of 2015 against Washington. Want to guess what the repeated score was on those two days? Yeah, 8-5.

Now we still have a night game to play (at 8:05 Eastern, since that's a theme here). And we have a whole lot of bullpen guys who haven't pitched in a few days. And we have the wind blowing out to center. And we have starter Jack Flaherty back from a shoulder strain after a month of inaction. Hmmmm, let's see how this goes.

Zach Davies spots the Cardinals 3 runs by giving up 4 hits and a walk in the 1st. That's probably not good against a team riding a 13-game win streak. Flaherty uses his first three pitches back from the injured list to strike out Rafael Ortega. His sixth one is a single by Frank Schwindel. His twelfth is a 2-run bomb from Patrick Wisdom. He's then out of the game after walking Ian Happ, leaving the Cards bullpen to try and collect 26 more outs. Flaherty is the first St Louis starter to give up multiple runs and get only 1 out since Mark Petkovsek did it in Cleveland on June 24, 1998.

Meanwhile, back in Zach Davies Land, he starts the 2nd with two more hits and a 3-run bomb from Tyler O'Neill. Who, we haven't mentioned yet, also homered in the day game. He's the first Cardinals batter to homer in both games of a twinbill at Wrigley since Matt Carpenter did it on July 21, 2018. And with Justin Steele earlier in the day, Davies has completed the first doubleheader where both Cubs starters gave up 6 runs since Carlos Zambrano and Juan Cruz did it in Pittsburgh on September 19, 2003.

Michael Rucker will replace Davies for the 3rd and, within 10 pitches, give up back-to-back homers to Lars Nootbaar and Paul DeJong. So now it's 8-2 and this turns into a romp. Nootbaar singles to make it 9-3 and destroy any hope of another 8-5 game. Adam Morgan takes over on the hill in the 7th, and while it took Rucker 10 pitches to give up back-to-back homers, Morgan can do it in half that time. (Pace of play!) Harrison Bader and our buddy Lars Nootbaar take him deep for an 11-4 lead and another fun note. That's twice in this game the Cardinals have gone back-to-back. The last time they did that at Wrigley was on July 12, 1996, by John Mabry & Gary Gaetti in the 3rd, then Ray Lankford & Ron Gant in the 5th-- with all four coming off Steve Trachsel.

Morgan gives up two more hits and just can't get that final out to end this mess, so Sergio Alcantara-- he of the pinch-hit homer in the day game-- wanders in from second base to encourage Tyler O'Neill to fly out to end the inning. He only threw 4 pitches, but it still makes Alcantara the first Cubs position player in (at least) the modern era to homer in one game of a doubleheader and pitch in the other. Final score, 12-4. Cardinals tie their team record with a 14th consecutive win. And they score 8+ runs in both games of a twinbill at Wrigley since August 31, 2002, when they won 8-1 and 10-4. We can confirm that one because we were there.


At about 3:50 there was even an "idiot on field" situation.

So finally we move on to Saturday. Jon Lester, in his triumphant return to Wrigley Field, decides to let his old mates have 8 hits and 4 runs. It turns out Lester also had that line in a game with the Nationals back on May 17, for whom he pitched before getting traded for Lane Thomas at the deadline. The last pitcher to have such a game at Wrigley for two different teams in the same season was Bob Chipman in 1944; he started that year with the Dodgers and then was traded to the Cubs-- on D-Day itself, no less-- for Eddie Stanky.

So the Cardinals have a little hole to climb out of if they want to get their 15th straight win. Harrison Bader helps with a solo homer in the 2nd. Tyler O'Neill goes yard again in the 4th. But the real damage doesn't hit until the 7th when Codi Heuer is handed the ball for the Cubs. He faces four batters and gives up base hits to all of them, in the process getting both a blown save and a loss. Bader has the third of the four hits, and then Paul DeJong gives the Cards the lead for good with a sac fly off Scott Effross. St Louis hadn't hit a go-ahead sac fly in the 7th or later at Wrigley since Yadier Molina hit one off the guy he's now catching, Jon Lester, on May 6, 2015, to break a runless tie. Bader, meanwhile, ended up with 4 hits and 2 stolen bases, the first Cardinal to pull that off at Wrigley since Gregg Jefferies on June 19, 1993.

DeJong's sac fly may have made it 5-4, but his 2-run homer in the 9th eventually makes it 8-4. So you've probably heard that the Cardinals did indeed set that team-record winning streak with 15 in a row, breaking a "W14" from July 2 through 18 of 1935. But Ian Happ isn't done yet. If the Cubs can't win, they may as well lose by another identical score. In the days of type-setting, some sports-page person would love this. Because Happ hits a solo homer with 2 outs in the 9th to make our final score-- what else?!-- 8 to 5. Now, because of the doubleheader on Friday we can't say three straight games. But the Cardinals are the first team to win a game on three straight days by the same exact score, where the winning number is 8 or higher (2-1 happens all the time), since the Royals dropped three straight 10-4's in June 2004.

And while the Cardinals did extend that streak to 16 on Sunday, it was "only" by a count of 4-2. Harrison Bader became the first batter in team history to have a home run and multiple RBIs in three consecutive games with all of them at Wrigley. And St Louis is the first National League team to string together 16 wins in a row since the 1951 Giants. You might have heard how that team eventually won the pennant.


Bottom Of The Bag

⚾ Orioles, Monday: Second time ever shutting out the Phillies IN Philadelphia (any score, any game). The other is, oh, only the clinching game of the 1983 World Series.

⚾ Jake Diekman, Thursday: First A's pitcher to give up 2 homers and blow a save while getting 1 out in a home game since T.J. Mathews against the Orioles on May 29, 1999.

⚾ Kyle Isbel, Friday: Second #9 batter in Royals history to have a triple and a double in the same game in Detroit. Buck Martinez did it in a 21-7 win at Tiger Stadium on June 15, 1976.

⚾ Yu Chang, Tuesday: First Clevelander with a bases-loaded triple and a hit-by-pitch in the same game since Wayne Kirby against Detroit, August 5, 1993.

⚾ Nationals, Monday: First time committing a "bounce-off" (walkoff wild pitch) since April 17, 2008 (Joel Hanrahan scoring Damion Easley of the Mets).

⚾ Hunter Dozier, Saturday: Second batter in Royals history with a triple, a double, and a sac fly in a loss. Danny Tartabull did it at Fenway Park on August 16, 1991.

⚾ Kyle Higashioka & Gary Sanchez, Wednesday: First time two Yankees catchers had an extra-base hit and 2 RBI in the same game since Thurman Munson and Elrod Hendricks did it against Detroit on October 1, 1977.

⚾ Ronald Torreyes, Thursday: First Phillies pinch hitter with a lead-flipping homer against the Pirates since Mike Lieberthal on June 16, 1998.

⚾ Willie Calhoun, Sunday: Second Rangers batter with a triple and a double in the same game at Camden Yards. Other is Gary Redus on August 23, 1993.

⚾ Pete Alonso, Tue-Wed: Fourth Mets player ever to homer in consecutive games at Fenway Park. Others are Carlos Delgado (2006), Mike Piazza (2000), and Len Dykstra (1986 World Series).

⚾ Logan Webb, Thursday: First Giants pitcher to give up 4 runs, hit a batter, and throw a wild pitch JUST in the 1st inning since Orel Hershiser at Houston on April 1, 1998.

⚾ Myles Straw, Sunday: First Cleveland leadoff batter with 4 hits and a stolen base, but 0 runs scored, since Miguel Dilone at Texas on August 15, 1982.

⚾ Mets/Brewers, Friday: First game at either Milwaukee stadium where one team hit a leadoff homer and the other hit a leadoff triple since Sandy Alomar Sr and Tommy Harper did it on June 29, 1970.

⚾ J.T. Realmuto, Tuesday: Phillies' first walkoff triple since Steve Jeltz hit one against the Cardinals on August 9, 1987.

⚾ Giancarlo Stanton, Saturday: Second batter in Yankees history to hit a lead-flipping grand slam in the 8th or later at Fenway Park. Johnny Blanchard went deep off Mike Fornieles on July 21, 1961.

⚾ Blue Jays, Monday: First time hitting 3 homers at Tropicana Field and losing since July 31, 2004.

⚾ Tyler Stephenson, Sunday: Second Reds batter to have a homer, a double, and a sac fly against the Nats/Expos franchise. Johnny Bench did it at l� Parc Jarry on July 9, 1973.

⚾ Miles Mikolas, Wednesday: First Cardinals batter with 2 sacrifice bunts and 2 strikeouts (he is a pitcher) in the same game since Tim Jones at Dodger Stadium on August 28, 1993.

⚾ Daulton Varsho, Tuesday: First Diamondbacks batter with a hit, a walk, a sac bunt, and a stolen base all in one game since Chris Young at Coors Field, September 20, 2008.

⚾ Pirates, Saturday: First game where they scored 0 runs, drew 0 walks, and had 0 extra-base hits since June 20, 2015, at Washington. You may remember that one for other reasons.


Sunday, September 19, 2021

Clip Show


Every so often, usually toward the end of a season, your favorite TV show, be it a sitcom or a reality show or a late-night talker, will basically throw you a repeat. They take the "best" clips from earlier shows, repackage them as a "brand-new" show, and then they don't have to write another one. Usually there's some cheesy setup where the sitcom characters are gathered for the holidays and "sharing memories" about the last year. In late-night it's usually because the host is on vacation.

We're stealing the concept but not the material. You see, some weeks we have a bunch of games that blow out the scoreboard. Some weeks we have a bunch of oddly interesting 1-0 games or 1-hitters or what have you. Some weeks it's a bunch of walkoffs. Or a bunch of grand slams. And so forth. As we close in on the end of 2021, this week happened to be a little bit of all of those. So we're sampling a little bit of each. It's an "all-new" Very Special Episode.


The Game We Have To Write About

They read like "Friends" episodes. The one where Scooter Gennett hit 4 homers. The one where Jose Reyes gave up 6 runs. The one that got suspended after 9 pitches. The 25-4 Game. The 29-9 Game. The 16-inning free runner game. The one where the Jays scored 11 in the 9th.

This one might not be quite worthy of a cute name, but we are of course heading to Citizens Bank Park on Thursday, where it is time for the Phillies' weekly "bullpen game", a new and "exciting" feature of MLB that it seems all teams are required to have every five or six days. (Despite previously bargaining for more off-days in the schedule so they didn't need as many pitchers. Okay.) So the lineup card got the name of Cam Bedrosian, now with his third team this season, but also back with the team where his father won the Cy Young Award 34 years ago. Cam "started" 7 other games in his career, all in 2019 when the Angels tried to do the "opener" thing for a couple months. He got 3 outs in every single one of those, so on this Thursday it was notable that he made it to the 2nd inning before walking Patrick Wisdom and getting pulled. Technically he's the fourth Phillies starter to leave a no-hitter this season, a team record, but the only one of any consequence was the guy who replaced him, Matt Moore. He took a no-hitter into the 6th back on August 14 just a few hours before Tyler Gilbert actually completed one.

Meanwhile, on the Cubs side, the starter is actual-starter Kyle Hendricks, who notched his 1000th career strikeout earlier this month and has made only one relief appearance ever. However, this has been a season where Cubs fans aren't really sure which Kyle Hendricks they're going to get. On Thursday they got a little of both. First 3 innings, good. Two hits, a walk, and a double play to erase one of them. The 4th, not so much. Double, hit batter, 2-run double by Andrew McCutchen. Single, another hit batter, walk, single, a failed attempt to convert an inning-ending double play, then one last walk for the road. By the time this is done, the Phillies have scored 7 runs, and Hendricks is the first Cubs hurler to give up 7 runs, 3 walks, and 2 hit batters since Sean Marshall at Florida on May 22, 2006. As mentioned, it's been a hit-or-miss season, and this was Hendricks' sixth start this year where he allowed at least 6 earned runs and didn't get through the 5th inning. In the modern era, the only other Cubs pitcher to pull that off was Jim Bullinger with seven such games in 1996.

So now the Phillies are up 7-0 and cruising along, and-- oh wait. You mean that 7-run inning didn't enable the cruise control? You mean it didn't even give them the lead? Nope, because remember the Phillies bullpen is trying to get through the heart of the Cubs' order, albeit an order that's now missing Kris Bryant and Javy Baez and Anthony Rizzo. But still it's a Phillies bullpen that, according to Fangraphs, has given up more runs per inning this season than any team except the Rays. They're in the bottom five of most other Fangraphs categories also, but that one jumped out at us. It also jumped up in this game. So after Matt Moore got his required 3 outs, it is Hammer Time. That's J.D. Hammer, who plunked the second batter he faced and allowed us to use the line "please Hammer don't hurt 'em". Unfortunately that was already with the bases loaded, and the Cubs were about to hammer Hammer, whom we hope someday goes to Japan and becomes a Nippon Ham-mer. (Buffalo buffalo, anyone?) Anyway, Hammer then gives up a single, a double, and a 3-run homer to Matt Duffy such that the Cubs also collected 7 runs in their big inning, which is why the Phillies' 4th only managed to tie them. Since CBP opened in 2004, it's the third game where both teams had a 7-run inning; the others were both against the Braves, on August 10 of last year and back on July 26, 2008. Hammer is the first Phillies pitcher to give up 5+ runs to the Cubs while getting only 1 out since Paul Byrd did it on July 26, 2000.

The Phillies are going to break the tie by getting 3 unearned runs off Manuel Rodriguez in the 6th (even though the error that made them unearned was by Rodriguez himself). Willson Contreras hits a solo homer off Hector Neris to make it 10-8. Tommy Nance gets summoned for the 7th and all he does is allow 3 hits and a walk. That sets up Rex Brothers to show some Brothers-ly love in the city that's famous for it. Bryce Harper, 3-run homer on the first pitch Rex throws. That's a five-run inning to go with the 7-spot from earlier, the Phils' first time doing that since April 7, 2018, in The One Where They Beat The Marlins 20-1. Jean Segura finishes things off with a 2-run single in the 8th to give us the 17-8 final that you're familiar with. That also completed the first game in Phillies history (or at least since RBI became official in 1920) where their top three batters (Odubel Herrera, Segura, Harper) all had 2 hits, 2 runs scored, and 3 RBI. Harper joined an "elite" list of Phillies batters to have 3 extra-base hits, 3 runs, 2 walks, and 4 RBI in a single game; the others are Pat Burrell in 2006 and left fielder Johnny Mokan who managed to do it on May 11, 1923, in one of the Phillies' 50 (fifty!) wins that entire season.


End-Of-Summer Blowout!

Last weekend we had tales of the Blue Jays scraping together a mere forty-four runs in the span of three games. (To be fair, that's only about 35 U.S. runs with the exchange rate.) This week it wasn't the Jays blowing up the scoreboard, it was... um... the AL West? (Yeah, we don't get it either.)

Now, it was mostly the Astros, the newest addition to the division, and maybe they're still learning how to adapt. Generally we expect AL West games to have about 3 runs each, and the Astros did that just in the 1st inning on Monday against Rangers rookie Spencer Howard. When Howard then gave up three straight hits to start the 2nd, it was time for him to go, the first Rangers starter to give up 6+ hits and 6+ runs while getting no more than 4 outs since Colby Lewis did it in Oakland on September 25, 2016. Yordan Alvarez would immediately hit the first of his 2 homers; he's eventually going to wind up scoring 4 runs as well. He also had that line in a 23-2 game in Baltimore two seasons ago; the only other player in Astros history with multiple 2-HR, 4-runs-scored games is George Springer.

The breakout star of Monday's game, however, is 26-year-old Jose Siri, who was called up by asking your iPhone if it could play the outfield better than the injured Michael Brantley. Or something like that. Anyway, after a few pinch-hitting appearances and late-inning replacements, Siri finally got his first MLB start on Monday. And all he did was connect for 2 homers, 2 singles, and 5 runs batted in. No big whoop. Only four others in Astros history have had 4 hits and 5 RBI batting either 8th or 9th: Tyler White (2017), J.R. Towles (2007), Geoff Blum (2002), and Brad Ausmus (1998). But, since RBI became official in 1920, Siri is the first player ever to have 4 hits and drive in 5 runs in his first big-league start.

After dropping the 15-1 on Monday, the Astros would then bookend the series on Thursday with another outburst against another Rangers rookie, this one the palindromic Glenn Otto. Like usual, the Astros needed a couple chances to figure him out, although Carlos Correa seemed to have his number with a 2nd-inning single and a 4th-inning homer. After that, however, Otto seemed to lose his, um, symmetry. Three straight walks to load the bases, then an Alex Bregman single and a Yordan Alvarez double to unload them and chase Otto from the game. Kyle Tucker's double play is the only thing that keeps this from getting worse, but still it's the Astros' first 7-run inning in Arlington since July 14, 2019, and Otto is the first Rangers starter to allow 7 hits, 4 walks, and not get through the 4th, since Martin Perez on April 10, 2018.

Kolby Allard, who has been converted into an 80- or 90-pitch starter over the course of this year, is the lucky one who gets to take one for the team. Bregman drives in two more runs in the 6th. Allard then can't get the final out in the 8th, giving up a homer, two walks, another single for Siri, and finally a double to Jake Meyers. That gave the Rangers two pitchers (Otto and Allard) who surrendered 6 hits, 5 runs, and 4 walks in the same game, a first in team history. That also gave us a 12-1 final (and once again, the lone Rangers run scored on a groundout). There's been only one other visiting team to post multiple double-digit wins in the same series in Arlington, in any stadium... and it's also the Astros. They put up 14-3 and 12-2 in back-to-back games on September 26 and 27, 2017.


Goin' To Kansas City

Meanwhile, a few hours up Interstate 35, we find another AL West team engaging in some high-numbered affairs, although this does occasionally happen if you get them out of their natural habitats. And into a hitter-friendly park like Kauffman Stadium. This time our rookie starter is Jackson Kowar of the Royals, their #4 prospect who appeared in 3 games in June when Jakob Junis got sent back to the minors, but finally came up for good in September. In his previous start he gave up 6 runs and lost, although he made it to the 6th inning at least. On Tuesday... not so much.

The A's lead off the game with a walk, a double, and then back-to-back sacrifice flies against Kowar. To find the last time the A's hit multiple sac flies in a 1st inning, you have to go back to when Billy Beane-- yeah, that one-- was still playing. It was May 5, 1989, in Detroit, and he hit the second one off Frank Tanana two batters after Mark McGwire hit the first. Kowar's 2nd inning is even less fun, with three straight walks and not even fly balls for outs this time. Back-to-back singles from Elvis Andrus and Josh Harrison to make it 5-0 and bounce Kowar after 39 pitches.

Naturally for the A's, Frankie Montas is playing down to the competition. Handed a 6-0 lead by the 3rd, he gives up 4 hits and 3 runs, then gets chased after a leadoff homer by Hunter Dozier in the 4th. So the Royals are back to 7-4 when Yusmeiro Petit gets the ball in the 6th. And he probably got several new balls after giving up three straight singles. He did not get a new ball when Sal Perez hit a 3-run lead-flipping homer, because he didn't throw any more pitches after that. Petit is the first Oakland pitcher to allow 4 runs and get 1 out against the Royals since Chad Bradford on September 4, 2002, and the first ever to do that while blowing a save to Kansas City. For Perez it was the 13th lead-flipping homer of his career (any situation), creating a logjam on the Royals' all-time leaderboard. Perez, Eric Hosmer, Mike Sweeney, and Frank White all have 13 of those; the only player in team history with more is George Brett (23).

And wrapping up Jackson Kowar's day, the eventual 10-7 Royals win is going to mean that he's their first starter to give up 5 runs, 4 walks, not get out of the 2nd inning, yet not get hit with a loss, since Miguel Asencio against the Padres on June 28, 2002.


We Could Be Royals

Sometimes we hit a game that's hard to write about because it's a group effort. Where everybody has 2 hits and a double instead of one person blowing up for 5 hits and 3 homers or whatnot. Such would be the next game of our A's/Royals series, although we must give the Royals credit for their consistency in scoring 10 runs again. And also at having a rookie starter give up a bunch.

Today's contestant is Carlos Hernandez, who made 5 appearances in last year's shortened season, but not enough innings to officially be a "veteran" yet. This year he's thrown 80 innings over 23 games while gradually being converted from bullpen to starter. On Wednesday he only made it through 4 of those innings, and it took 87 pitches to get that far. The A's got to him for a 2-run single in the 2nd, a leadoff walk in the 3rd who later scored, a 2-run homer in the 4th, then back-to-back singles in the 5th to knock him out. Both those runs later scored as well, making Hernandez the first Royals pitcher to allow 9 hits, 4 walks, and 7 runs in a game since James Shields did it in St Louis on June 3, 2014.

Ah, but all is not lost, because the Royals are busy knocking Sean Manaea around as well. Andrew Benintendi singles home a run in the 1st and then gets himself thrown out to end the inning. Three straight singles, including another by Benintendi, lead off the 4th and all score. With 2 outs in the 5th, guess who homers again. Why, it's Sal Perez with his 44th of the year. So it's 8-5 when Oakland collects three more RBI singles in the 7th to put this one out of reach. That doesn't stop the Royals-- especially Benintendi-- from reaching, however. He singles in Nicky Lopez in the 7th and again in the 8th, eventually becoming the first Royals batter with 5 hits and 4 RBI in a game since Eric Hosmer in Detroit on July 26, 2017. He's also the sixth in team history to have 5 hits in a loss, joining Whit Merrfield (2018), Tony Graffanino (2005), Joe Randa (1999), Wally Joyner (1994), and Amos Otis (1970).

The Royals had not scored 10 runs and lost sicne August 23, 2013, against Washington, the fourth-longest "drought" of doing that by any team (Dodgers, Cardinals, Rays). Only twice before have the Royals scored 10 runs in consecutive games and not won both of them, and those streaks happened within a few weeks of each other. On July 3-4, 2000, they traded a 10-14 and a 10-7 with the White Sox, followed on August 12-13 by an 11-12 and a 10-5 against Baltimore.

Did we mention Benintendi was on deck when the game ended?

And we won't dwell on Thursday's series finale-- a 7-2 Oakland win-- except to mention that Sal Perez wasted no time grabbing the attention. After Merrifield struck out to start the game and Lopez walked, Perez generated both of those Royals runs with another dinger. It's not the "third game in a row" part that made news; he's done that several other times this season. But all those homer streaks meant that Thursday's tater was his 45th of the season. He's still three short of Jorge Soler, who two years ago famously made the Royals the last team to finally have someone hit 40 homers. (There are still nine teams who haven't had a 50-HR hitter.) But at 45 he has tied the record for a player who was primarily a catcher. That's held by none other than Johnny Bench in his (first) MVP season in 1970.


One And Done

It's no secret that no-hitters aren't our thing. It's easy to churn out notes on a 17-8 game. It's a lot harder to write about a game where nothing happens. Plus, time basically freezes for an hour or more while we wait to see if this pitcher's gonna finish it, when we could be off working on other games. So one hit, one run, one something. Plus, when one thing happens and it's the only thing that happens, you've got an entirely different series of notes.

Johnny Bench led the majors in homers with those 45 dingers in 1970, and also had an MLB-best 148 RBI. Two years later he again led the majors in HR (40) and RBI (125). And while he was never anywhere close to a batting title and thus a triple crown, there is one other category in which Bench led the majors both times-- sacrifice flies. He finished his career with 90, which was good for 14th on the list at the time (it's now on about the third page). Asdrubal Cabrera sits another couple pages lower with 60 of them.

Uhhh, make that 61. Bench's old team, the Reds, took a flyer on Cabrera at the end of August when Arizona waived him, citing a desire to get their younger players more time. So far he's made 12 pinch-hitting appearances for Cincinnati, but someone might want to pinch him, because he hasn't actually gotten a hit yet. At least on Thursday he didn't really need to.

In what can best be described as a "slog", Tyler Mahle "battled" a parade of Pirates relievers in a 12:30 start for which no one was awake. Ben Gamel got himself thrown out at the plate in the 3rd; other than that the teams combined to go a whopping 0-for-5 with runners in scoring position, and four of those ABs came with 2 outs. Snore. Finally in the 7th the coffee has kicked in and Tyler Stephenson greets Cody Ponce with a leadoff double. He gets pinch-run for and then sacrificed over to third. Enter Asdrubal Cabrera as pinch hitter for Mahle. That 61st career sac fly ends up on the warning track in left-center, but it's enough to give the Reds the lead. In the 9th, the Pirates manage to get Ben Gamel to third again after a pair of walks, but rather than get thrown out to end the game, he's going to let Hoy Park strike out to end the game instead. Final score, 1-0. On Cabrera's pinch-hit sac fly.

Cody Ponce, the "hard-luck loser" in this one, threw 3 innings and gave up only 1 hit (the double to Stephenson). He's the first Pirates reliever to do that and lose since Jonah Bayliss in an extra-inning affair against Houston on September 27, 2006. As for the 1-0 score, the Reds had not won a 1-0 game in Pittsburgh since September 28, 2012, and that was also on a sac fly, by Todd Frazier. That one, however, happened in the 1st inning and Frazier started the game. In the past six years there's only been one other 1-0 game decided by a pinch-hit sac fly, Michael Perez of the Rays last August. And since sac flies were split into their own category in 1954, the Reds had never had a 1-0 win via PH SF. Not even by Johnny Bench.


This post already has a whole bunch of video clips embedded in it, so we're not positive it needs a long break in the middle. You're already entertained. (Are you not?) And actually none of them is a Rick-roll either. (Except maybe this one.) But if you would like a little interlude, our "best of" compilation can't help but remind us of this little classic. Intermission!


Make Mine A Double

Meanwhile, last Sunday, the Tigers gave up 4 runs to the Rays in the 8th, got them back, then traded runs in the 10th before finally walking off in the 11th. So a day off probably wasn't the worst thing. Let's meet again on Tuesday for the first-ever Battle Of The Peraltas. (Or is it Peraltae?) That would be Wily of the Tigers and Freddy of the Brewers, who, along with Wandy and Joel, are the four pitchers in MLB history with the Peralta surname. And this was the first time any of the four had started against another.

And at least the TV graphics had it really easy. Not only did they not have to change names, they didn't even have to change pitching lines! Both Peraltas went 6 scoreless innings and allowed exactly 2 hits. Wily walked 2 while Freddy hit 2. Different numbers of strikeouts, but still, this one ends in a draw after the 6th round, er, inning, and we play on with no end in sight. Brad Boxberger throws a perfect 7th. Derek Holland gives up a single in his half but a double play erases it. Devin Williams strikes out the side in the 8th. And this becomes one of those games where you're grateful for the free runner because at least somebody might finally score and get this over with. It was the first game at Comerica to be run-less after 9 innings since May 28, 2013, against the Pirates.

Two strikeouts in the Brewers 10th. Which means Niko Goodrum's only job is to bunt the free runner to third in the bottom half. Fail. Strikes out bunting foul. No runs for you. Bryan Garcia escapes the 11th on a bases-loaded double play. Now Derek Hill is going to try and bunt. And he will also fail, but the silver lining is that with two strikes he finally has to actually swing the bat. Which (who knew?) may occasionally result in a walkoff double. The last time the Tigers won a 1-0 game via an 11th-inning walkoff was on July 16, 1976, when Willie Horton singled home Ron LeFlore. Losing pitcher for Oakland that day? Rollie Fingers. With only 2 hits against Peralta, and a bunch of perfect innings in between, Hill's double was just the third hit of the game for Detroit. First off, it's the 49th time in the last four seasons that the Tigers have been held to 3 hits, nine more than any other team. But Tuesday was also their first time collecting only 3 hits in an extra-inning game and winning it since July 26, 1974. That was another 11-inning 1-0 affair, with Boston, won by Jim Northrup's single off Reggie Cleveland.

And the only other time the Brewers lost a 1-0 game in Detroit also involved Jim Northrup. His 6th-inning double was the lone run on August 23, 1970, as Mickey Lolich held the first-year Milwaukee Brewers to 2 hits.


Wide World Of Walkoffs

The Bryan Garcia giveth, the Bryan Garcia taketh away. (It needs work, we know.) He got that extra-inning win against the Brewers on Tuesday, but by Friday the Tigers have moved on to St Petersburg so there are no walkoffs to be had. Or should we say, none to be had by Detroit.

The Tigers go ahead immediately on a leadoff homer by Akil Baddoo, the first one they've hit at The Trop since Ian Kinsler on April 20, 2017. They have gotten to 4-1 by the time Gregory Soto is entrusted with the ball in the 9th. And he does trustily return the baseball... as he leaves the mound after two singles and a walk. And he's actually not going to get a blown save because those runs haven't scored yet. ("I just put 'em on, the other guy let 'em score.") Instead Michael Fulmer will take care of that with another single, a wild pitch, and a sac fly. So it's off to free runner land again, where the Tigers again do nothing in their half of the 10th. The Rays are now facing Garcia in a tie game, and may have considered bunting their free runner over, but Taylor Wells never sees a pitch in the strike zone. Brett Phillips does, and proceeds to do this. The only other walkoff homer in Rays history against the Tigers was a 2-run shot by Jonny Gomes off Troy Percival on July 9, 2005. Friday also marked the first game in Rays history where they scored 3+ runs in the 9th and then scored at least 3 more in extra innings.

As for Garcia, he got an extra-inning loss in the appearance right after getting an extra-inning win. He's the first Tigers pitcher to do that, in either order, since Angel Nesbitt on May 10 and 12, 2015. And count up his line as well. Counting the free runner, Garcia officially gave up 3 runs (despite facing only 2 batters) while getting 0 outs. If that sounds familiar, it's because Gregory Soto did it in the previous inning. In their history only two other sets of Tigers teammates have done that in the same game: Fernando Rodney and Todd Jones in Toronto on June 9, 2006; and Virgil Trucks and Hal White against the Yankees on May 23, 1946.


Pitchers Are Strange

Pitchers are a special breed. Every now and then you have to call on them to do something a little strange, a little out of their comfort zone. But when it happens, isn't it fun?

The Giants took a 4-2 lead into the 9th inning on Friday against the Braves. Tyler Rogers was charged with protecting this lead and promptly gave up a pair of leadoff singles to start the inning. This is closely followed by Travis d'Arnaud hitting a lead-flipping homer, the Braves' first in the 9th inning of any road game since Ender Inciarte at Arizona on September 9, 2018, and their first in San Francisco since Clete Boyer went deep against Lindy McDaniel on April 22, 1967. So then Will Smith blows the save on the other side by allowing a 2-out homer to Donovan Solano, the Giants' first tying or go-ahead dinger when down to their final out since Hector Santiago hit one in Washington on August 15, 2013.

So now we're off to find more free runners. Neither team scores in the 10th. In the bottom of the 11th, free runner Brandon Crawford actually gets picked off second, but the throw goes astray and Crawford scampers to third. In a tie game, that naturally leads to two intentional walks so we have a force at every base. But it also means the pitcher's spot is up again. Camilo Doval, the pitcher who is due up, has never had a plate appearance in his professional career. He's a reliever, why would he. Probably not the guy you want up with the bases loaded in extras. But of course the Giants are also quickly running out of bench players due to the close nature of this game. They've already expended 19 of their 26 players, and basically what's left are your emergency catcher and a bunch of off-day starters. Kevin Gausman, come on down. Despite spending most of his career with Baltimore, Gausman has had nearly 50 at-bats, and 9 hits, so why the heck not? Worst case, you play another inning. Best case... walkoff sac fly. By a pitcher. The first one in the majors since Dennis Martinez did it for the Expos against the Cardinals on August 13, 1993. To steal a line from the New York Lottery, hey, you never know.


Must Be The Chili...

Much like Interstate 275, we keep circling back to Cincinnati. When Johnny Bench and Asdrubal Cabrera aren't hitting sac flies, then either Joey Votto is walking a bunch of times, or they're in a rain delay. (Even odds of either of those on any given night.) But in the game before that 1-0 pinch-hit sac fly, they were on the wrong end of another strange walkoff.

Vladimir Gutierrez gave up a double, a triple, and a sac fly in the span of nine pitches to put the Pirates ahead in the 3rd. Yoshi Tsutsugo (who had the double) added another run on the first pitch Justin Wilson threw in the 4th. Jonathan India, who would join Jose Peraza (2016), Jerome Walton (1995), and Pete Rose (1972) with the strange combo of a sac fly, a hit-by-pitch, and a stolen base in the same game, hit the SF in the 7th to get the Reds back within 1. Kyle Farmer then ties it with a homer in the 8th. And just when it looks like more free runners are coming, Wilmer Difo comes up with a 1-out double in the 9th. Naturally that calls for an intentional walk to set up a double play. Colin Moran hits a dribbler behind first, too slow to get the DP, but it's still in the infield, so the Reds play it at average speed figuring Difo will hold up at third because the ball's still in the infield. Don't assume that. Difo sees that Votto's throw has the pitcher-- and his momentum-- facing the wrong direction and never stops, scoring the winning run from second base on, yes, an infield groundout.

The last time the Pirates won any game on a "clean" walkoff groundout (with no errors, no other shenanigans) was June 5, 1990, and it wasn't even a double-play situation. R.J. Reynolds smacked one to second with Wally Backman on third base, and the Cubs apparently decided they had no play at home and just took Reynolds' walkoff hit away from him. And the last instance we found of any team scoring a walkoff run from second on a groundout was June 16, 1990, when... well...

Shades of Taijuan Walker, anyone?


...With A Dash Of McCormick

If you like circling back, then Houston and its many beltways are just your speed. We had an earlier dream sequence where they dropped a pair of 10-run wins in Arlington, which at some point might be reachable if Houston keeps building outer-outer-outside beltways. But the Astros were back home for a weekend series with the Diamondbacks, who found a particularly interesting way to get their 100th loss of the year. Madison Bumgarner, of the "no-hitter that doesn't count" back in April, is getting dangerously close to throwing one that does count before giving up a 2-run homer to Jose Altuve in the 6th. That would be the only hit MadBum allowed, but it was enough to give Houston the lead until Josh VanMeter tied things up against Kendall Graveman in the 8th. Houston starts the 9th with a double and a walk off Noe Ramirez but can't score. And it's off to the land of free runners.

In case this post didn't have enough Peralta sightings, David is Arizona's left fielder. So it's his single that gives the D'backs a lead in the 10th; he joins Welington Castillo on July 31, 2015, as the only D'backs batters to have a go-ahead extra-inning base knock in Houston. Jake Meyers answers that with his own single in the bottom of the 10th. That's only the 13th time in Astros history they've gotten a game-tying single in an extra inning, and three of those have come in the past two seasons under The New Rules. This is the first season in which they've done it twice.

Aledmys Diaz draws a walk that loads the bases, and then with Chas McCormick at the dish... doink. That would be the third plunk-off in Astros history and the second one ever committed by Arizona. Richard Hidalgo (1998 by Mark Leiter) and Luis Gonzalez (1997 by Greg McMichael) are the Astros' other recipients. Meanwhile Erik Sabel hit Eric Karros of the Dodgres on June 20, 2001, to score one of the great names in recent memory, Hiram Bocachica.

Friday ended up being the first extra-inning game where the Astros had only 4 hits and won since defeating the Cubs 2-1 on August 6, 2007.


Passed Your Bedtime

And to bring our show to an end, we may as well tie it all together by going all the way back to the Phillies. Their 17-8 game on Thursday was the blowup of the week. But maybe the reason they decided they needed 17 runs was because of the way they were forced to win Wednesday's game.

The Phils lead 4-2 as Ranger Suarez "outduels" Alec Mills (if that can be called a duel). Ranger has actually helped his own cause with a double, a sac bunt, and a run scored, the first Phillies pitcher to do that since J.D. Durbin in San Diego on July 22, 2007. But he can only do so much before Jose Alvarado has to save things in the 8th. If by "save" you mean, hit Ian Happ with a pitch and then give up a tying homer to Robinson Chirinos. He then plunks the next batter, Alfonso Rivas, before getting removed, which makes him the second Phillies pitcher to hit two batters, give up a homer, and blow a save in the process. The other was Ryan Karp in his final MLB appearance on September 27, 1997.

Not to worry, J.T. Realmuto homers to lead off the 8th and get the lead back. That means Ian Kennedy just has to not give up a matching homer in the 9th and... oh. Welcome Matt Duffy. Duffy and Frank Schwindel both homered and doubled in this game, the first time Cubs teammates have done that in Philadelphia since Billy Williams and Adolfo Phillips on July 2, 1966. That also gave the Phillies two blown saves in the game, which is actually a thing they've done six times this year. They'd done it six times in the previous decade combined.

So if pitching's not doing it for you, might as well try the catching. Andrew Knapp (who happens to be the Phils' catcher) leads off the 9th with a single, ends up at third after a couple of groundouts, and then Robinson Chirinos-- he of the tying homer from last inning-- commits his fourth passed ball of the year and Knapp scampers home for the win. The last time either of these teams was involved in a "passed-ball-off" (we don't have a cute name for this yet) was also against each other. That was August 3, 2005, when Pat Burrell struck out but Michael Barrett let strike 3 get away and Jimmy Rollins scored.


Bottom Of The Bag

⚾ Indians, Sat-Sun: First team to score 11+ runs in consecutive games against the Yankees since the Phillies did it on June 22-23, 2015.

⚾ Spenser Watkins, Tuesday: Became first pitcher in Orioles/Browns history to appear in back-to-back team games and give up multiple homers in each outing.

⚾ Jordan Montgomery & Clay Holmes, Thursday: Second Yankees teammates ever to uncork multiple wild pitches in the same game. Terry Mulholland and Donn Pall did it in Cleveland on June 24, 1994.

⚾ Giancarlo Stanton, Saturday: First Yankees homer to break up a shutout of 10 or more in the 7th or later since Nick Swisher on August 22, 2009.

⚾ Nestor Cortes, Wednesday: First Yankees pitcher to allow only 3 hits, strike out 11, and not get a win in a road game since Lindy McDaniel at Comiskey on July 10, 1973.

⚾ Yadier Molina, Friday: First Cardinals catcher to be hit by a pitch (as a batter) twice in the same game since Jason LaRue against the Reds on September 28, 2008.

⚾ Blue Jays, Sunday: Second game in SkyDome/Rogers history where they scored 5+ runs with all of them coming in the 1st inning. Other was May 22, 2018, against the Angels.

⚾ Josh Rojas, Monday: First in Diamondbacks history to play shortstop, third base, and right field all in the same game.

⚾ Jake Brentz, Thursday: First pitcher in live-ball era to throw 3 wild pitches and hit a batter while recording 0 outs. Miguel Castro (2018 Orioles) and Sergio Santos (2014 Jays) did it without the hit batter.

⚾ Lewin Diaz, Sunday: First walkoff homer in Marlins history to be hit with the team trailing in extra innings.

⚾ Thairo Estrada, Wednesday: First Giants batter to have a pinch-hit homer in the 3rd inning or earlier (you don't usually use PH's so soon) since Jim Marshall against the Cubs on June 16, 1961.

⚾ Indians, Friday: First time being shut out on 4 hits in the Bronx since Jim Abbott's no-hitter on September 4, 1993.

⚾ Andrew Knizner, Tuesday: Second Cardinals batter to have a multi-run pinch hit against the Mets in the 11th or later. Other was Matty Alou on September 27, 1971.

⚾ Sandy Alcantara, Monday: Second pitcher in Marlins history to throw 8 innings and allow no more than 2 baserunners in a road game. Kevin Brown did it in his no-hitter at Candlestick on June 10, 1997.

⚾ Yu Darvish, Saturday: Second Padres pitcher to allow 0 runs and strike out 9+ at (either) Busch Stadium. Andy Benes did it in a 1-0 win on August 29, 1991.

⚾ Brett Gardner, Wednesday: Yankees' first lead-flipping single in the 9th or later since Melky Cabrera walked off against the Twins on May 15, 2009.

⚾ Gavin Sheets, Tuesday: First White Sox #8 or #9 batter with a homer, double, single, and 4 RBI in a game since Juan Uribe against Baltimore on July 4, 2006.

⚾ Eddie Rosario, Sunday: Second cycle ever at Giants' current park. Other was by Eric Byrnes of Oakland on June 29, 2003.

⚾ Eddie Rosario (Sun), with Freddie Freeman (Aug 18): First time Braves players have ever recorded two cycles in the same season.


Sunday, September 12, 2021

It Gets Late Early Out Here


Last week we marked our entry into the final month of the season. Not only are the sunsets getting earlier, and the stadium lights coming on sooner, but the proverbial sun is about to set on a bunch of teams' seasons. Most of them already know it. And we already know we're going to be writing about the Dodgers and Giants and Astros and White Sox for a good chunk of October. It so happens that a lot of the interesting stuff this week came from those other teams who are riding off into the sunset.


Phil Me In

If the Phillies were in any other division, they'd be within a couple days of being mathematically eliminated (if not already). Their cause was not helped by losing 5 out of 7 to the Central-leading Brewers and the lowly Rockies this week. The one win was pretty impressive though.

Bryce Harper wasted no time on the Monday holiday, taking Brandon Woodruff for a 2-run homer in the 1st. Freddy Galvis adds a solo shot in the 2nd. The Phils have two more runners in the 3rd, and lest you think they're going to homer again this inning, they don't. But that just leaves Brad Miller to lead off the 4th with another one. After that Woodruff settles down and actually retires the entire "third time through the order". He still became the first Brewers pitcher to give up 9 hits and 3 homers in a home game since Chase Anderson on April 30, 2016. But it's still only a 4-0 game. And then Brad Boxberger happens.

Andrew McCutchen, leadoff homer in the 8th. Walk. Single. Walk. Single. Pitching change. Boxberger is going to end up charged with 5 runs while getting 0 outs, the first Brewers pitcher to do that since Will Smith on July 24, 2016. And the last two of those runs are going to be part of a Jean Segura grand slam, just the second one ever hit by the Phillies in Milwaukee. The other was fairly recent, by Nick Williams on July 16, 2017. That also means they never hit one at County Stadium, including the years they played the Braves there.

And one final parting shot to The Park Formerly Known As Miller, courtesy of (who else?) Brad Miller. After already leading off the 4th with a dinger, he pounds another one to lead off the 9th, the first Phillie to lead off two different innings with one since Scott Kingery on June 10, 2019. Friend Of Kernels Jayson Stark dove into this and determined that no "Miller" had ever had a multi-homer game at Miller Park... and still hasn't since they keep changing the names on the stadiums all the time. (We were equally excited when Esmil Rogers finally got a win at Rogers Centre.) The Phillies who had multiple homers when it was still Miller Park were Maikel Franco (2016), Mike Lieberthal (2005), and Chase Utley (2000). Miller (that's Brad) also gave the Phils 6 longballs for the game, which they also did in Cincinnati on June 1. It's the first time in franchise history (1883) they've had multiple 6-homer games in the same season. And the only other 12-run victory for the Phillies against Milwaukee was a 13-1 decision behind Harvey Haddix on September 14, 1956. That one is from the Braves years.


Philled Up

Every so often we envision a system where teams could "bank" runs. Say after the 3rd and the 6th, if a team is up big they can put some extra runs aside for the next game (but they can't get them back if they then give up the lead). And, of course, the other team could do likewise, so the first game of a series might potentially start with a score of 10-6 already. Or something. But we digress.

Our point is that the Phillies might have enjoyed saving some of those 12 runs. Because on Tuesday they did not score 12 times. They didn't even score 1 time. And while Aaron Nola only gave up 3 runs to the Brewers, he also needed 92 pitches to finish 5 innings, after which it was the bullpen's turn to melt down. Ramon Rosso wild-pitches a third strike that would have ended the inning, then walks two batters and ends up with 3 runs. Cam Bedrosian gives up a 2-run dinger to Avisail Garcia in the 7th. Christian Yelich polishes it off with a double in the 8th. All told, Milwaukee's top four hitters each had at least 1 extra-base hit and at least 2 RBIs, the first time that's happened since June 2, 1987. Final score, 10-0. A day after the Phillies posted their largest shutout ever against the Brewers, the Brewers just posted their largest shutout against the Phillies. This one topped a 9-0 Randy Wolf start on April 19, 2011.

And as for trading double-digit shutouts in back-to-back games? That hadn't happened anywhere in the majors since April 22 and 23 of 2006, and that pair also involved the Brewers and still-called-Miller Park. The Reds were the visiting team when the combatants traded final scores of 11-0 each way.

11-0, you say? Hey, after playing a 10-0 and a 12-0 earlier in the week, an 11 would fit right in. So sure enough, the Phillies were staring down another barrel on Friday against the Rockies. This was the designated "bullpen game" which apparently all teams are required to throw twice a week now, and it was Bailey Falter who, well, faltered first. He gave up 3 runs in the 2nd, but he wasn't the only one. Ramon Rosso gave up back-to-back homers (but no wild pitches this time). Enyel De Los Santos, who also hadn't pitched since the 10-0 game on Tuesday, walks the bases loaded in the 9th. And if you thought Bailey Falter was a less-than-ideal name for a pitcher, J.D. Hammer did not exactly drop one. He got hammered, in the form of an Elias Diaz grand slam, the second one the Rockies have hit in Philadelphia. Larry Walker connected at The Vet on May 6, 1998. It was also the first multi-run homer (not just a slam) ever hit by the Rockies when they were already up by 7 runs in the 9th.

So that makes things 11-0 and never do the shutout notes early. (Also, don't bank too many of those runs.) Because the Phillies apparently don't want to get mixed up in a 10-0, an 11-0, and a 12-0 in the same week. At least Didi Gregorius doesn't. He deposits the fourth pitch from Ben Bowden into the right-field seats for a leadoff homer that breaks up the shutout. Bryce Harper later singles in another run after a 2-out error to make our final score 11-2. But that dinger by Didi? It's the first one the Phillies have hit to break up an 11-run shutout (or more) in the 9th since Willie Montañez off Fergie Jenkins at Wrigley on July 16, 1971.


Guardians Of The Galaxy

Technically Cleveland is still alive in the wild-card race but they would have to make up 7 games and jump over three teams, all of whom still play each other several times (and thus can't both lose). So pretty safe to say that's not happening.

Also not happening for the Indians this week was much run support. Or "hit support" if that's even a thing. They began their week by losing three in a row to the Twins who are 8 games worse than the Tribe and already in line to be eliminated tomorrow. Two of those games-- Tuesday and Wednesday-- were 3-0 shutouts, their first time losing back-to-back home games to the same opponent in shutout form since Oakland beat them on August 27 and 28, 2012. In Tuesday's game the only extra-base hit was from pinch batter Oscar Mercado in the 8th inning, and their only at-bats with anyone in scoring position all came with 2 outs (and obviously didn't result in any scoring).

On Wednesday they probably would have liked that much. We say this all too frequently, but it's the new pitchers that scare us now. Yes, the Max Scherzers and Gerrit Coles of the world are still scary, but everyone's seen them before. Batters have figured out how to squeeze a hit or two out of them. The Twins, meanwhile, are trotting out a triple-A callup named Joe Ryan, who was part of the Nelson Cruz deal with the Rays, and who is the third major-leaguer ever to attend Cal State Stanislaus County. (Trivia time, name the others. Hint: The school didn't exist until 1960.) It's his second big-league appearance and so of course nobody in the Cleveland lineup is going to be able to hit him. Ryan goes 19 up, 19 down and has everyone scrambling for the no-hitter notes (they have happened in second MLB starts, as Clay Buchholz fans will attest) when Amed Rosario grounds one through the hole at short. Ryan gets out of the inning unscathed, Caleb Thielbar pitches a perfect 8th, Tyler Duffey does likewise in the 9th, and Rosario ends up as Cleveland's only baserunner of the game.

In theory, the good news is that in 121 seasons of the franchise, Wednesday was only the eighth time they've finished a game with one baserunner. The bad news is that two of those have been this year. Remember Carlos Rodon's no-hitter back in April where he lost perfection by hitting Roberto Perez in the 9th? Yeah, that was against Cleveland. One of the other six games is a 6-inning no-hitter by Washington in 1912 that was called because of an agreed curfew to let the Naps catch a train to their next series. So it's not exactly common. And to be fair, it is the first time this season that the Indians have been one-hit. Except there's the pesky matter of the three times they were no-hit. One of those, the doubleheader game against Tampa Bay, is another of those "non-no-hitters" that doesn't really count, which is why you still hear that no team has "officially" been no-hit thrice in a season. (Yeah, we know. Wait for it. This part was written earlier.) But tack on Wade Miley's NH for the Reds in May, and you have four games this season where the Indians were held to no more than 1 hit. So maybe it's good that it's their last season as the "Indians". Because the last year where that happened four times... was their first season as the Indians. That would be 1915.

As for Joe Ryan, he didn't achieve Clay Buchholz levels of immortality (there really should be a scale of some type for this), but he did become the first pitcher to throw 7 innings, allow 1 hit, and get a win in either of his first two MLB appearances since another newbie did it for the Pirates. That was Nick Kingham, who also took a no-hitter into the 7th in his MLB debut on April 29, 2018.

(Still wondering about Cal State Stanislaus, huh? Steve Andrade was a 32nd-round pick who pitched 4 games for the Royals during an injury-related callup in 2006. The other is the guy who always makes our inner 10-year-old giggle, Rusty Kuntz. He led CSUS to national Div-3 baseball titles in both 1976 and 1977 before getting a World Series ring with the Tigers in 1984 and then coaching for several teams.)


The Gaels Of November

So now that you know all about the baseball traditions of Stanislaus, let's continue our educational journey around northern California with a stop at St Mary's College. They're not exactly a baseball powerhouse. As best we can tell they've made the NCAA tournament once. But the college has been around, albeit in three different cities, since the 1860s. That means it's actually produced the starting pitcher in three MLB no-hitters: Ed Morris of Columbus in 1884, and Hubert "Dutch" Leonard of the Red Sox who threw two of them in the 1910s.

Turns out a lot of things related to 1884 suddenly need updating. Because try as they might (and we're really not sure if they're trying anymore), the Indians just can't seem to stop themselves. After getting 1-hit by Joe Ryan on Wednesday, they were stuck on 1 hit on Friday as well before getting to Jandel Gustave in the 8th. (They finally finished that game with the neat linescore of 3 runs, 3 hits, and 3 errors, their second time ever doing that exactly. The other was in 1939 at Tiger Stadium, which wasn't even called that yet.) So by Saturday, Cleveland finally said, okay, the third time we're gonna do this. "This", of course, is letting Corbin Burnes, drafted out of St Mary's in 2016 (which is also the year they made the NCAA's), strike out 11 of the first 15 hitters and carry a perfect game into the 7th. It marked the fifth time this year that the Brewers got a no-hitter into the 7th; you might recall Burnes doing it on opening weekend when he and Jose Berrios had a double-NH going. He gives up a walk to Myles Straw in the 7th, and then there is the controversial matter of letting him pitch the 8th. The Brewers will, of course, be in the playoffs, so do you want to over-extend one of your top pitchers just to get his name in no-hitter lore? It's almost as if Craig Counsell was hoping for a hit in the 8th just to make the decision easier. That plan backfires when Burnes doesn't allow one. So now, after 115 pitches, he is going to be the first pitcher in 24 years to be removed from a game in the 9th or later having not allowed a hit. The other was Francisco Cordova of the Pirates, who memorably pitched all 9 innings of a tie game before Pittsburgh scored in the 10th and Ricardo Rincon came on to finish the no-hitter.

Finish the no-hitter, you say? Well, that's now up to Josh Hader, whom you may remember from a few years ago when he would appear in the 6th or 7th inning and rack up about 8 strikeouts every game before leaving. So, yeah, this doesn't look promising either. And it's not. After a whopping 4 weeks of agonizing waiting we have yet another no-hitter on the books in 2021, the ninth of the season to break the MLB record set in (here's the earlier reference) 1884. Remember how Wednesday was the fourth time this year the Indians were held to 1 hit? Yep, here's five; the only other team in the live-ball era to pull that off was the 2010 Rays. Myles Straw still ends up as the only baserunner, so instead of eight such games in Indians history, they're up to nine. Three this year. And two this week.

You've heard everywhere else that yes, the Indians are the first team to "officially" be no-hit three times in a single season. But again, there's that unofficial one thrown by the Rays in a doubleheader in July. So it's really four times this year that Cleveland has finished a game with 0 hits. And that's also a modern-era record. The 1906 Brooklyn squad had it happen three times, even though none of those is officially recognized anymore. One of their games, similar to Cleveland, was planned as a 7-inning affair for travel reasons. One was called by darkness. And they had one broken up in the 11th which was wiped off the books in 1991 for not being a "complete game".

We mentioned that Burnes struck out 11 of the first 15 batters of the game. He fanned three more after that (at least Cleveland did eventually figure out how to make contact). That's 0 hits and 14 strikeouts, which has been done by only one other Milwaukee pitcher in history. Warren Spahn fanned 15 for the Braves in his no-hitter on September 16, 1960. Meanwhile, Hader struck out two of his three batters in the 9th, yielding 16 K's for the game. Although Spahn's 15 is close behind, there have only been three other NH's with 16 strikeouts-- two are by Nolan Ryan (1973 and 1991), plus Max Scherzer's season-ending 17-K effort in 2015.

And someone give Zach Plesac a hug please. We mentioned the other two times that Cleveland was "officially" no-hit this year, by Carlos Rodon and Wade Miley. Guess who started both those games on the other side. And guess who started Saturday. Only one pitcher in MLB history has been the opposing starter for three no-hitters, and his were in different years for different teams. Jim Perry, in his Cy Young year of 1970 for the Twins, lost to Vida Blue in no-hit fashion, then did it twice more in 1973 with the Tigers (one is that same 16-K Nolan Ryan game from above). Adding insult to injury, Plesac actually took a no-hitter of his own into the 8th earlier this year until J.P. Crawford of the Mariners broke it up.

And there would have been Plesac notes even if Hader hadn't finished the no-hitter. Because the last time the Brewers had a no-hitter broken up in the 9th, it was also in Cleveland. Ron Washington spoiled an Odell Jones bid on May 28, 1988. The pitcher who relieved Jones after he finally gave up that first hit... was Dan Plesac-- Zach's uncle.


Sho-Time

Right behind Cleveland, still alive mathematically if not practically, are the Angels. Who right now offer exactly one major reason to pay attention to them. It's not Albert Pujols anymore, or the still-injured Mike Trout. It's of course Shohei Ohtani, the two-way phenom who seems like a good bet to break Troy Glaus's team home-run record of 47. Maybe even this week. Because on Friday he got number 44 in very Kernels-like fashion.

As he does about once a week, Ohtani was pitching in that game against the Astros. Granted, he wasn't pitching for very long because Houston jumped on him for 9 hits and 6 runs before he finally gave up the ball in the 4th. But regardless of whether he's pitching or just DH'ing, Ohtani and his .360 on-base percentage always bat either 1st or 2nd in the order. So before losing the lead in the 3rd inning, Ohtani actually gave himself the lead with a 1st-inning homer off Framber Valdez. Since this was a road game, it means that Ohtani, as the game's starting pitcher, actually homered on offense before he threw a pitch on defense. And yes, he's the first pitcher in Angels history to do that. Turns out he also homered as the pitcher in the 1st inning of a home game against the White Sox on April 4. And since the DH was brought into the realm in 1973, only one other pitcher for any team has hit multiple 1st-inning dingers. That was the unofficial king of pitcher homers, Carlos Zambrano, and both of his also came in the same season (2006).

Again, Ohtani did get tagged for 6 runs and Houston went on to an easy 10-5 win. The last Angels starter to give up 6 earned, hit a batter, throw a wild pitch, and not get out of the 4th inning, was C.J. Wilson, also against the Astros, on June 23, 2015. But posting that disastrous line on the mound while still hitting a homer on offense? Had not been done by any previous pitcher in MLB's modern era (1901). So Ohtani is still finding new and unique ways to entertain us. Keep watching them Angels. But maybe only every fifth day.


It was a choice between a Yogi Berra quote and a Paul Simon song. So if that radio coming from the room next door is bugging you, indulge it for a few minutes. Intermission!


Rays Your Glass

Two of the teams you will be hearing about down the stretch are the Rays and Red Sox, who met up for their final series of the regular season. And if they end up meeting in October somehow, be sure to have a calculator handy.

If you had nothing else to do on your Labor Day holiday, you certainly could have spent the entire day at Fenway Park. No, really. The entire day. Ryan Yarbrough, usually deployed for a 5- or 6-inning "relief" appearance after the Rays do their famous "opener" shtick, actually started the game on Monday. This time, instead of entering in the 3rd inning, Yarbrough would depart in the 3rd inning after the Red Sox tagged him for 7 runs. None of them came via homers, either; it was three well-timed doubles and a sac fly. But instead of rolling over and eating this one, the Rays decided to fight back with Nelson Cruz connecting for what can best be described as a Little League grand slam. Thanks to all that being unearned, Chris Sale becomes the first Boston pitcher to allow 10 hits but only 1 earned run since Pedro Martinez did it against the Angels on August 6, 2003.

We then match runs for a little while until it's 9-8 in the 9th and Austin Meadows legs out an inside-the-park homer when his fly ball kicks off the wall and away from Alex Verdugo. It's the Rays' third IHR in a month (Brett Phillips and Kevin Kiermaier), joining the 2017 Diamondbacks as the only teams in the last 30 years to pull that off so quickly. It's also the first game-tying IHR in the majors since Mark Teahen of the Royals against Minnesota on May 27, 2008.

So it's now 9-9 and we're off to Free Runner Land because what else did you have to do? Game's already over 4 hours old. Nelson Cruz singles home the Rays' free runner for his third hit and third RBI of the day. He ends up scoring an 11th run a few pitches later, thus joining Hunter Renfroe (2020), Brandon Lowe (2019), and Sam Fuld (2011) as the only Rays batters with 3 hits, 3 RBI, and 3 runs scored in a game at Fenway. Now it's Boston's turn to make this interesting. Collin McHugh balks the free runner to third, although he would have scored anyway on Jose Iglesias's single. 11-10. Then an error and a walk to load the bases before Kevin Plawecki mercifully grounds out to end it. McHugh would be the first reliever in Rays history to allow 2 hits, 2 walks, commit a balk, and still end up with a win (he also pitched the 9th). The last "home" game where the Sawx scored 10 runs and lost was that 17-13 escapade with the Yankees in London two seasons ago. At Fenway Park it was a 13-10 against Toronto on June 12, 2015.

And at 4 hours 54 minutes, this thing clocked in as the longest known game in Fenway history that did not go at least 11 innings. The old mark of 4:45 was set on August 18, 2006, in a 14-11 affair with (of course) the Yankees.

After 4:54 could you possibly want more? Well, they're right back at it on Tuesday night, and this one actually finished in under 3 hours. Still need that calculator, though. This time it's Eduardo Rodriguez of the Sawx who gets knocked around for 6 early runs and 2 homers, also featuring a 2-run triple by (yes he's a catcher) Mike Zunino. It's actually Zunino's homer his second time up that makes the score 6-1 and knocks E-Rod out of the game. Nelson Cruz, who homered off E-Rod, also takes Michael Feliz deep in the 5th. Zunino does the same in his third at-bat, joining Twins manager Rocco Baldelli as the only Rays players with 2 homers and a triple in the same game. Baldelli did it against the Yankees on September 14, 2006. Cruz and Zunino also combined to be the first Rays teammates ever to have multiple homers in the same game at Fenway. When Jordan Luplow gives the Rays a homer in five consecutive innings, it drives the score to 12-1 and Boston sorta concedes this one. Bunch of defensive changes, leave Brad Peacock out there on the mound to take one for the team, and so forth.

But sometimes those bench guys step up and make the most of their chance to play. Bobby Dalbec, now at third base, touches third base again during his home-run trot in the 8th. Danny Santana, now in left field, follows him with another homer. That was the first time multiple bench players had homered for the Sawx in the same game since Kevin Millar and Bill Mueller both went deep as pinch hitters in Milwaukee on June 7, 2003. Then, after Peacock gets through the 9th, Dalbec is up again and launches another one. He's only the third player in Red Sox history to hit 2 homers in a game he didn't start. Mike Lowell did it on August 11, 2009, replacing Kevin Youkilis who got hit with a pitch in his first at-bat. The other was Joe Foy against the Senators on June 9, 1967; he got double-switched into the pitcher's spot in the 6th.

For Wednesday you can put the calculator away. Boston takes the finale 2-1 after Hunter Renfroe hits a lead-flipping homer in the bottom of the 8th. That was the fourth such homer by the Red Sox this season, their most since Youkilis, David Ortiz, and Mark Loretta collected four during the 2006 campaign.


Ontario's Eleven

The Orioles hold the honor of being the first team this season to be mathematically eliminated from even the wild-card race, having gotten bounced way back on August 28. So their role is mostly to play spoiler and mess everyone else up as they conclude their 38th consecutive "rebuilding" season. (Sigh.) Trailing 5-0 to the Royals (who also aren't going anywhere) on Wednesday, Baltimore blew up for a 9-spot in the bottom of the 8th against three different Royals relievers. The last 4 runs-- and the winning 4 runs-- were unearned after "defensive replacement" Hunter Dozier dropped a fly ball and then Ryan Mountcastle homered. It gave the Orioles their first game with 9+ runs scored, all of them in the same inning, since beating the Yankees 10-3 on July 8, 1969.

As for the "spoiler" part-- and 9-run innings, for that matter-- the O's got to host Toronto for the weekend, one of those five teams that are realistically battling for the two AL Wild Card spots. On Friday it was Anthony Santander's turn to be the spoiler, cranking a 3-run homer in the 7th that held up for a win when Cole Sulser recorded a 6-out save. Robbie Ray managed to strike out 8 Orioles before departing, his sixth consecutive 8-K game. That joins a short but illustrious list of Jays pitchers to have such a streak: A.J. Burnett in 2007 and Roger Clemens in 1997. On the Baltimore side, Cedric Mullins homered and also stole two bases, which he also did against the Yankees back on August 2. Only three others in franchise history have done that twice in a season: Corey Patterson in 2006, Reggie Jackson in 1976, and George Sisler in 1920.

So on to Saturday where the Jays stood to actually gain ground on the other wild-card-ers because of a rainout back in July. So "let's play two", and for once maybe it's good that MLB changed doubleheaders into 7 innings.

It certainly appeared as though the Orioles were going to play spoiler again, beating up on Hyun-Jin Ryu for 7 runs in the first 3 innings. Santander homered again. Austin Hays homered. Ryan McKenna knocks Ryu out of the game with a bases-loaded double. It's the third time this season that Ryu allowed 7 runs and multiple homers, the most for Toronto since R.A. Dickey and Mark Buehrle both managed to do it in 2013. Mind you, the Jays are hanging around with 3 homers of their own, including the 43rd of the year from Vlad Guerrero Jr. This will end up being the 12th game in Camden Yards history-- and first in over 4 years-- where both teams connect for at least 4 homers. Hays goes yard again to lead off the 4th and the Baltimore lead eventually grows to 10-5. Marcus Diplan gives up 2 walks, 2 singles, and thus 2 runs in the 5th, meaning Tyler Wells has a 3-run cushion to start the 7th and final inning. Yeah, about that. Double, walk, single, sac fly, home run by George Springer. That was their first lead-flipping homer when down to their final out in a road game since Randal Grichuk hit a grand slam on September 18, 2019, also at Camden Yards. That game was also an 11-10 Toronto win and is the last time the O's scored 10 in a game and lost. Between the 8 homers (Hays was the only player to hit two) and a bunch of doubles, there were 13 different batters who recorded an extra-base hit, just the second time in Camden Yards history that's happened. The other was a 17-8 jamboree against the Angels on August 16, 2009. And the last time the Jays scored 11+ in the first game of a doubleheader was May 3, 2018, in Cleveland.

Oh, look, another Cleveland mention. Remember that no-hitter from Corbin Burnes? Game 1 of our doubleheader took over 3 hours to play and ended while the Brewers were batting in the 7th. Game 2 had just started when Josh Hader got the final out in Cleveland. And granted, this is a 7-inning game which wouldn't "officially" count. But you don't think... maybe...? No, of course not. Keegan Akin is on the mound. He started the season 0-8, although he did get a 4-2 win over the Jays a couple weeks ago. Still, though, they just scored 11 runs and had a big last-inning rally in the first game.

Balloon, deflate thyself. After a leadoff walk to George Springer the Jays go completely limp. Twelve straight outs and by the time we're done dealing with the first no-hitter of the night, this game is headed for the 5th. It's still true that the last day on which two teams finished with 0 hits in a game was the famous Dave Stewart/Fernando Valenzuela day on June 29, 1990. Stewart's no-hitter was actually against Toronto as well. Akin throws a perfect 5th. Cedric Mullins, meanwhile, has recorded the only run for the Orioles with a solo homer. Which is probably why the Jays decide to play for 1 run in the 6th after Randal Grichuk draws a leadoff walk. Instead of trying to break up the no-hitter, Breyvic Valera lays down a sac bunt that almost results in another no-hitter being lost to a blown call. We have replay now, so it gets overturned and then Akin gets the last two outs. That puts the Orioles three outs away from their second 0-hit game of the year (remember John Means?). The only time they've thrown two in a season was 1917 when Ernie Koob famously was awarded a retroactive NH because the official scorer changed his mind (or was "persuaded" to) overnight, and then Bob Groom went out and threw one later that same day. But Vladdy is leading off the 7th, and it would be a real good spot for him to hit number 44.

He doesn't. He does deposit a liner into shallow right for the first Jays hit. He then shoots a ground ball into left for the Jays' ninth hit. Wait, what? Yes, balloon, reinflate. After getting no-hit through 6 innings, Toronto bats around as Bo Bichette, Alejandro Kirk, and Marcus Semien all hit multi-run homers. The only out before Vladdy bats again comes on a sacrifice fly. Keegan Akin is long gone by this point, so Tanner Scott has suddenly become the first reliever in Orioles/Browns history to give up 6 runs and 2 homers while getting no more than 1 out. And for the final nail in the balloon (mixed-metaphor alert!), Teoscar Hernandez rips another 3-run homer to finish off an 11-run inning. By a team that was getting no-hit just a half-hour ago.

So let's unpack. Elias tells us that no team since at least 1960 had rattled off an 11-run inning in the 4th or later when they were getting no-hit at the beginning of it. As for being down to their last inning, we couldn't find any 9-inning game in MLB history where that happened, although the records of no-hitter breakups are incomplete before 1928. There's also no way to distinguish games that were intentionally made shorter beforehand, such as Saturday's, from games that were called early by rain or darkness, so it is certainly possible that this happened 140 years ago. But we're also certain that it hasn't happened in a long time.

As for the Jays, they've only had four 11-run innings in the history (no 12's), the prior ones being in 2007, 1995, and 1984. Saturday was the first time that 11-run inning comprised all of their scoring, however. The top of the 7th was the second occurrence in Jays history of 4 homers in an inning; the other was against the Rangers on August 17, 2001 (Jeff Frye, Jose Cruz, Shannon Stewart, Carlos Delgado). It's also the first time the Jays have ever hit 4 homers in both games of a doubleheader, although they play fewer of them than most teams thanks to that dome. But the last time any team did that almost predates the Toronto franchise. Seven different Cardinals, including Lou Brock and Not-That-Mike Tyson, combined to do it in Atlanta on July 6, 1979.

Bo Bichette's homer (the first of the four) actually flipped the lead again because the O's were up 1-0. Again, "the final" inning is hard to determine going way back, but the Jays are the first team to hit a lead-flipping homer even in the 7th or later of both games of a twinbill since R.J. Reynolds and Mike Diaz did it for the Pirates on June 7, 1987.

And remember the score of Game 1? (It's okay if you don't, this thing took 6 hours 35 minutes to play 14 innings, and one team didn't have a hit for most of it.) It was 11-10 Toronto. We already mentioned May 3, 2018, in Cleveland, when the Jays scored 11+ in Game 1. Turns out that was the last time any team scored 11+ in both games of a doubleheader. But guess what. It wasn't the Blue Jays who did it that day. It was the Indians, who actually lost the first game 13-11 and then returned the favor with a 13-4 in the nightcap.


Ontario's Twenty-Two

Just so you know, Blue Jays, scoring 22 runs on Saturday does not mean you also have to score 22 runs on Sunday. Might want to grab that calculator from the Sawx/Rays games though.

Rookie Zac Lowther is your starter for the Orioles in just his seventh MLB game. Again, the Orioles are really only here to play spoiler, so why not. The "spoiler alert" is that this isn't going to end well. Single, two walks, hit batter. There's 1. And then Lourdes Gurriel takes Lowther's first pitch into right for a grand slam, such that just 17 hours or so after Saturday's 11-run outburst, the Jays have another 5-run inning. Gurriel also had a 1st-inning slam against the Rangers on July 18, and another on June 24 against Baltimore. The only other player in Jays history to hit three 1st-inning slams in a season is Carlos Delgado in 1999. While the Jays were busy "only" scoring 1 in the 2nd, we were figuring out that this was the first time in team history the Jays had ever scored 16 runs in the span of 2 innings. Heh. It seems quaint looking back on it.

Spenser Watkins gets summoned for the 3rd. Let's see how that goes, shall we? Danny Jansen, 2-run double. Breyvic Valera singles him home. Jake Lamb, who we honestly didn't know was still playing, homers to make it 10-3. Two singles and a walk re-load the bases, and then Teoscar Hernandez unloads them with a grand slam. That would be 14-3, and Watkins joins Dylan Bundy as the only pitchers in Orioles/Browns history to give up 7 runs and 2 homers while getting no more than 1 out. Bundy did it in a start 3 years ago during a stretch where it seemed every Orioles starter was charged with a minimum of 5 runs. Combined with Gurriel, it's the first time the Jays have ever hit two slams in the same game, and it's the first time the Orioles have surrendered same since The 30-3 Game against Texas on August 22, 2007.

Mike Baumann eventually gets out of the inning, but not before the Jays send 13 batters to the plate and score 10 more runs. Sound familiar? Yeah, they just scored 11 in an inning at about 11:00 last night. The Jays have never before had two 10-run innings in the same season, and here they are doing it twice in 18 hours. As you probably know, by the time this thing finally ends it's going to be 22-7, the first time that exact score has hit since the Dodgers beat the Rockies by that count on July 21, 2001, and the 11th time in MLB history. The only other time Toronto reached 22 runs in a game was also against Baltimore-- June 26, 1978, at Exhibition Stadium. That 24-10 win was also part of the Jays' highest-scoring 3-game stretch in team history, totaling 39 runs. This weekend they dropped 44 in less than 24 hours. Imagine if they could bank them.


Bottom Of The Bag

⚾ Mets, Thursday: Fifth time the team had exactly 4 hits in a game and they comprised a team cycle. Previous was May 9, 2002, against the Giants.

⚾ Frank Schwindel, Monday: Became first Cubs batter to have a go-ahead hit in the 7th or later of three consecutive team games since Shawon Dunston in June 1991.

⚾ Austin Adams, Sunday: First pitcher in Padres history to hit 3 batters while getting no more than 3 outs.

⚾ Michael Lorenzen, Tuesday: First Reds pitcher to "earn" a hold despite allowing 2 homers since Scott Sullivan at Houston on May 20, 2001.

⚾ Luis Robert, Saturday: Second leadoff batter in White Sox history to have 3 doubles and 3 RBI in a loss. Johnny Mostil did it in Cleveland on August 30, 1924.

⚾ Max Scherzer, Monday: First Dodgers pitcher to record a 13-strikeout game in St Louis since Sandy Koufax on September 29, 1966.

⚾ Andrew Benintendi, Friday: First batter in Royals history to homer 10 innings apart in the same game (1st and 11th). Previous record was held by George Brett who went deep in the 8th and 16th against Baltimore on May 28, 1979.

⚾ Jason Heyward, Wednesday: First 3- or 4-run walkoff homer ever hit by the Cubs against the Reds (both have been in the National League since 1890).

⚾ Dietrich Enns, Saturday: First reliever in Rays history to throw 4+ hitless innings and record at least 6 strikeouts.

⚾ Braves, Thursday: First game since saves became official in 1969 where they blew three of them in the same game and still ended up winning.

⚾ J.T. Realmuto, Sunday: Second game this year with a double, a stolen base, and 2 runs scored. In modern era, only other Phillies catcher to do that twice in a season is Charles "Red" Dooin in 1909.

⚾ Giants, Tuesday: First time collecting 7 doubles and 2 triples in a game since April 30, 1944, against Brooklyn (a game they won 26-8).

⚾ Joey Votto, Friday: Third time homering on his birthday (also did it in 2011 and 2016). Only other Reds batter in modern era to do it three times is Tony Perez.

⚾ Andrew Stevenson, Monday: First Nationals pinch-hitter to tie a game against the Mets in the 9th since Carlos Baerga hit his final career homer on September 23, 2005.

⚾ Luis Gil, Wednesday: First Yankees starter to issue 7 walks in a game since Joba Chamberlain against the Red Sox on August 6, 2009.

⚾ Pirates, Saturday: First game where they scored 10+ runs on no more than 7 hits since August 13, 1988.

⚾ Matt Olson, Friday: Second player in "Oakland" A's history (1968) to have 4 hits and 4 RBI in a home game but 0 runs scored himself. Ernie Riles did it against the Yankees on May 1, 1991.

⚾ Jackson Kowar, Tuesday: Became second pitcher in modern era to accumulate 7 wild pitches in his first five MLB appearances. Other was Bobby Witt for Texas in 1986.

⚾ Nate Lowe, Wednesday: Second Rangers batter to have a single, a double, and a triple at Chase Field. Will Clark did it on June 25, 1998.

⚾ Kolten Wong & Avisail Garcia, Sunday: Second Brewers teammates ever to have multiple homers in the same game in Cleveland. Sal Bando and Ben Ogilvie did it in a 14-1 drubbing on April 29, 1980.