D’oh! Cincinnati’s Homer Bailey no-hits Pirates


Associated Press

PITTSBURGH

Homer Bailey of the Cincinnati Reds threw the season’s seventh no-hitter, beating the Pittsburgh Pirates, 1-0, on Friday night.

The seven no-hitters matches the modern record for most in a season, tying 1990 and 1991. There were eight no-hitters in 1884.

The last no-hitter for the Reds was a perfect game by Tom Browning on Sept. 16, 1988. This was the 15th no-hitter in Reds history.

Bailey (13-10) walked one and struck out 10. He threw 115 pitches and retired the side in order in the ninth, striking out pinch-hitter Brock Holt then getting pinch-hitter Michael McKenry and Alex Presley to both pop out.

When Presley’s popup was caught by second baseman Brandon Phillips, Bailey was mobbed near the mound by teammates who doused him with water.

Bailey, 26, improved to 5-0 in his six career starts with a 1.19 ERA at PNC Park. All four of his complete games and both his shutouts have come against Pittsburgh.

Cincinnati, which clinched the NL Central title last Saturday, improved to 95-62. The Reds entered the day one game behind Washington (95-61) for best record in the NL.

The other no-hitters this season were: the Chicago White Sox’s Philip Humber, the Los Angeles Angels’ Jered Weaver, the New York Mets’ Johan Santana, San Francisco’s Matt Cain, Seattle’s Felix Hernandez and a combined six-pitcher effort by the Mariners. Humber, Cain and Hernandez each had a perfect game.

Pittsburgh (76-81) made its own bit of history as it was assured of a 20th consecutive non-winning season with the loss, extending its major North American professional sports record.

Bailey retired the first six batters before third baseman Scott Rolen failed to handle Clint Barmes’ ground ball leading off the third for an error. Bailey then set down 13 straight until walking Andrew McCutchen with one out in the seventh.

McCutchen stole second but then was thrown out by catcher Ryan Hanigan attempting to steal third. Garrett Jones flied out to the warning track in right to end the inning.

Cincinnati needed to make just one above-average defensive play behind Bailey. Left fielder Todd Frazier ran down Presley’s flare toward the foul line to end the third inning.