It was cool how he thanked Crawford, Sandoval and Posey before walking off the mound.mauidano said:And he's done. Another nice round of applause and hope they can hold it for you Jake. You deserve a win.
Peavy most certainly gets itDeJesus Built My Hotrod said:It was cool how he thanked Crawford, Sandoval and Posey before walking off the mound.
True. He's happy as a clam pitching well with a contender, great crowds, clubhouse, his first ML manager whom he said he'd die for, or something like that.mauidano said:Feel bad for Peavy. He's had a couple that went late into the contest this year only to lose them. One literally.
earthquakes tho.LogansDad said:A SF vs. Oakland World Series this year would be awesome, not gonna lie.
and looks like he is being taken out of game at 108 pitches.mauidano said:Cole Hamels through 7 in Atlanta. 6 K's & 5 BB's.
mauidano said:Cole Hamels through 7 in Atlanta. 6 K's & 5 BB's.
Sox and Rocks said:Worst no hitter ever?
Starter can only go 6 and walks 5. It takes 4 combined pitchers. Nothing like Kershaw mowing down the opposing lineup.
Sox and Rocks said:Worst no hitter ever?
Starter can only go 6 and walks 5. It takes 4 combined pitchers. Nothing like Kershaw mowing down the opposing lineup.
I think any game in which the starter completes the no-hitter, or at least gets close, has to rank above this simply because it is harder for one pitcher to complete a no-no, both from a stamina perspective and the fact that hitters adjust better to the same stuff over the course of a game.cannonball 1729 said:
It's certainly on the list. AJ Burnett's 9 walk, 1 HBP, 1 wild pitch no-hit performance against a terrible hitting Padres team has to be up there. And so does Edwin Jackson's 8 walk, 1 HBP, 149 pitch effort. The Astros' one above warrants mention (two innings by the starter, although it was against the Yankees), or the six-pitcher affair that Kevin Millwood started with the Mariners in 2012. Dock Ellis' legendary no-hitter on LSD is probably also on the list.
The worst official no-hitter, though, is still probably Steve Barber and Stu Miller's 2-1 loss, which happened thanks to Barber's 10 walks, 2 HBP, and 1 WP in 8 2/3 IP. The top of the 9th had 3 walks, one wild pitch (which scored the game-tying run), and a fielder's choice error to let in the go-ahead run.
Lose Remerswaal said:History being made through 5 innings at Fenway
When clicking in the thread took me to last viewed post I got this.Deathofthebambino said:Thru 7, 1 walk, 9 k's, NO HITS for Arrieta