List of Major League Baseball no-hitters
Below is a list of Major League Baseball no-hitters, enumerating every no-hitter pitched in Major League Baseball history. In addition, all no-hitters that were broken up in extra innings or were in shortened games are listed, although they are not currently considered official no-hitters. (Prior to 1991, a performance in which no hits were surrendered through nine innings or in a shortened game was considered an official no-hit game.) The names of those pitchers who threw a perfect game no-hitter are italicized. For combined no-hitters by two or more pitchers on the same team, each is listed with his number of innings pitched. Games which were part of a doubleheader are noted as either the first game or second game.
Through September 11, 2021, there have been 314 no-hitters officially recognized by Major League Baseball (MLB); the first 43 in the pre-modern era (before the formation of the American League in 1901) and the balance in the modern era. Three other games are also noted; one in 1875 by Joe Borden that is accepted as a no-hitter but not recognized by MLB (as MLB does not accept the National Association as a major league), one in 1876 by Borden that is disputed and not recognized by MLB, and one in 1901 by Pete Dowling that is also disputed and not recognized by MLB. The first no-hitter officially recognized by MLB was pitched by George Bradley on July 15, 1876, during the first season of play in the National League. The most recent major league no-hitter was thrown by Corbin Burnes and Josh Hader of the Milwaukee Brewers on September 11, 2021.
Background[]
An official no-hit game occurs in Major League Baseball (MLB) when a pitcher (or pitchers) allows no hits during the entire course of a game, which consists of at least nine innings thrown by the pitcher(s). By definition, a perfect game is also a no-hitter, as no batters reach base (thus there are no hits allowed). In a no-hit game, a batter may still reach base via a walk, an error, a fielder's choice, an intentional walk, a hit by pitch, a passed ball or wild pitch on strike three, or catcher's interference.[1] Also, due to these methods of reaching base, it is possible for a team to score runs without getting any hits.
While the vast majority of no-hitters are shutouts, no-hit teams have managed to score runs in their respective games 25 times. Five times a team has been no-hit and still won the game: two notable victories occurred when the Cincinnati Reds defeated the Houston Colt .45s (now called the Houston Astros) 1–0 on April 23, 1964, even though they were no-hit by Houston starter Ken Johnson, and the Detroit Tigers defeated the Baltimore Orioles 2–1 on April 30, 1967, even though they were no-hit by Baltimore starter Steve Barber and reliever Stu Miller. In another four games, the home team won despite gaining no hits through eight innings (not needing to play the bottom half of the ninth inning), but these are near no-hitters under the 1991 rule that nine no-hit innings must be completed in order for a no-hitter to be credited.
The pitcher who holds the record for the shortest time between no-hitters is Johnny Vander Meer, the only pitcher in MLB history to throw no-hitters in consecutive starts, while playing for the Cincinnati Reds in 1938. Besides Vander Meer, Allie Reynolds (in 1951), Virgil Trucks (in 1952), Nolan Ryan (in 1973), and Max Scherzer (in 2015) are the only other major leaguers to throw two no-hitters in the same regular season. Jim Maloney technically threw two no-hitters in the 1965 season, but his first one ended after he allowed a home run in the top of the 11th inning. According to the rules interpretation of the time, this was considered a no-hitter. Later that season, Maloney once again took a no-hitter into extra innings, but this time he managed to preserve the no-hitter after the Reds scored in the top half of the tenth, becoming the first pitcher to throw a complete game extra inning no-hitter since Fred Toney in 1917.[2] Roy Halladay threw two no-hitters in 2010: a perfect game during the regular season and a no-hitter in the 2010 National League Division Series. He is the only major leaguer to have thrown no-hitters in regular season and postseason play.
Ryan holds the record for most no-hitters in a career, with seven. Sandy Koufax is second on the list with four no-hitters.
The first black pitcher to toss a no-hitter was Sam Jones who did it for the Chicago Cubs in 1955. The first Latin pitcher to throw one was San Francisco Giant Juan Marichal in 1963. The first Asian pitcher to throw one was Los Angeles Dodger Hideo Nomo in 1996.
The most recent MLB season completed without a no-hitter was 2005.[notes 1]
Regulation no-hitters[]
Key[]
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No-hitters[]
# | Date | Pitcher | Team | RS | Opponent | RA | League | Catcher | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
N/A | July 28, 1875 | Joe Borden | Philadelphia White Stockings | 4 | Chicago White Stockings | 0 | NA | Pop Snyder | [3] [notes 2] |
N/A | May 23, 1876 | Joe Borden | Boston Red Caps | 8 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | John Morrill | [notes 3] |
1 | July 15, 1876 | George Bradley | St. Louis Brown Stockings | 2 | Hartford Dark Blues | 0 | NL | John Clapp | [4] |
2 | June 12, 1880 | Lee Richmond | Worcester Worcesters | 1 | Cleveland Blues | 0 | NL | Charlie Bennett | [5] |
3 | June 17, 1880 | John Montgomery Ward | Providence Grays | 5 | Buffalo Bisons | 0 | NL | Emil Gross | [6] |
4 | August 19, 1880 | Larry Corcoran (1) | Chicago White Stockings | 6 | Boston Red Caps | 0 | NL | Silver Flint (? IP)(1) King Kelly (? IP)(1) |
[3] |
5 | August 20, 1880 | Pud Galvin (1) | Buffalo Bisons | 1 | Worcester Worcesters | 0 | NL | Jack Rowe (1) | [3] |
6 | September 11, 1882 | Tony Mullane | Louisville Eclipse | 2 | Cincinnati Red Stockings | 0 | AA | Dan Sullivan (1) | [3] |
7 | September 19, 1882 | Guy Hecker | Louisville Eclipse | 3 | Pittsburgh Alleghenys | 1 | AA | Dan Sullivan (2) | [3] |
8 | September 20, 1882 | Larry Corcoran (2) | Chicago White Stockings | 5 | Worcester Worcesters | 0 | NL | Silver Flint (2) | [3] |
9 | July 25, 1883 | Charles Radbourn | Providence Grays | 8 | Cleveland Blues | 0 | NL | Barney Gilligan | [3] |
10 | September 13, 1883 | Hugh Daily | Cleveland Blues | 1 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Doc Bushong | [3] |
11 | May 24, 1884 | Al Atkinson (1) | Philadelphia Athletics | 10 | Pittsburgh Alleghenys | 1 | AA | Jocko Milligan | [3] |
12 | May 29, 1884 | Ed Morris | Columbus Buckeyes | 5 | Pittsburgh Alleghenys | 0 | AA | Rudy Kemmler (1) | [3] |
13 | June 5, 1884 | Frank Mountain | Columbus Buckeyes | 12 | Washington Nationals | 0 | AA | Rudy Kemmler (2) | [3] |
14 | June 27, 1884 | Larry Corcoran (3) | Chicago White Stockings | 6 | Providence Grays | 0 | NL | King Kelly (2) | [3] |
15 | August 4, 1884 | Pud Galvin (2) | Buffalo Bisons | 18 | Detroit Wolverines | 0 | NL | Jack Rowe (2) | [3] |
16 | August 26, 1884 | Dick Burns | Cincinnati Outlaw Reds | 3 | Kansas City Unions | 1 | UA | Joe Crotty | [3] |
17 | September 28, 1884 | Ed Cushman | Milwaukee Brewers | 5 | Washington Nationals | 0 | UA | Cal Broughton | [3] |
18 | October 4, 1884 | Sam Kimber | Brooklyn Atlantics | 0 | Toledo Blue Stockings | 0 | AA | Jack Corcoran | [7] [notes 4] |
19 | July 27, 1885 | John Clarkson | Chicago White Stockings | 4 | Providence Grays | 0 | NL | Silver Flint (3) | [8] |
20 | August 29, 1885 | Charlie Ferguson | Philadelphia Phillies | 1 | Providence Grays | 0 | NL | Charlie Ganzel (1) | [9] |
21 | May 1, 1886 | Al Atkinson (2) | Philadelphia Athletics | 3 | New York Metropolitans | 2 | AA | Jack O'Brien | [10] |
22 | July 24, 1886 | Adonis Terry (1) | Brooklyn Grays | 1 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AA | Jimmy Peoples (1) | [11] |
23 | October 6, 1886 | Matt Kilroy | Baltimore Orioles | 6 | Pittsburgh Alleghenys | 0 | AA | Tom Dolan | [3] |
24 | May 27, 1888 | Adonis Terry (2) | Brooklyn Bridegrooms | 4 | Louisville Colonels | 0 | AA | Jimmy Peoples (2) | [12] |
25 | June 6, 1888 | Henry Porter | Kansas City Cowboys | 4 | Baltimore Orioles | 0 | AA | Law Daniels | [3] |
26 | July 26, 1888 | Ed Seward | Philadelphia Athletics | 12 | Cincinnati Red Stockings | 2 | AA | Wilbert Robinson (1) | [13] |
27 | July 31, 1888 | Gus Weyhing | Philadelphia Athletics | 4 | Kansas City Cowboys | 0 | AA | George Townsend | [14] |
28 | September 15, 1890 | Ledell Titcomb | Rochester Broncos | 7 | Syracuse Stars | 0 | AA | John Grim | [15] |
29 | June 22, 1891 | Tom Lovett | Brooklyn Grooms | 4 | New York Giants | 0 | NL | Con Daily | [16] |
30 | July 31, 1891 | Amos Rusie | New York Giants | 6 | Brooklyn Grooms | 0 | NL | Dick Buckley | [17] [notes 5] |
31 | October 4, 1891 | Ted Breitenstein (1) | St. Louis Browns | 8 | Louisville Colonels | 0 | AA | John Munyan | [18] [notes 6] |
32 | August 6, 1892 | Jack Stivetts | Boston Beaneaters | 11 | Brooklyn Grooms | 0 | NL | Charlie Ganzel (2) | [19] |
33 | August 22, 1892 | Ben Sanders | Louisville Colonels | 6 | Baltimore Orioles | 2 | NL | Bill Merritt | [20] |
34 | October 15, 1892 | Bumpus Jones | Cincinnati Reds | 7 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 1 | NL | Farmer Vaughn | [21] [notes 7] |
35 | August 16, 1893 | Bill Hawke | Baltimore Orioles | 5 | Washington Senators | 0 | NL | Wilbert Robinson (2) | [22] [notes 8] |
36 | September 18, 1897 | Cy Young (1) | Cleveland Spiders | 6 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | Chief Zimmer (1) | [23] [notes 9] |
37 | April 22, 1898 | Ted Breitenstein (2) | Cincinnati Reds | 11 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 0 | NL | Heinie Peitz (1) | [24] [notes 10] |
38 | April 22, 1898 | Jay Hughes | Baltimore Orioles | 8 | Boston Beaneaters | 0 | NL | Boileryard Clarke | [24] [notes 11] |
39 | July 8, 1898 | Red Donahue | Philadelphia Phillies | 5 | Boston Beaneaters | 0 | NL | Ed McFarland (1) | [25] |
40 | August 21, 1898 | Walter Thornton | Chicago Orphans | 2 | Brooklyn Bridegrooms | 0 | NL | Tim Donahue | [26] [notes 12] |
41 | May 25, 1899 | Deacon Phillippe | Louisville Colonels | 7 | New York Giants | 0 | NL | Malachi Kittridge | [27] |
42 | August 7, 1899 | Vic Willis | Boston Beaneaters | 7 | Washington Senators | 1 | NL | Marty Bergen | [28] |
43 | July 12, 1900 | Noodles Hahn | Cincinnati Reds | 4 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Heinie Peitz (2) | [29] |
N/A | June 30, 1901 | Pete Dowling | Cleveland Blues | 7 | Milwaukee Brewers | 0 | AL | George Yeager | [30] [notes 13] |
44 | July 15, 1901 | Christy Mathewson (1) | New York Giants | 5 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0 | NL | Jack Warner | [35] |
45 | September 20, 1902 | Nixey Callahan | Chicago White Sox | 3 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Ed McFarland (2) | [36] [notes 9] |
46 | September 18, 1903 | Chick Fraser | Philadelphia Phillies | 10 | Chicago Cubs | 0 | NL | Chief Zimmer (2) | [37] [notes 12] |
47 | May 5, 1904 | Cy Young (2) | Boston Americans | 3 | Philadelphia Athletics | 0 | AL | Lou Criger (1) | [38] [notes 14] |
48 | August 17, 1904 | Jesse Tannehill | Boston Americans | 6 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Duke Farrell | [39] [notes 15] |
49 | June 13, 1905 | Christy Mathewson (2) | New York Giants | 1 | Chicago Cubs | 0 | NL | Frank Bowerman | [40] [notes 16] |
50 | July 22, 1905 | Weldon Henley | Philadelphia Athletics | 6 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AL | Harry Barton | [41][notes 9] |
51 | September 6, 1905 | Frank Smith (1) | Chicago White Sox | 15 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Ed McFarland (3) | [42] [notes 17] |
52 | September 27, 1905 | Bill Dinneen | Boston Americans | 2 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Lou Criger (2) | [notes 18] |
53 | May 1, 1906 | Johnny Lush | Philadelphia Phillies | 6 | Brooklyn Superbas | 0 | NL | Red Dooin | [43][notes 19] |
54 | July 20, 1906 | Mal Eason | Brooklyn Superbas | 2 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0 | NL | Lew Ritter | [44] [notes 20] |
55 | May 8, 1907 | Big Jeff Pfeffer | Boston Doves | 6 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | Sam Brown | [45] |
56 | September 20, 1907 | Nick Maddox | Pittsburgh Pirates | 2 | Brooklyn Superbas | 1 | NL | George Gibson | [46] [notes 21] |
57 | June 30, 1908 | Cy Young (3) | Boston Red Sox | 8 | New York Highlanders | 0 | AL | Lou Criger (3) | [47][notes 22] |
58 | July 4, 1908 | Hooks Wiltse | New York Giants | 1 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Roger Bresnahan | [48] [notes 23] |
59 | September 5, 1908 | Nap Rucker | Brooklyn Superbas | 6 | Boston Doves | 0 | NL | Bill Bergen | [49] [notes 12] |
60 | September 18, 1908 | Bob Rhoads | Cleveland Naps | 2 | Boston Red Sox | 1 | AL | Harry Bemis | [50] |
61 | September 20, 1908 | Frank Smith (2) | Chicago White Sox | 1 | Philadelphia Athletics | 0 | AL | Billy Sullivan | [51] |
62 | October 2, 1908 | Addie Joss (1) | Cleveland Naps | 1 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Nig Clarke (1) | [52] |
63 | April 20, 1910 | Addie Joss (2) | Cleveland Naps | 1 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Nig Clarke (2) | [53] [notes 24] |
64 | May 12, 1910 | Chief Bender | Philadelphia Athletics | 4 | Cleveland Naps | 0 | AL | Ira Thomas | [54] |
65 | July 29, 1911 | Smoky Joe Wood | Boston Red Sox | 5 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AL | Bill Carrigan(1) | [55] [notes 25] |
66 | August 27, 1911 | Ed Walsh | Chicago White Sox | 5 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Bruno Block | [56] |
67 | July 4, 1912 | George Mullin | Detroit Tigers | 7 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AL | Oscar Stanage | [57] [notes 12] |
68 | August 30, 1912 | Earl Hamilton | St. Louis Browns | 5 | Detroit Tigers | 1 | AL | Walt Alexander | [58] [notes 26] |
69 | September 6, 1912 | Jeff Tesreau | New York Giants | 3 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Art Wilson (1) | [59] [notes 9] |
70 | May 31, 1914 | Joe Benz | Chicago White Sox | 6 | Cleveland Naps | 1 | AL | Ray Schalk (1) | [60] [notes 27] |
71 | September 9, 1914 | Iron Davis | Boston Braves | 7 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Hank Gowdy | [61] [notes 28] |
72 | September 19, 1914 | Ed Lafitte | Brooklyn Tip-Tops | 6 | Kansas City Packers | 2 | FL | Yip Owens | [62] [notes 9] |
73 | April 15, 1915 | Rube Marquard | New York Giants | 2 | Brooklyn Robins | 0 | NL | Chief Meyers | [63] |
74 | April 24, 1915 | Frank Allen | Pittsburgh Rebels | 2 | St. Louis Terriers | 0 | FL | Claude Berry | [64] |
75 | May 15, 1915 | Claude Hendrix | Chicago Chi-Feds/Whales | 10 | Pittsburgh Rebels | 0 | FL | Art Wilson (2) | [65] |
76 | August 16, 1915 | Alex Main | Kansas City Packers | 5 | Buffalo Buffeds/Blues | 0 | FL | Ted Easterly | [66] |
77 | August 31, 1915 | Jimmy Lavender | Chicago Cubs | 2 | New York Giants | 0 | NL | Jimmy Archer | [67] [notes 9] |
78 | September 7, 1915 | Dave Davenport | St. Louis Terriers | 3 | Chicago Chi-Feds/Whales | 0 | FL | Grover Hartley | [68] |
79 | June 16, 1916 | Tom L. Hughes | Boston Braves | 2 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 0 | NL | Walt Tragesser | |
80 | June 21, 1916 | Rube Foster | Boston Red Sox | 2 | New York Yankees | 0 | AL | Bill Carrigan (2) | [69] |
81 | August 26, 1916 | Bullet Joe Bush | Philadelphia Athletics | 5 | Cleveland Indians | 0 | AL | Val Picinich (1) | [notes 29] |
82 | August 30, 1916 | Dutch Leonard (1) | Boston Red Sox | 4 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AL | Bill Carrigan (3) | [70] |
83 | April 14, 1917 | Eddie Cicotte | Chicago White Sox | 11 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AL | Ray Schalk (2) | |
84 | April 24, 1917 | George Mogridge | New York Yankees | 2 | Boston Red Sox | 1 | AL | Les Nunamaker | |
85 | May 2, 1917 | Fred Toney | Cincinnati Reds | 1 | Chicago Cubs | 0 | NL | Emil Huhn | [notes 30] |
86 | May 5, 1917 | Ernie Koob | St. Louis Browns | 1 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Hank Severeid (1) | |
87 | May 6, 1917 | Bob Groom | St. Louis Browns | 3 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Hank Severeid (2) | [notes 31] |
88 | June 23, 1917 | Babe Ruth (0 IP) Ernie Shore (9 IP) |
Boston Red Sox | 4 | Washington Senators | 0 | AL | Pinch Thomas (0 IP) Sam Agnew (9 IP) |
[notes 32] |
89 | June 3, 1918 | Dutch Leonard (2) | Boston Red Sox | 5 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Wally Schang | |
90 | May 11, 1919 | Hod Eller | Cincinnati Reds | 6 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0 | NL | Bill Rariden | |
91 | September 10, 1919 | Ray Caldwell | Cleveland Indians | 3 | New York Yankees | 0 | AL | Steve O'Neill | [notes 33] |
92 | July 1, 1920 | Walter Johnson | Washington Senators | 1 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Val Picinich (2) | [notes 34] |
93 | April 30, 1922 | Charlie Robertson | Chicago White Sox | 2 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Ray Schalk (3) | |
94 | May 7, 1922 | Jesse Barnes | New York Giants | 6 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Earl Smith | |
95 | September 4, 1923 | Sad Sam Jones | New York Yankees | 2 | Philadelphia Athletics | 0 | AL | Fred Hofmann | [notes 35] |
96 | September 7, 1923 | Howard Ehmke | Boston Red Sox | 4 | Philadelphia Athletics | 0 | AL | Val Picinich (3) | [notes 36] |
97 | July 17, 1924 | Jesse Haines | St. Louis Cardinals | 5 | Boston Braves | 0 | NL | Mike González | [notes 37] |
98 | September 13, 1925 | Dazzy Vance | Brooklyn Robins | 10 | Philadelphia Phillies | 1 | NL | Hank DeBerry | [notes 38] |
99 | August 21, 1926 | Ted Lyons | Chicago White Sox | 6 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Johnny Grabowski | |
100 | May 8, 1929 | Carl Hubbell | New York Giants | 11 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 0 | NL | Bob O'Farrell | |
101 | April 29, 1931 | Wes Ferrell | Cleveland Indians | 9 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AL | Luke Sewell (1) | [notes 39] |
102 | August 8, 1931 | Bobby Burke | Washington Senators | 5 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Roy Spencer | [notes 40] |
103 | September 21, 1934 | Paul Dean | St. Louis Cardinals | 3 | Brooklyn Dodgers | 0 | NL | Bill DeLancey | [notes 41] |
104 | August 31, 1935 | Vern Kennedy | Chicago White Sox | 5 | Cleveland Indians | 0 | AL | Luke Sewell (2) | [notes 42] |
105 | June 1, 1937 | Bill Dietrich | Chicago White Sox | 8 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AL | Luke Sewell (3) | |
106 | June 11, 1938 | Johnny Vander Meer (1) | Cincinnati Reds | 3 | Boston Bees | 0 | NL | Ernie Lombardi (1) | [notes 43] |
107 | June 15, 1938 | Johnny Vander Meer (2) | Cincinnati Reds | 6 | Brooklyn Dodgers | 0 | NL | Ernie Lombardi (2) | [notes 44] |
108 | August 27, 1938 | Monte Pearson | New York Yankees | 13 | Cleveland Indians | 0 | AL | Joe Glenn | [notes 45] |
109 | April 16, 1940 | Bob Feller (1) | Cleveland Indians | 1 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Rollie Hemsley | [notes 46] |
110 | April 30, 1940 | Tex Carleton | Brooklyn Dodgers | 3 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | Herman Franks | |
111 | August 30, 1941 | Lon Warneke | St. Louis Cardinals | 2 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | Walker Cooper (1) | |
112 | April 27, 1944 | Jim Tobin | Boston Braves | 2 | Brooklyn Dodgers | 0 | NL | Phil Masi | [notes 47] |
113 | May 15, 1944 | Clyde Shoun | Cincinnati Reds | 1 | Boston Braves | 0 | NL | Ray Mueller | [notes 48] |
114 | September 9, 1945 | Dick Fowler | Philadelphia Athletics | 1 | St. Louis Browns | 0 | AL | Buddy Rosar (1) | [notes 49] |
115 | April 23, 1946 | Ed Head | Brooklyn Dodgers | 5 | Boston Braves | 0 | NL | Ferrell Anderson | |
116 | April 30, 1946 | Bob Feller (2) | Cleveland Indians | 1 | New York Yankees | 0 | AL | Frankie Hayes | |
117 | June 18, 1947 | Ewell Blackwell | Cincinnati Reds | 6 | Boston Braves | 0 | NL | Ray Lamanno | [notes 50] |
118 | July 10, 1947 | Don Black | Cleveland Indians | 3 | Philadelphia Athletics | 0 | AL | Jim Hegan (1) | [notes 9] |
119 | September 3, 1947 | Bill McCahan | Philadelphia Athletics | 3 | Washington Senators | 0 | AL | Buddy Rosar (2) | [notes 51] |
120 | June 30, 1948 | Bob Lemon | Cleveland Indians | 2 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Jim Hegan (2) | |
121 | September 9, 1948 | Rex Barney | Brooklyn Dodgers | 2 | New York Giants | 0 | NL | Bruce Edwards | |
122 | August 11, 1950 | Vern Bickford | Boston Braves | 7 | Brooklyn Dodgers | 0 | NL | Walker Cooper (2) | |
123 | May 6, 1951 | Cliff Chambers | Pittsburgh Pirates | 3 | Boston Braves | 0 | NL | Ed Fitz Gerald | [notes 12] |
124 | July 1, 1951 | Bob Feller (3) | Cleveland Indians | 2 | Detroit Tigers | 1 | AL | Jim Hegan (3) | [notes 9] |
125 | July 12, 1951 | Allie Reynolds (1) | New York Yankees | 1 | Cleveland Indians | 0 | AL | Yogi Berra (1) | |
126 | September 28, 1951 | Allie Reynolds (2) | New York Yankees | 8 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Yogi Berra (2) | [notes 52] |
127 | May 15, 1952 | Virgil Trucks (1) | Detroit Tigers | 1 | Washington Senators | 0 | AL | Joe Ginsberg | [notes 53] |
128 | June 19, 1952 | Carl Erskine (1) | Brooklyn Dodgers | 5 | Chicago Cubs | 0 | NL | Roy Campanella (1) | |
129 | August 25, 1952 | Virgil Trucks (2) | Detroit Tigers | 1 | New York Yankees | 0 | AL | Matt Batts | [notes 54] |
130 | May 6, 1953 | Bobo Holloman | St. Louis Browns | 6 | Philadelphia Athletics | 0 | AL | Les Moss | [notes 55] |
131 | June 12, 1954 | Jim Wilson | Milwaukee Braves | 2 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Del Crandall (1) | |
132 | May 12, 1955 | Sam Jones | Chicago Cubs | 4 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 0 | NL | Clyde McCullough | [notes 56] |
133 | May 12, 1956 | Carl Erskine (2) | Brooklyn Dodgers | 3 | New York Giants | 0 | NL | Roy Campanella (2) | |
134 | July 14, 1956 | Mel Parnell | Boston Red Sox | 4 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Sammy White | |
135 | September 25, 1956 | Sal Maglie | Brooklyn Dodgers | 5 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Roy Campanella (3) | [notes 57] |
136 | October 8, 1956 | Don Larsen | New York Yankees (AL) | 2 | Brooklyn Dodgers (NL) | 0 | WS | Yogi Berra (3) | [notes 58] |
137 | August 20, 1957 | Bob Keegan | Chicago White Sox | 6 | Washington Senators | 0 | AL | Sherm Lollar | [notes 12] |
138 | July 20, 1958 | Jim Bunning (1) | Detroit Tigers | 3 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Red Wilson | [notes 9] |
139 | September 20, 1958 | Hoyt Wilhelm | Baltimore Orioles | 1 | New York Yankees | 0 | AL | Gus Triandos (1) | [notes 59] |
140 | May 15, 1960 | Don Cardwell | Chicago Cubs | 4 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0 | NL | Del Rice | [notes 60] |
141 | August 18, 1960 | Lew Burdette | Milwaukee Braves | 1 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Del Crandall (2) | [notes 61] |
142 | September 16, 1960 | Warren Spahn (1) | Milwaukee Braves | 4 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Del Crandall (3) | [notes 62] |
143 | April 28, 1961 | Warren Spahn (2) | Milwaukee Braves | 1 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Charley Lau | [notes 63] |
144 | May 5, 1962 | Bo Belinsky | Los Angeles Angels | 2 | Baltimore Orioles | 0 | AL | Buck Rodgers | [notes 64] |
145 | June 26, 1962 | Earl Wilson | Boston Red Sox | 2 | Los Angeles Angels | 0 | AL | Bob Tillman (1) | [notes 65] |
146 | June 30, 1962 | Sandy Koufax (1) | Los Angeles Dodgers | 5 | New York Mets | 0 | NL | Johnny Roseboro (1) | [notes 66] |
147 | August 1, 1962 | Bill Monbouquette | Boston Red Sox | 1 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Jim Pagliaroni (1) | |
148 | August 26, 1962 | Jack Kralick | Minnesota Twins | 1 | Kansas City Athletics | 0 | AL | Earl Battey | [notes 67] |
149 | May 11, 1963 | Sandy Koufax (2) | Los Angeles Dodgers | 8 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Johnny Roseboro (2) | [notes 68] |
150 | May 17, 1963 | Don Nottebart | Houston Colt .45s | 4 | Philadelphia Phillies | 1 | NL | John Bateman (1) | |
151 | June 15, 1963 | Juan Marichal | San Francisco Giants | 1 | Houston Colt .45s | 0 | NL | Ed Bailey | [notes 69] |
152 | April 23, 1964 | Ken Johnson | Houston Colt .45s | 0^ | Cincinnati Reds | 1 | NL | Jerry Grote | [notes 70] |
153 | June 4, 1964 | Sandy Koufax (3) | Los Angeles Dodgers | 3 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Doug Camilli | [notes 71] |
154 | June 21, 1964 | Jim Bunning (2) | Philadelphia Phillies | 6 | New York Mets | 0 | NL | Gus Triandos (2) | [notes 72] |
155 | August 19, 1965 | Jim Maloney (1) | Cincinnati Reds | 1 | Chicago Cubs | 0 | NL | Johnny Edwards (1) | [notes 73] |
156 | September 9, 1965 | Sandy Koufax (4) | Los Angeles Dodgers | 1 | Chicago Cubs | 0 | NL | Jeff Torborg (1) | [notes 74] |
157 | September 16, 1965 | Dave Morehead | Boston Red Sox | 2 | Cleveland Indians | 0 | AL | Bob Tillman (2) | [notes 75] |
158 | June 10, 1966 | Sonny Siebert | Cleveland Indians | 2 | Washington Senators | 0 | AL | Joe Azcue (1) | |
159 | April 30, 1967 | Steve Barber (8⅔ IP) Stu Miller (⅓ IP) |
Baltimore Orioles | 1^ | Detroit Tigers | 2 | AL | Andy Etchebarren (8 IP) Larry Haney (1 IP) |
[notes 76] |
160 | June 18, 1967 | Don Wilson (1) | Houston Astros | 2 | Atlanta Braves | 0 | NL | Dave Adlesh | [notes 77] |
161 | August 25, 1967 | Dean Chance | Minnesota Twins | 2 | Cleveland Indians | 1 | AL | Jerry Zimmerman | [notes 12] |
162 | September 10, 1967 | Joel Horlen | Chicago White Sox | 6 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | J. C. Martin | [notes 78] |
163 | April 27, 1968 | Tom Phoebus | Baltimore Orioles | 6 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Curt Blefary | |
164 | May 8, 1968 | Catfish Hunter | Oakland Athletics | 4 | Minnesota Twins | 0 | AL | Jim Pagliaroni (2) | [notes 79] |
165 | July 29, 1968 | George Culver | Cincinnati Reds | 6 | Philadelphia Phillies | 1 | NL | Pat Corrales | [notes 12] |
166 | September 17, 1968 | Gaylord Perry | San Francisco Giants | 1 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0 | NL | Dick Dietz | [notes 80] |
167 | September 18, 1968 | Ray Washburn | St. Louis Cardinals | 2 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Johnny Edwards (2) | [notes 81] |
168 | April 17, 1969 | Bill Stoneman (1) | Montreal Expos | 7 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | John Bateman (2) | [notes 82] |
169 | April 30, 1969 | Jim Maloney (2) | Cincinnati Reds | 10 | Houston Astros | 0 | NL | Johnny Bench | [notes 83] |
170 | May 1, 1969 | Don Wilson (2) | Houston Astros | 4 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | Don Bryant | [notes 84] |
171 | August 13, 1969 | Jim Palmer | Baltimore Orioles | 8 | Oakland Athletics | 0 | AL | Ellie Hendricks | [notes 85] |
172 | August 19, 1969 | Ken Holtzman (1) | Chicago Cubs | 3 | Atlanta Braves | 0 | NL | Bill Heath (7⅔ IP) Gene Oliver (1⅓ IP) |
[notes 86] |
173 | September 20, 1969 | Bob Moose | Pittsburgh Pirates | 4 | New York Mets | 0 | NL | Manny Sanguillén | [notes 87] |
174 | June 12, 1970 | Dock Ellis | Pittsburgh Pirates | 2 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Jerry May | [notes 88] |
175 | July 3, 1970 | Clyde Wright | California Angels | 4 | Oakland Athletics | 0 | AL | Joe Azcue (2) | [notes 89] |
176 | July 20, 1970 | Bill Singer | Los Angeles Dodgers | 5 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Jeff Torborg (2) | [notes 90] |
177 | September 21, 1970 | Vida Blue | Oakland Athletics | 6 | Minnesota Twins | 0 | AL | Gene Tenace (1) | [notes 91] |
178 | June 3, 1971 | Ken Holtzman (2) | Chicago Cubs | 1 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | Danny Breeden | [notes 92] |
179 | June 23, 1971 | Rick Wise | Philadelphia Phillies | 4 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | Tim McCarver (1) | [notes 93] |
180 | August 14, 1971 | Bob Gibson | St. Louis Cardinals | 11 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 0 | NL | Ted Simmons (1) | [notes 94] |
181 | April 16, 1972 | Burt Hooton | Chicago Cubs | 4 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Randy Hundley (1) | [notes 95] |
182 | September 2, 1972 | Milt Pappas | Chicago Cubs | 8 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Randy Hundley (2) | [notes 96] |
183 | October 2, 1972 | Bill Stoneman (2) | Montreal Expos | 7 | New York Mets | 0 | NL | Tim McCarver (2) | [notes 97] |
184 | April 27, 1973 | Steve Busby (1) | Kansas City Royals | 3 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Fran Healy (1) | [notes 98] |
185 | May 15, 1973 | Nolan Ryan (1) | California Angels | 3 | Kansas City Royals | 0 | AL | Jeff Torborg (3) | |
186 | July 15, 1973 | Nolan Ryan (2) | California Angels | 6 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Art Kusnyer | [notes 99] |
187 | July 30, 1973 | Jim Bibby | Texas Rangers | 6 | Oakland Athletics | 0 | AL | Dick Billings | |
188 | August 5, 1973 | Phil Niekro | Atlanta Braves | 9 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Paul Casanova | |
189 | June 19, 1974 | Steve Busby (2) | Kansas City Royals | 2 | Milwaukee Brewers | 0 | AL | Fran Healy (2) | [notes 100] |
190 | July 19, 1974 | Dick Bosman | Cleveland Indians | 4 | Oakland Athletics | 0 | AL | John Ellis | [notes 101] |
191 | September 28, 1974 | Nolan Ryan (3) | California Angels | 4 | Minnesota Twins | 0 | AL | Tom Egan | |
192 | June 1, 1975 | Nolan Ryan (4) | California Angels | 1 | Baltimore Orioles | 0 | AL | Ellie Rodríguez | |
193 | August 24, 1975 | Ed Halicki | San Francisco Giants | 6 | New York Mets | 0 | NL | Dave Rader | [notes 12] |
194 | September 28, 1975 | Vida Blue (5 IP) Glenn Abbott (1 IP) Paul Lindblad (1 IP) Rollie Fingers (2 IP) |
Oakland Athletics | 5 | California Angels | 0 | AL | Gene Tenace (2) (6 IP) Ray Fosse (1) (3 IP) |
[notes 102] |
195 | July 9, 1976 | Larry Dierker | Houston Astros | 6 | Montreal Expos | 0 | NL | Ed Herrmann | [notes 103] |
196 | July 28, 1976 | Blue Moon Odom (5 IP) Francisco Barrios (4 IP) |
Chicago White Sox | 2 | Oakland Athletics | 1 | AL | Jim Essian | [notes 104] |
197 | August 9, 1976 | John Candelaria | Pittsburgh Pirates | 2 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 0 | NL | Duffy Dyer | [notes 105] |
198 | September 29, 1976 | John Montefusco | San Francisco Giants | 9 | Atlanta Braves | 0 | NL | Gary Alexander | |
199 | May 14, 1977 | Jim Colborn | Kansas City Royals | 6 | Texas Rangers | 0 | AL | Darrell Porter (1) | |
200 | May 30, 1977 | Dennis Eckersley | Cleveland Indians | 1 | California Angels | 0 | AL | Ray Fosse (2) | [notes 106] |
201 | September 22, 1977 | Bert Blyleven | Texas Rangers | 6 | California Angels | 0 | AL | Jim Sundberg | [notes 107] |
202 | April 16, 1978 | Bob Forsch (1) | St. Louis Cardinals | 5 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Ted Simmons (2) | [notes 108] |
203 | June 16, 1978 | Tom Seaver | Cincinnati Reds | 4 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0 | NL | Don Werner | [notes 109] |
204 | April 7, 1979 | Ken Forsch | Houston Astros | 6 | Atlanta Braves | 0 | NL | Alan Ashby (1) | [notes 110] |
205 | June 27, 1980 | Jerry Reuss | Los Angeles Dodgers | 8 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Steve Yeager | [notes 111] |
206 | May 10, 1981 | Charlie Lea | Montreal Expos | 4 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Gary Carter | [notes 112] |
207 | May 15, 1981 | Len Barker | Cleveland Indians | 3 | Toronto Blue Jays | 0 | AL | Ron Hassey (1) | [notes 113] |
208 | September 26, 1981 | Nolan Ryan (5) | Houston Astros | 5 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 0 | NL | Alan Ashby (2) | [notes 114] |
209 | July 4, 1983 | Dave Righetti | New York Yankees | 4 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Butch Wynegar | [notes 115] |
210 | September 26, 1983 | Bob Forsch (2) | St. Louis Cardinals | 3 | Montreal Expos | 0 | NL | Darrell Porter (2) | [notes 116] |
211 | September 29, 1983 | Mike Warren | Oakland Athletics | 3 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Mike Heath | [notes 117] |
212 | April 7, 1984 | Jack Morris | Detroit Tigers | 4 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Lance Parrish (1) | [notes 118] |
213 | September 30, 1984 | Mike Witt | California Angels | 1 | Texas Rangers | 0 | AL | Bob Boone | [notes 119] |
214 | September 19, 1986 | Joe Cowley | Chicago White Sox | 7 | California Angels | 1 | AL | Ron Karkovice (1) | [notes 120] |
215 | September 25, 1986 | Mike Scott | Houston Astros | 2 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Alan Ashby (3) | [notes 121] |
216 | April 15, 1987 | Juan Nieves | Milwaukee Brewers | 7 | Baltimore Orioles | 0 | AL | Bill Schroeder | [notes 122] |
217 | September 16, 1988 | Tom Browning | Cincinnati Reds | 1 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 0 | NL | Jeff Reed | [notes 123] |
218 | April 11, 1990 | Mark Langston (7 IP) Mike Witt (2 IP) |
California Angels | 1 | Seattle Mariners | 0 | AL | Lance Parrish (2) | [notes 124] |
219 | June 2, 1990 | Randy Johnson (1) | Seattle Mariners | 2 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Scott Bradley | [notes 125] |
220 | June 11, 1990 | Nolan Ryan (6) | Texas Rangers | 5 | Oakland Athletics | 0 | AL | John Russell | |
221 | June 29, 1990 | Dave Stewart | Oakland Athletics | 5 | Toronto Blue Jays | 0 | AL | Terry Steinbach (1) | [notes 126] |
222 | June 29, 1990 | Fernando Valenzuela | Los Angeles Dodgers | 6 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0 | NL | Mike Scioscia (1) | [notes 11] [notes 127] |
223 | August 15, 1990 | Terry Mulholland | Philadelphia Phillies | 6 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Darren Daulton | [notes 128] |
224 | September 2, 1990 | Dave Stieb | Toronto Blue Jays | 3 | Cleveland Indians | 0 | AL | Pat Borders | [notes 129] |
225 | May 1, 1991 | Nolan Ryan (7) | Texas Rangers | 3 | Toronto Blue Jays | 0 | AL | Mike Stanley | [notes 130] |
226 | May 23, 1991 | Tommy Greene | Philadelphia Phillies | 2 | Montreal Expos | 0 | NL | Darrin Fletcher | [notes 131] |
227 | July 13, 1991 | Bob Milacki (6 IP) Mike Flanagan (1 IP) Mark Williamson (1 IP) Gregg Olson (1 IP) |
Baltimore Orioles | 2 | Oakland Athletics | 0 | AL | Chris Hoiles | [notes 132] |
228 | July 28, 1991 | Dennis Martínez | Montreal Expos | 2 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 0 | NL | Ron Hassey (2) | [notes 133] |
229 | August 11, 1991 | Wilson Álvarez | Chicago White Sox | 7 | Baltimore Orioles | 0 | AL | Ron Karkovice (2) | [notes 134] |
230 | August 26, 1991 | Bret Saberhagen | Kansas City Royals | 7 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Brent Mayne | [notes 135] |
231 | September 11, 1991 | Kent Mercker (6 IP) Mark Wohlers (2 IP) Alejandro Peña (1 IP) |
Atlanta Braves | 1 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Greg Olson | [notes 136] |
232 | August 17, 1992 | Kevin Gross | Los Angeles Dodgers | 2 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Mike Scioscia (2) | |
233 | April 22, 1993 | Chris Bosio | Seattle Mariners | 2 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Dave Valle | [notes 137] |
234 | September 4, 1993 | Jim Abbott | New York Yankees | 4 | Cleveland Indians | 0 | AL | Matt Nokes | [notes 138] |
235 | September 8, 1993 | Darryl Kile | Houston Astros | 7 | New York Mets | 1 | NL | Scott Servais (1) | [notes 139] |
236 | April 8, 1994 | Kent Mercker | Atlanta Braves | 6 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 0 | NL | Javy Lopez | |
237 | April 27, 1994 | Scott Erickson | Minnesota Twins | 6 | Milwaukee Brewers | 0 | AL | Matt Walbeck | |
238 | July 28, 1994 | Kenny Rogers | Texas Rangers | 4 | California Angels | 0 | AL | Iván Rodríguez (1) | [notes 140] |
239 | July 14, 1995 | Ramón Martínez | Los Angeles Dodgers | 7 | Florida Marlins | 0 | NL | Mike Piazza (1) | [notes 141] |
240 | May 11, 1996 | Al Leiter | Florida Marlins | 11 | Colorado Rockies | 0 | NL | Charles Johnson (1) | [notes 142] |
241 | May 14, 1996 | Dwight Gooden | New York Yankees | 2 | Seattle Mariners | 0 | AL | Joe Girardi (1) | [notes 143] |
242 | September 17, 1996 | Hideo Nomo (1) | Los Angeles Dodgers | 9 | Colorado Rockies | 0 | NL | Mike Piazza (2) | [notes 144] |
243 | June 10, 1997 | Kevin Brown | Florida Marlins | 9 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Charles Johnson (2) | [notes 145] |
244 | July 12, 1997 | Francisco Córdova (9 IP) Ricardo Rincón (1 IP) |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 3 | Houston Astros | 0 | NL | Jason Kendall | [notes 146] |
245 | May 17, 1998 | David Wells | New York Yankees | 4 | Minnesota Twins | 0 | AL | Jorge Posada | [notes 147] |
246 | June 25, 1999 | José Jiménez | St. Louis Cardinals | 1 | Arizona Diamondbacks | 0 | NL | Alberto Castillo | [notes 148] |
247 | July 18, 1999 | David Cone | New York Yankees (AL) | 6 | Montreal Expos (NL) | 0 | Inter | Joe Girardi (2) | [notes 149] |
248 | September 11, 1999 | Eric Milton | Minnesota Twins | 7 | Anaheim Angels | 0 | AL | Terry Steinbach (2) | [notes 150] |
249 | April 4, 2001 | Hideo Nomo (2) | Boston Red Sox | 3 | Baltimore Orioles | 0 | AL | Jason Varitek (1) | [notes 151] |
250 | May 12, 2001 | A. J. Burnett | Florida Marlins | 3 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Charles Johnson (3) | [notes 152] |
251 | September 3, 2001 | Bud Smith | St. Louis Cardinals | 4 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Eli Marrero | [74] |
252 | April 27, 2002 | Derek Lowe | Boston Red Sox | 10 | Tampa Bay Devil Rays | 0 | AL | Jason Varitek (2) | |
253 | April 27, 2003 | Kevin Millwood | Philadelphia Phillies | 1 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Mike Lieberthal | [notes 153] |
254 | June 11, 2003 | Roy Oswalt (1 IP) Pete Munro (2⅔ IP) Kirk Saarloos (1⅓ IP) Brad Lidge (2 IP) Octavio Dotel (1 IP) Billy Wagner (1 IP) |
Houston Astros (NL) | 8 | New York Yankees (AL) | 0 | Inter | Brad Ausmus | [notes 154] |
255 | May 18, 2004 | Randy Johnson (2) | Arizona Diamondbacks | 2 | Atlanta Braves | 0 | NL | Robby Hammock | [notes 155] |
256 | September 6, 2006 | Aníbal Sánchez | Florida Marlins | 2 | Arizona Diamondbacks | 0 | NL | Miguel Olivo (1) | [notes 156] |
257 | April 18, 2007 | Mark Buehrle (1) | Chicago White Sox | 6 | Texas Rangers | 0 | AL | A. J. Pierzynski (1) | [notes 157] |
258 | June 12, 2007 | Justin Verlander (1) | Detroit Tigers (AL) | 4 | Milwaukee Brewers (NL) | 0 | Inter | Iván Rodríguez (2) | [notes 158] |
259 | September 1, 2007 | Clay Buchholz | Boston Red Sox | 10 | Baltimore Orioles | 0 | AL | Jason Varitek (3) | [notes 159] |
260 | May 19, 2008 | Jon Lester | Boston Red Sox | 7 | Kansas City Royals | 0 | AL | Jason Varitek (4) | [notes 160] |
261 | September 14, 2008 | Carlos Zambrano | Chicago Cubs | 5 | Houston Astros | 0 | NL | Geovany Soto | [notes 161] |
262 | July 10, 2009 | Jonathan Sánchez | San Francisco Giants | 8 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Eli Whiteside | [notes 162] |
263 | July 23, 2009 | Mark Buehrle (2) | Chicago White Sox | 5 | Tampa Bay Rays | 0 | AL | Ramón Castro | [notes 163] |
264 | April 17, 2010 | Ubaldo Jiménez | Colorado Rockies | 4 | Atlanta Braves | 0 | NL | Miguel Olivo (2) | [notes 164] |
265 | May 9, 2010 | Dallas Braden | Oakland Athletics | 4 | Tampa Bay Rays | 0 | AL | Landon Powell | [notes 165] |
266 | May 29, 2010 | Roy Halladay (1) | Philadelphia Phillies | 1 | Florida Marlins | 0 | NL | Carlos Ruiz (1) | [notes 166] |
267 | June 25, 2010 | Edwin Jackson | Arizona Diamondbacks (NL) | 1 | Tampa Bay Rays (AL) | 0 | Inter | Miguel Montero (1) | [notes 167] |
268 | July 26, 2010 | Matt Garza | Tampa Bay Rays | 5 | Detroit Tigers | 0 | AL | Kelly Shoppach | [notes 168] |
269 | October 6, 2010 | Roy Halladay (2) | Philadelphia Phillies | 4 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | Carlos Ruiz (2) | [notes 169] |
270 | May 3, 2011 | Francisco Liriano | Minnesota Twins | 1 | Chicago White Sox | 0 | AL | Drew Butera (1) | [notes 170] |
271 | May 7, 2011 | Justin Verlander (2) | Detroit Tigers | 9 | Toronto Blue Jays | 0 | AL | Alex Avila | [notes 171] |
272 | July 27, 2011 | Ervin Santana | Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim | 3 | Cleveland Indians | 1 | AL | Bobby Wilson | |
273 | April 21, 2012 | Philip Humber | Chicago White Sox | 4 | Seattle Mariners | 0 | AL | A. J. Pierzynski (2) | [notes 172] |
274 | May 2, 2012 | Jered Weaver | Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim | 9 | Minnesota Twins | 0 | AL | Chris Iannetta | |
275 | June 1, 2012 | Johan Santana | New York Mets | 8 | St. Louis Cardinals | 0 | NL | Josh Thole | [notes 173] |
276 | June 8, 2012 | Kevin Millwood (6 IP) Charlie Furbush (⅔ IP) Stephen Pryor (⅓ IP) Lucas Luetge (⅓ IP) Brandon League (⅔ IP) Tom Wilhelmsen (1 IP) |
Seattle Mariners (AL) | 1 | Los Angeles Dodgers (NL) | 0 | Inter | Jesús Montero | [notes 174] |
277 | June 13, 2012 | Matt Cain | San Francisco Giants | 10 | Houston Astros | 0 | NL | Buster Posey (1) | [notes 175] |
278 | August 15, 2012 | Félix Hernández | Seattle Mariners | 1 | Tampa Bay Rays | 0 | AL | John Jaso | [notes 176] |
279 | September 28, 2012 | Homer Bailey (1) | Cincinnati Reds | 1 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 0 | NL | Ryan Hanigan (1) | [notes 177] |
280 | July 2, 2013 | Homer Bailey (2) | Cincinnati Reds | 3 | San Francisco Giants | 0 | NL | Ryan Hanigan (2) | [notes 178] |
281 | July 13, 2013 | Tim Lincecum (1) | San Francisco Giants | 9 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Buster Posey (2) | [notes 179] |
282 | September 29, 2013 | Henderson Álvarez | Miami Marlins (NL) | 1 | Detroit Tigers (AL) | 0 | Inter | Koyie Hill | [notes 180] |
283 | May 25, 2014 | Josh Beckett | Los Angeles Dodgers | 6 | Philadelphia Phillies | 0 | NL | Drew Butera (2) | [notes 181] |
284 | June 18, 2014 | Clayton Kershaw | Los Angeles Dodgers | 8 | Colorado Rockies | 0 | NL | A. J. Ellis | [notes 182] |
285 | June 25, 2014 | Tim Lincecum (2) | San Francisco Giants | 4 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Hector Sanchez | [notes 183] |
286 | September 1, 2014 | Cole Hamels (6 IP) Jake Diekman (1 IP) Ken Giles (1 IP) Jonathan Papelbon (1 IP) |
Philadelphia Phillies | 7 | Atlanta Braves | 0 | NL | Carlos Ruiz (3) | |
287 | September 28, 2014 | Jordan Zimmermann | Washington Nationals | 1 | Miami Marlins | 0 | NL | Wilson Ramos (1) | [notes 184] |
288 | June 9, 2015 | Chris Heston | San Francisco Giants | 5 | New York Mets | 0 | NL | Buster Posey (3) | [notes 185] |
289 | June 20, 2015 | Max Scherzer (1) | Washington Nationals | 6 | Pittsburgh Pirates | 0 | NL | Wilson Ramos (2) | [notes 186] |
290 | July 25, 2015 | Cole Hamels | Philadelphia Phillies | 5 | Chicago Cubs | 0 | NL | Carlos Ruiz (4) | [notes 187] |
291 | August 12, 2015 | Hisashi Iwakuma | Seattle Mariners | 3 | Baltimore Orioles | 0 | AL | Jesús Sucre | [notes 188] |
292 | August 21, 2015 | Mike Fiers (1) | Houston Astros (AL) | 3 | Los Angeles Dodgers (NL) | 0 | Inter | Jason Castro | [notes 189] |
293 | August 30, 2015 | Jake Arrieta (1) | Chicago Cubs | 2 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 0 | NL | Miguel Montero (2) | [notes 190] |
294 | October 3, 2015 | Max Scherzer (2) | Washington Nationals | 2 | New York Mets | 0 | NL | Wilson Ramos (3) | [notes 191] |
295 | April 21, 2016 | Jake Arrieta (2) | Chicago Cubs | 16 | Cincinnati Reds | 0 | NL | David Ross | [notes 192] |
296 | June 3, 2017 | Edinson Vólquez | Miami Marlins | 3 | Arizona Diamondbacks | 0 | NL | J. T. Realmuto | [notes 193] |
297 | April 21, 2018 | Sean Manaea | Oakland Athletics | 3 | Boston Red Sox | 0 | AL | Jonathan Lucroy | [notes 194] |
298 | May 4, 2018 | Walker Buehler (6 IP) Tony Cingrani (1 IP) Yimi García (1 IP) Adam Liberatore (1 IP) |
Los Angeles Dodgers | 4 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Yasmani Grandal | |
299 | May 8, 2018 | James Paxton | Seattle Mariners | 5 | Toronto Blue Jays | 0 | AL | Mike Zunino | [notes 196] |
300 | May 7, 2019 | Mike Fiers (2) | Oakland Athletics (AL) | 2 | Cincinnati Reds (NL) | 0 | Inter | Josh Phegley | [notes 197] |
301 | July 12, 2019 | Taylor Cole (2 IP) Félix Peña (7 IP) |
Los Angeles Angels | 13 | Seattle Mariners | 0 | AL | Dustin Garneau | [notes 198] |
302 | August 3, 2019 | Aaron Sanchez (6 IP) Will Harris (1 IP) Joe Biagini (1 IP) Chris Devenski (1 IP) |
Houston Astros | 9 | Seattle Mariners | 0 | AL | Martín Maldonado | [notes 199] |
303 | September 1, 2019 | Justin Verlander (3) | Houston Astros | 2 | Toronto Blue Jays | 0 | AL | Robinson Chirinos | [notes 200] |
304 | August 25, 2020 | Lucas Giolito | Chicago White Sox (AL) | 4 | Pittsburgh Pirates (NL) | 0 | Inter | James McCann | [notes 201] |
305 | September 13, 2020 | Alec Mills | Chicago Cubs | 12 | Milwaukee Brewers | 0 | NL | Víctor Caratini (1) | [notes 202] |
306 | April 9, 2021 | Joe Musgrove | San Diego Padres (NL) | 3 | Texas Rangers (AL) | 0 | Inter | Víctor Caratini (2) | [notes 203] |
307 | April 14, 2021 | Carlos Rodón | Chicago White Sox | 8 | Cleveland Indians | 0 | AL | Zack Collins | [notes 204] |
308 | May 5, 2021 | John Means | Baltimore Orioles | 6 | Seattle Mariners | 0 | AL | Pedro Severino | [notes 205] |
309 | May 7, 2021 | Wade Miley | Cincinnati Reds (NL) | 3 | Cleveland Indians (AL) | 0 | Inter | Tucker Barnhart | [notes 206] |
310 | May 18, 2021 | Spencer Turnbull | Detroit Tigers | 5 | Seattle Mariners | 0 | AL | Eric Haase | [notes 207] |
311 | May 19, 2021 | Corey Kluber | New York Yankees | 2 | Texas Rangers | 0 | AL | Kyle Higashioka | [notes 208] |
312 | June 24, 2021 | Zach Davies (6 IP) Ryan Tepera (1 IP) Andrew Chafin (1 IP) Craig Kimbrel (1 IP) |
Chicago Cubs | 4 | Los Angeles Dodgers | 0 | NL | Willson Contreras | [notes 209] |
313 | August 14, 2021 | Tyler Gilbert | Arizona Diamondbacks | 7 | San Diego Padres | 0 | NL | Daulton Varsho | [notes 210] |
314 | September 11, 2021 | Corbin Burnes (8 IP) Josh Hader (1 IP) |
Milwaukee Brewers (NL) | 3 | Cleveland Indians (AL) | 0 | Inter | Omar Narváez | [notes 211] |
No-hitters by team[]
Current teams[]
Team | No-hitters pitched | No-hitters pitched against | Most recent pitched | Most recent against |
---|---|---|---|---|
Los Angeles Dodgers | 26 | 20 | May 4, 2018 | June 24, 2021 |
Chicago White Sox | 20 | 13 | April 14, 2021 | May 3, 2011 |
Boston Red Sox | 18 | 12 | May 19, 2008 | April 21, 2018 |
Chicago Cubs | 17 | 7 | June 24, 2021 | July 25, 2015 |
Cincinnati Reds | 17 | 13 | May 7, 2021 | May 7, 2019 |
San Francisco Giants | 17 | 16 | June 9, 2015 | July 2, 2013 |
Atlanta Braves | 14 | 17 | April 8, 1994 | September 1, 2014 |
Cleveland Indians | 14 | 12 | May 15, 1981 | September 11, 2021 |
Houston Astros | 13 | 5 | September 1, 2019 | June 13, 2012 |
Oakland Athletics | 13 | 14 | May 7, 2019 | July 13, 1991 |
Philadelphia Phillies | 13 | 19 | July 25, 2015 | May 25, 2014 |
New York Yankees | 12 | 6 | May 19, 2021 | June 11, 2003 |
Los Angeles Angels | 11 | 7 | July 12, 2019 | September 11, 1999 |
Baltimore Orioles (modern) | 10 | 15 | May 5, 2021 | August 12, 2015 |
St. Louis Cardinals | 10 | 9 | September 3, 2001 | June 1, 2012 |
Detroit Tigers | 8 | 14 | May 18, 2021 | September 29, 2013 |
Minnesota Twins | 7 | 9 | May 3, 2011 | May 2, 2012 |
Washington Nationals (modern) | 7 | 4 | October 3, 2015 | July 18, 1999 |
Miami Marlins | 6 | 3 | June 3, 2017 | September 28, 2014 |
Pittsburgh Pirates | 6 | 13 | July 12, 1997 | August 25, 2020 |
Seattle Mariners | 6 | 7 | May 8, 2018 | May 18, 2021 |
Texas Rangers | 5 | 6 | July 28, 1994 | May 19, 2021 |
Kansas City Royals | 4 | 2 | August 26, 1991 | May 19, 2008 |
Arizona Diamondbacks | 3 | 3 | August 14, 2021 | June 3, 2017 |
Milwaukee Brewers (modern) | 2 | 4 | September 11, 2021 | September 13, 2020 |
Colorado Rockies | 1 | 3 | April 17, 2010 | June 18, 2014 |
New York Mets | 1 | 8 | June 1, 2012 | October 3, 2015 |
San Diego Padres | 1 | 10 | April 9, 2021 | August 14, 2021 |
Tampa Bay Rays | 1 | 5 | July 26, 2010 | August 15, 2012 |
Toronto Blue Jays | 1 | 6 | September 2, 1990 | September 1, 2019 |
Source: [76]
Italics: Multiple pitchers used for combined no-hitter
Bold: Perfect Game
Defunct teams[]
Team | No-hitters pitched | No-hitters pitched against |
---|---|---|
Louisville Colonels | 4 | 2 |
Philadelphia Athletics | 4 | 0 |
Baltimore Orioles (AA/NL) | 3 | 2 |
Buffalo Bisons | 2 | 1 |
Columbus Buckeyes | 2 | 0 |
Providence Grays | 2 | 3 |
Brooklyn Tip-Tops | 1 | 0 |
Chicago Chi-Feds/Whales | 1 | 1 |
Cincinnati Outlaw Reds | 1 | 0 |
Cleveland Blues | 1 | 2 |
Cleveland Spiders | 1 | 0 |
Kansas City Cowboys (AA) | 1 | 1 |
Kansas City Packers | 1 | 1 |
Milwaukee Brewers (UA) | 1 | 0 |
Pittsburgh Rebels | 1 | 1 |
Rochester Broncos | 1 | 0 |
St. Louis Brown Stockings | 1 | 0 |
St. Louis Terriers | 1 | 1 |
Worcester Worcesters | 1 | 2 |
Buffalo Blues | 0 | 1 |
Detroit Wolverines | 0 | 1 |
Hartford Dark Blues | 0 | 1 |
Kansas City Cowboys (UA) | 0 | 1 |
New York Metropolitans | 0 | 1 |
Syracuse Stars | 0 | 1 |
Toledo Blue Stockings | 0 | 1 |
Washington Nationals (AA) | 0 | 1 |
Washington Nationals (UA) | 0 | 1 |
Washington Senators | 0 | 2 |
Near no-hitters[]
Regulation games in which a pitcher or staff pitches less than nine full innings, or in which a hit is allowed in extra innings, are not recognized by MLB as no-hitters. However, before the rules were tightened in 1991, such games were recognized as official no-hitters.
Regulation no-hit losses ending in the middle of the ninth[]
Since the bottom of the ninth inning is not played if the team batting last already has a lead, the pitcher(s) of the team batting first can complete a full game without allowing a hit, but not be credited with an official no-hitter. The winning team may not need to bat in the bottom of the ninth due to runs scored by walks, errors, or anything else not involving hits, in which case the losing team's pitcher(s) will not be credited with an official no-hitter, because they pitched less than nine innings. This has happened only four times in major-league history.[77][78]
Such games were recognized as no-hitters before 1991; however, MLB no longer recognizes such games, past or present, as no-hitters. While in modern baseball the home team always bats last, the visiting team sometimes batted last in the early days of professional baseball.
Players' League[]
- June 21, 1890 – Silver King, Chicago Pirates 0 Brooklyn Ward's Wonders 1
- Brooklyn's run scored on an error, sacrifice bunt, and fielder's choice in the seventh inning. Note that Chicago, the home team, opted to bat first in this game, as was allowed at the time; thus, Brooklyn did not bat in the bottom of the ninth.[79]
American League[]
- July 1, 1990 – Andy Hawkins, New York Yankees 0 Chicago White Sox 4
- April 12, 1992 – Matt Young, Boston Red Sox 1 Cleveland Indians 2
Interleague play[]
- June 28, 2008 – Jered Weaver (6 inn.) and José Arredondo (2 inn.), Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim 0 Los Angeles Dodgers 1
- Dodgers' run scored on a error, stolen base, and sacrifice fly in the fifth inning.[84]
Shortened games[]
Under certain circumstances, if a game cannot continue because of the weather, darkness, or any other reason, but at least five innings have been completed, the result can stand as an officially completed game. No-hitters pitched under such circumstances were recognized before 1991, but are no longer recognized by MLB as official no-hitters. In many instances, these games were shortened by rain, by darkness (in the era before lights), or due to timing constraints when teams needed to travel on regularly scheduled trains. Some games were scheduled for less than nine innings as part of a doubleheader, decided "by agreement" between managers prior to the start of the game (to avoid darkness or in consideration of travel schedules), or by league rule (such as adopted by MLB in 2020).
Names listed in bold signify the pitcher was pitching a perfect game at the time the game was ended; such games are not recognized as official perfect games.
National League[]
- October 1, 1884 (6 innings) – Charlie Getzien, Detroit Wolverines 1 Philadelphia Phillies 0
- Game called due to rain.[85]
- October 7, 1885 (first game; 5 innings) – Dupee Shaw, Providence Grays 4 Buffalo Bisons 0
- Both games of the doubleheader were scheduled for five innings.[86]
- June 21, 1888 (6 innings) – George Van Haltren, Chicago White Stockings 1 Pittsburgh Alleghenys 0
- September 27, 1888 (7 innings) – Ed Crane, New York Giants 3 Washington Nationals 0
- Game called due to darkness.[89]
- October 15, 1892 (second game; 5 innings) – Jack Stivetts, Boston Braves 4 Washington Senators 0
- Game called "by agreement".[90]
- September 23, 1893 (second game; 7 innings) – Elton Chamberlain, Cincinnati Reds 6 Boston Beaneaters 0
- Game called due to darkness.[91]
- June 2, 1894 (6 innings) – Ed Stein, Brooklyn Grooms 1 Chicago White Stockings 0
- Game called due to rain.[92]
- September 14, 1903 (second game; 5 innings) – Red Ames, New York Giants 5 St. Louis Cardinals 0
- August 24, 1906 (second game; 7 innings) – Jake Weimer, Cincinnati Reds 1 Brooklyn Superbas 0
- Game called "by agreement".[95]
- September 24, 1906 (second game; 7 innings) – Stoney McGlynn, St. Louis Cardinals 1 Brooklyn Superbas 1
- Game called due to darkness; first game of the doubleheader went 11 innings; Brooklyn run scored on a walk, stolen base, and sacrifice fly in the first inning.[96][97][notes 212]
- September 26, 1906 (second game; 6 innings) – Lefty Leifield, Pittsburgh Pirates 8 Philadelphia Phillies 0
- Game called due to darkness.[98]
- August 11, 1907 (second game; 7 innings) – Ed Karger, St. Louis Cardinals 4 Boston Doves 0
- Game called "by agreement".[99]
- August 23, 1907 (second game; 5 innings) – Howie Camnitz, Pittsburgh Pirates 1 New York Giants 0
- Game called "by agreement"; first game of the doubleheader went 10 innings.[100]
- August 6, 1908 (first game; 6 innings) – Johnny Lush, St. Louis Cardinals 2 Brooklyn Superbas 0
- Game called due to rain; second game of the doubleheader postponed.[101]
- July 31, 1910 (second game; 7 innings) – King Cole, Chicago Cubs 4 St. Louis Cardinals 0
- Game called so teams could catch trains (both teams next played in New York City).[102]
- August 27, 1937 (first game; 8 innings) – Fred Frankhouse, Brooklyn Dodgers 5 Cincinnati Reds 0
- Game called due to rain; second game of the doubleheader canceled.[103]
- June 22, 1944 (second game; 5 innings) – Jim Tobin, Boston Braves 7 Philadelphia Phillies 0
- June 12, 1959 (5 innings) – Mike McCormick, San Francisco Giants 3 Philadelphia Phillies 0
- September 26, 1959 (7 innings) – Sam Jones, San Francisco Giants 4 St. Louis Cardinals 0
- Game called due to rain.[108]
- April 21, 1984 (second game; 5 innings) – David Palmer, Montreal Expos 4 St. Louis Cardinals 0
- September 24, 1988 (5 innings) – Pascual Pérez, Montreal Expos 1 Philadelphia Phillies 0
- Game called due to rain.[111]
- April 25, 2021 (second game; 7 innings) – Madison Bumgarner, Arizona Diamondbacks 7 Atlanta Braves 0
American League[]
- August 15, 1905 (5 innings) – Rube Waddell, Philadelphia Athletics 2 St. Louis Browns 0
- Game called due to rain.[114]
- May 26, 1907 (5 innings) – Ed Walsh, Chicago White Sox 8 New York Highlanders 1
- Game called due to rain; New York's run scored on two walks and two wild pitches in the first inning.[115]
- October 5, 1907 (second game; 5 innings) – Rube Vickers, Philadelphia Athletics 4 Washington Senators 0
- August 20, 1912 (second game; 6 innings) – Carl Cashion, Washington Senators 2 Cleveland Naps 0
- Game called so Naps could catch an express train to Boston.[118]
- August 25, 1924 (first game; 7 innings) – Walter Johnson, Washington Senators 2 St. Louis Browns 0
- Game called due to rain; second game of the doubleheader postponed.[119]
- August 5, 1940 (second game; 6 innings) – John Whitehead, St. Louis Browns 4 Detroit Tigers 0
- August 6, 1967 (5 innings) – Dean Chance, Minnesota Twins 2 Boston Red Sox 0
- July 12, 1990 (6 innings) – Mélido Pérez, Chicago White Sox 8 New York Yankees 0
- Game called due to rain.[124]
- October 1, 2006 (5 innings) – Devern Hansack, Boston Red Sox 9 Baltimore Orioles 0
- July 7, 2021 (7 innings) – Collin McHugh (2.0 IP), Josh Fleming (2.2 IP), Diego Castillo (0.1 IP), Matt Wisler (1.0 IP), and Pete Fairbanks (1.0 IP), Tampa Bay Rays 4, Cleveland Indians 0
- Second game of a seven-inning doubleheader
American Association[]
- May 6, 1884 (6 innings) – Larry McKeon, Indianapolis Hoosiers 0 Cincinnati Red Stockings 0
- July 29, 1889 (second game; 7 innings) – Matt Kilroy, Baltimore Orioles 0 St. Louis Browns 0
- September 23, 1890 (7 innings) – George Nicol, St. Louis Browns 21 Philadelphia Athletics 2
- October 12, 1890 (8 innings) – Hank Gastright, Columbus Solons 6 Toledo Maumees 0
Union Association[]
- August 21, 1884 (8 innings) – Charlie Geggus, Washington Nationals 12 Wilmington Quicksteps 1
- October 5, 1884 (5 innings) – Charlie Sweeney (2 inn.) and Henry Boyle (3 inn.), St. Louis Maroons 0 St. Paul Saints 1
Nine-inning no-hitters broken up in extra innings[]
MLB previously recognized no-hitters when the only hits allowed occurred in extra innings, until the rules were tightened in 1991. Names listed in bold signify the pitcher was pitching a perfect game through nine innings.
National League[]
- June 11, 1904 (12 innings) – Bob Wicker, Chicago Cubs 1 New York Giants 0
- Wicker (winning pitcher)[127] surrendered single with one out in 10th; only hit allowed.
- August 1, 1906 (13 innings) – Harry McIntire, Brooklyn Superbas 0 Pittsburgh Pirates 1
- McIntire (losing pitcher)[128] surrendered single with two out in 11th; allowed three more hits.
- April 15, 1909 (13 innings; Opening Day) – Red Ames, New York Giants 0 Brooklyn Superbas 3
- Ames (losing pitcher)[129] surrendered single with one out in 10th; allowed six more hits.
- May 2, 1917 (10 innings) – Hippo Vaughn, Chicago Cubs 0 Cincinnati Reds 1
- May 26, 1956 (11 innings) – Johnny Klippstein (7 inn.), Hersh Freeman (1 inn.) and Joe Black (3 inn.), Cincinnati Reds 1 Milwaukee Braves 2
- May 26, 1959 (13 innings) – Harvey Haddix, Pittsburgh Pirates 0 Milwaukee Braves 1
- June 14, 1965 (11 innings) – Jim Maloney, Cincinnati Reds 0 New York Mets 1
- July 26, 1991 (10 innings) – Mark Gardner (9 inn.) and Jeff Fassero (0 inn.), Montreal Expos 0 Los Angeles Dodgers 1
- June 3, 1995 (10 innings) – Pedro Martínez (9 inn.) and Mel Rojas (1 inn.), Montreal Expos 1 San Diego Padres 0
- August 23, 2017 (10 innings) – Rich Hill, Los Angeles Dodgers 0 Pittsburgh Pirates 1
- Hill (losing pitcher) threw 9 no-hit innings and was perfect into the 9th before first base-runner reached on error; surrendered walk-off home run leading off the 10th inning.[142]
American League[]
- May 9, 1901 (10 innings) – Earl Moore, Cleveland Blues 2 Chicago White Sox 4
- Moore (losing pitcher)[143] surrendered lead-off single in 10th; allowed one more hit.
- August 30, 1910 (second game; 11 innings) – Tom Hughes, New York Highlanders 0 Cleveland Naps 5
- Hughes (losing pitcher)[144] surrendered single with one out in 10th; allowed six more hits.
- May 14, 1914 (10 innings) – Jim Scott, Chicago White Sox 0 Washington Senators 1
- Scott (losing pitcher)[145] surrendered lead-off single in 10th; allowed one more hit.
- September 18, 1934 (10 innings) – Bobo Newsom, St. Louis Browns 1 Boston Red Sox 2
Teams with only a single no–hitter[]
These active teams have only pitched one no-hitter in their franchise history.
¶ | Indicates a perfect game |
£ | Pitcher was left-handed |
* | Member of the National Baseball Hall of Fame and Museum |
Colorado Rockies[]
# | Date | Pitcher | Final score | Base- runners |
Opponent | Catcher | Plate umpire | Manager | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | April 17, 2010 | Ubaldo Jiménez | 4–0 | 6 | @ Atlanta Braves | Miguel Olivo | Jeff Kellogg | Jim Tracy |
|
[148] |
New York Mets[]
# | Date | Pitcher | Final score | Base- runners |
Opponent | Catcher | Plate umpire | Manager | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | June 1, 2012 | Johan Santana£ | 8–0 | 5 | St. Louis Cardinals | Josh Thole | Gary Cederstrom | Terry Collins |
|
[149] |
San Diego Padres[]
# | Date | Pitcher | Final score | Base- runners |
Opponent | Catcher | Plate umpire | Manager | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | April 9, 2021 | Joe Musgrove | 3–0 | 1 | @ Texas Rangers | Victor Caratini | Vic Carapazza | Jayce Tingler |
|
[150] |
Tampa Bay Rays[]
# | Date | Pitcher | Final score | Base- runners |
Opponent | Catcher | Plate umpire | Manager | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | July 26, 2010 | Matt Garza | 5–0 | 1 | Detroit Tigers | Kelly Shoppach | Ed Hickox | Joe Maddon |
|
[151] |
Toronto Blue Jays[]
# | Date | Pitcher | Final score | Base- runners |
Opponent | Catcher | Plate umpire | Manager | Notes | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | September 2, 1990 | Dave Stieb | 3–0 | 4 | @ Cleveland Indians | Pat Borders | Drew Coble | Cito Gaston |
|
[152] |
Notes[]
- ^ Major League Baseball seasons since 1901 without a no-hitter pitched are 1909, 1913, 1921, 1927–1928, 1932–1933, 1936, 1939, 1942–1943, 1949, 1959, 1982, 1985, 1989, 2000 and 2005.
- ^ Major League Baseball does not recognize the National Association as a major league.
- ^ Some baseball historians claim this was the first no-hitter in National League history, but contemporary newspaper reports differ; see Joe Borden#1876 season.
- ^ 10 innings
- ^ At 20 years and two months old, Rusie is the youngest pitcher to throw a no-hitter.
- ^ First career start. First game of a doubleheader on the final day of the season.
- ^ First career game.
- ^ First no-hitter at modern pitching distance of 60'6".
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i First game of a doubleheader.
- ^ First of two no-hitters on the same day.
- ^ Jump up to: a b Second of two no-hitters on the same day.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h i Second game of a doubleheader.
- ^ Not officially recognized by Major League Baseball for unknown reasons. There is some discrepancy over whether this was a no-hitter. Baseball Reference and Retrosheet[31] both credit Dowling with giving up no hits. Newspaper accounts, however, state that Milwaukee's Wid Conroy reached on an infield single in the 7th.[32][33] Conroy's career statistics, though, do not credit him with a hit in this game.[34]
- ^ Part of a streak of 25.1 consecutive hitless innings by Young, still a Major League record.
- ^ Tannehill's brother, Lee, played third base for the White Sox and went 0-3.
- ^ Only base-runners came on errors by Bill Dahlen and Billy Gilbert.
- ^ Second game of a doubleheader. The Tigers lineup included 18-year-old Ty Cobb, who was playing in his 10th career game and went 0-2 with a walk.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. Dinneen would later be the home plate umpire for five no-hitters.
- ^ The Phillies would not have another no-hitter until Jim Bunning's perfect game in 1964.
- ^ Eason was the losing pitcher in the previous no-hitter, a feat not duplicated until 1947. He would be the home plate umpire for Davis' no-hitter in 1914. Remains the last time the Cardinals have been no-hit at home.
- ^ Third career start for Maddox. Last no-hitter in Pittsburgh until 1971. A Pirate pitcher would not throw a no-hitter at home again until 1976.
- ^ Young retired the final 27 batters in a row after a leadoff walk. He also drove in four runs.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. 10 innings, only base-runner was on a Hit by pitch with 2 outs in the ninth.
- ^ To date, Joss is one of only three pitchers in modern history to no-hit the same team twice.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. Wood had a no-hitter broken up in the 9th inning against the Browns three weeks earlier.
- ^ Hamilton did not strike out a batter.
- ^ Benz took a no-hitter into the 9th inning two starts later.
- ^ Second game of a doubleheader. First no-hitter at Fenway Park.
- ^ Bush retired 27 batters in a row after a leadoff walk in the first inning. He also started against Cleveland a day earlier and gave up five runs in just three innings. The Athletics went 36–117, making them the worst team to pitch a no-hitter. This was the final game in the career of future Hall of Famer Nap Lajoie.
- ^ 10 innings; See Double No-Hitter
- ^ The same teams, in the same park, on the next day as the previous no-hitter, but the second game of a doubleheader. Groom also pitched two hitless innings in relief during the first game. The White Sox went on to win the 1917 World Series—to date, the only time a team won a World Series after being no-hit twice in the same season.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. Ruth and Thomas were ejected for arguing balls and strikes after walking the first batter, who was then caught stealing. Shore retired the next 26 in a row for a no-hitter completely in relief.[71]
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. Two weeks earlier, Caldwell had been struck by lightning while on the mound during a game against the Athletics.
- ^ Only base-runner came on Bucky Harris' error leading off the 7th.
- ^ Jones did not strike out a batter the entire game.
- ^ In the sixth inning, Athletics pitcher Slim Harriss hit a ball to left field but was tagged out after not touching first base. Two innings later, Frank Welch was credited with a hit that was later changed to an error on Red Sox left fielder Mike Menosky. Ehmke pitched a one-hit shutout in his next start four days later, the only hit coming on the first batter of the game when Howie Shanks misplayed a ground ball that was ruled a hit instead of an error.
- ^ Only no-hitter the Cardinals would have at Sportsman's Park, their home from 1920-1966.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. Vance had thrown a one-hit shutout against the Phillies five days earlier.
- ^ Also hit a home run. Ferrell's brother, Rick, started at catcher for the Browns and went 0-3.
- ^ Only no-hitter ever thrown at Griffith Stadium, home of the Senators from 1911-1960.
- ^ Second game of a doubleheader. In the first game, Paul's brother Dizzy had a no-hitter for 8 innings but finished with a 3-hit shutout. First no-hitter in 1140 days, the longest gap between no-hitters in the modern era as measured by days.
- ^ First no-hitter ever thrown at Comiskey Park.
- ^ First of two no-hitters in back-to-back starts.
- ^ Second of two no-hitters in back-to-back starts. First-ever night game at Ebbets Field
- ^ Second game of a doubleheader. First no-hitter at Yankee Stadium.
- ^ Opening Day
- ^ Tobin pitched a one-hit shutout in his previous start. He would be the losing pitcher in Shoun's no-hitter eighteen days later.
- ^ Only base-runner was a walk to the opposing pitcher in the third inning. A day earlier, Shoun's teammate Bucky Walters had a no-hitter broken up with two outs in the eighth inning.
- ^ Second game of a doubleheader. First no-hitter by a Canadian-born pitcher. The winning run was scored in the bottom of the ninth inning. Fowler was making his first start in nearly three years after serving in World War II. This was his only victory of the season.
- ^ Against the Brooklyn Dodgers four days later, Blackwell nearly duplicated Vander Meer's double no-hit feat but had this bid broken up in the ninth.
- ^ Only base-runner came on Ferris Fain's error with one out in the 2nd. McCahan had been the losing pitcher in Black's no-hitter earlier in the season.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. The win gave the Yankees a share of the 1951 pennant, which they clinched outright in the second game.
- ^ Tigers won on a walk-off home run in the bottom of the ninth inning.
- ^ Trucks pitched two no-hitters in 1952 but went 5-19. Yankees' shortstop Phil Rizzuto was initially credited with a hit in the third inning but it was later changed to an error on Tigers' shortstop Johnny Pesky.
- ^ First major league start; Holloman would win only two more Major League games.
- ^ First no-hitter by black pitcher. Jones walked the bases loaded with no one out in the ninth inning but then struck out the final three batters to end the game.
- ^ Maglie would be the losing pitcher in Larsen's perfect game 13 days later.
- ^ Game 5 of the 1956 World Series; the first of two postseason no-hitters. First perfect game in the majors since 1922.
- ^ Wilhelm had pitched primarily in relief prior to this season; this was only his ninth career start. The Yankees would go on to win the World Series, and wouldn't be no-hit again until 2003.
- ^ Second game of a doubleheader. First start after being traded by Phillies to Cubs. Cardwell retired the last 26 batters he faced after a first inning walk. First no-hitter against the Cardinals in 41 years.
- ^ Burdette scored the game's only run. He faced the minimum and didn't issue a walk. The only base-runner came on a hit by pitch in the fifth inning, who was then retired on a double play.
- ^ Spahn's first no-hitter came in his 506th career start, the most in Major League history. He would pitch his second just six starts later. First time since 1917 a team no-hit the same opponent twice in a season, a feat that hasn't happened since.
- ^ Faced the minimum 27 batters, with the only two base-runners being retired on double plays. Spahn's second no-hitter in a span of six starts.
- ^ Belinsky's fourth career game. First no-hitter at Dodger Stadium. Belinsky's gem was also the first in Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim history, and the first since major league baseball came to California with the Giants and Dodgers in 1958.
- ^ Wilson also hit a home run.
- ^ First no-hitter by a Dodgers pitcher at Dodger Stadium (see Bo Belinsky's entry above) and the first in team history since the move from Brooklyn in 1958.
- ^ Only base-runner was a walk in the 9th.
- ^ Koufax retired Harvey Kuenn for the final out. Kuenn would also be the last out in Koufax's perfect game two years later.
- ^ Marichal was the losing pitcher in Koufax's no-hitter earlier in the season.
- ^ 9-inning home loss. Only run scored on an error with two outs in the ninth inning.
- ^ Koufax faced the minimum 27 batters (the only base-runner was caught stealing).
- ^ Father's Day. First game of a doubleheader.
- ^ 10 innings. Maloney threw 187 pitches, walked 10 and hit a batter. Two months earlier, Maloney also had a no-hitter thru 10 innings before it was broken up in the 11th.
- ^ Dodgers only managed 2 base-runners and one hit, setting records for fewest base-runners and hits in a game by both teams combined. The last no-hitter thrown against the Cubs until July 25, 2015. As of 2011, first of only two perfect games at Dodger Stadium – the other was pitched by Dennis Martínez in 1991.
- ^ On the same day, the Red Sox fired Pinky Higgins as their general manager. At 1,247 this was the lowest attended no-hitter until Lucas Giolito pitched one on August 25, 2020 with no fans in attendance due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. 9-inning home loss. Tigers had at least one base-runner in every inning except one. Barber walked 10, hit two batters and committed an error.
- ^ First no-hitter on artificial turf and in a domed stadium.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. Horlen didn't walk a batter, the only two basrunners coming on a hit by pitch and an error.
- ^ Hunter also batted in three of Oakland's four runs.
- ^ The next day in the same park, the Cardinals no-hit the Giants.
- ^ The previous day in the same park, the Giants no-hit the Cardinals.
- ^ Stoneman's fifth career start; ninth game in Expos franchise history. Sets a record for the earliest no-hitter recorded in a franchise's history.
- ^ First game of a two-game series, in which both were no-hitters.
- ^ Second game of a two-game series, in which both were no-hitters.
- ^ Palmer came off the disabled list four days earlier. Home plate umpire Lou DiMuro's son Mike was umpire for Roy Halladay's 2010 perfect game.
- ^ Holtzman did not strike out a batter the entire game.
- ^ The Mets would go on to win the 1969 World Series.
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. Ellis later claimed to have been under the influence of LSD.[72]
- ^ In a pre-game ceremony, Wright had been inducted into the NAIA Hall of Fame.
- ^ Singer didn't issue a walk but did hit a batter and commit a throwing error.
- ^ Blue's third career win and eighth start. He had lost a no-hitter with two outs in the 8th inning two starts earlier. All four no-hitters of 1970 had been pitched in California.
- ^ Holtzman scored the game's only run.
- ^ Also hit 2 home runs. All-time hits leader Pete Rose hit a hard line drive right at Phillies third baseman John Vukovich for the final out. Reds were the first team since 1923 to be no-hit at home twice in a season.
- ^ First no-hitter in Pittsburgh in 64 years. Pirates were no-hit at home for the first time since 1886, when they were a member of the American Association. First (and to date only) no-hitter with both a Hall of Fame pitcher and catcher.
- ^ Hooton's fourth career start.
- ^ Walk with 2 outs in 9th inning only base-runner for Padres
- ^ First game of a doubleheader. First no-hitter pitched in a regular-season game in Canada. Stoneman also pitched the first one in Montreal on April 17, 1969.
- ^ First no-hitter by a pitcher who did not come to bat the entire game, under the American League's new designated hitter rule.
- ^ Pitched seven innings of no-hit ball in next start. Closest to tying Vander Meer's back-to-back no-hitters since Ewell Blackwell in 1947. Ryan's 17 strikeouts set a record for a no-hitter, tied in 2015 by Max Scherzer. He also became the fourth pitcher to throw two no-hitters in the same season.
- ^ Busby took a no-hitter into the 6th inning in his next start, setting an AL record by retiring 33 consecutive batters (the record stood until 1998). He is the only pitcher to throw a no-hitter in each of his first two seasons in the Majors.
- ^ Bosman's own fielding error with 2 outs in the 4th allowed Oakland's only base-runner (Sal Bando).
- ^ Final day of the regular season. First no-hitter involving more than two pitchers. The Athletics had already clinched the division title and removed Blue after five innings to rest him for the postseason.
- ^ First no-hitter thrown against the Expos, and the third the Expos had participated in (the other 2 were by Bill Stoneman in April 1969 and October 1972).
- ^ Odom was removed after walking his ninth batter to lead off the sixth inning. This would be the last win of his career.
- ^ Candelaria became the first Pirates pitcher to throw a no-hitter at home since 1907. Game was televised on ABC.
- ^ Eckersley spent nine more seasons as a starter before becoming a Hall of Fame closer. He retired with 390 saves, the most by any pitcher who also threw a no-hitter.
- ^ Blyleven's last start with the Rangers. He was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates after the season.
- ^ First no-hitter at Busch Memorial Stadium.
- ^ Seaver had two previous bids broken up in the ninth, including a perfect game bid in 1969 while pitching for the Mets.
- ^ Bob and Ken Forsch are the only set of brothers to have thrown no-hitters.
- ^ Only base-runner came on Bill Russell's error with 2 outs in the 1st inning
- ^ Second game of a doubleheader. Third no-hitter in Expos history. Only no-hitter thrown by an Expos pitcher at Olympic Stadium. Previous 2 were one in Philadelphia and one also in Montreal, but at Jarry Park (Bill Stoneman in 1969 and 1972).
- ^ First no-hitter thrown against the Blue Jays – the first no-hitter by a Toronto pitcher would also be played in Cleveland; see the entry for Dave Stieb's 1990 no-hitter.
- ^ Broke Sandy Koufax's old record of no-hitters. The Dodgers would go on to win the 1981 World Series.
- ^ First no-hitter for the Yankees since Don Larsen's perfect game.
- ^ Only base-runners came on a hit by pitch and an error in the second inning.
- ^ Warren's ninth career start. He would win just four more games in his career and finish with a record of 9-13.
- ^ Game was televised on NBC. Fourth game of Tigers 1984 season. Detroit would start 9–0 and were 35–5 after 40 games. Went on to win 1984 World Series over San Diego Padres.
- ^ Final day of the regular season.
- ^ Last win of his career. Cowley is the last pitcher to be charged with an earned run in a no-hitter.
- ^ Houston clinched the NL West title in this game.
- ^ Robin Yount made a diving catch in center field to rob Eddie Murray of a hit for the final out. Brewers' ninth win in a row to start the season; they would go on to win their first 13 games, tying the Major League record.
- ^ The start of the game was delayed two and a half hours by rain. Browning's teammate Ron Robinson lost a perfect game with two outs in the ninth inning earlier in the season. The Dodgers would go on to win the 1988 World Series. Browning lost a perfect game in the ninth inning the next season, the closest any pitcher has come to throwing two perfect games.
- ^ Langston was making his Angels debut after signing a $16 million contract — at the time the largest in history — in the offseason. Witt is the only pitcher to throw a perfect game and be involved in a combined no-hitter. This was his first relief appearance since 1983.
- ^ Johnson also threw a perfect game fourteen years later, the largest gap between no-hitters.
- ^ First of two no-hitters thrown on the same day. First no-hitter against the Blue Jays in Toronto
- ^ First month with four no-hitters.
- ^ Only base-runner came on third baseman Charlie Hayes's error leading off the 7th. Hayes would later make a spectacular catch to end the game. Mulholland faced the minimum.
- ^ Stieb lost three potential no-hitters in the ninth inning over the previous 2 years, including one that would have been a perfect game.
- ^ Ryan's 7th and last no-hitter. At 44, Ryan is the oldest pitcher to throw a no-hitter.
- ^ Second no-hitter thrown at Olympic Stadium in Montreal and the fourth one all time in Canada
- ^ The Oakland Athletics currently hold the longest streak the majors of not being no-hit. This was the last time it occurred. First Orioles no-hitter since 1969, also against the Athletics. Milacki was hit on the hand by a ground ball in the sixth inning and had to leave the game after completing the inning.
- ^ Hassey becomes the first catcher of two Major League perfect games. Fourth and final no-hitter in Montreal Expos history and the only perfect game. Dodgers pitcher Mike Morgan also took a perfect game into the sixth inning.
- ^ Second career start and first game with White Sox. Alvarez came into the game with a career ERA of infinity; in his only previous start, with Texas two seasons earlier, he had given up three runs without recording an out.
- ^ In the fifth inning, Dan Pasqua hit a fly ball to left field that deflected off the glove of Kirk Gibson. After initially being ruled a hit, the play was later changed to an error on Gibson.
- ^ Mercker had been primarily a reliever before this game and was making his third career start after 81 games out of the bullpen. Padres Hall of Famer Tony Gwynn made the final out, less than two months after his brother Chris was the last out of Martinez's perfect game.
- ^ Bosio walked the first two batters of the game, then retired 27 in a row.
- ^ Abbott was born without a right hand.
- ^ The Mets scored a run in the fourth inning on a walk, a wild pitch, and an error.
- ^ Fifth no-hitter in Rangers history and the fourteenth perfect game in MLB history. Preserved by a diving catch in the ninth inning by rookie center fielder Rusty Greer. Season shortened by the 1994–95 Major League Baseball strike.
- ^ 22nd no-hitter in Dodgers history. Martínez lost a perfect game with two outs in the eighth inning due to a walk by the Marlins' only base-runner.
- ^ First no-hitter in Marlins history
- ^ Gooden became the first right-handed pitcher to throw a no-hitter at Yankee Stadium since Don Larsen 40 years earlier.
- ^ First no-hitter thrown at Coors Field. First Japanese pitcher to record no-hitter.
- ^ Only base-runner was a hit by pitch with two outs in the 8th.
- ^ 10 innings. Pinch-hitter Mark Smith hit a walk-off 3-run home run with two outs in the bottom of the tenth inning to secure the no-hitter.
- ^ Part of a streak of 38 consecutive batters retired by Wells, a new AL record that stood until 2007. Wells claims to have been hung over.[73]
- ^ Ten days later, Jiménez again shut out the Diamondbacks 1-0, allowing only two hits. Randy Johnson was the losing pitcher in both games. Cardinals scored the only run of the game on Thomas Howard's RBI single with two outs in the top of the ninth inning. First no-hitter at Chase Field, then Bank One Ballpark.
- ^ First no-hitter/perfect game in regular-season interleague play. Pitched on Yogi Berra Day at Yankee Stadium, with Berra and Don Larsen in attendance.
- ^ Game began at 11 a.m. local time due to a University of Minnesota football game that was scheduled to be played at the Metrodome that same night.
- ^ Nomo's first start with Red Sox. Second game of the season. Earliest (on calendar) no-hitter. First no-hitter at Camden Yards.
- ^ 7 strikeouts and 9 walks, most ever in a no-hitter.
- ^ On Phillie Phanatic's birthday and their last season at Veterans Stadium. Occurred during the 2003 NFL Draft. ESPN broke away from covering the draft to air the ninth inning.
- ^ Last no-hitter thrown at the original Yankee Stadium before it closed in 2008. Oswalt left with an injury in the second inning. Originally held the record for most pitchers used in a combined no-hitter, which was tied on June 8, 2012 when the Mariners no-hit the Dodgers. First interleague no-hitter thrown by away team. First no-hitter thrown by an NL team against an AL team. First official no-hitter against the Yankees in 44 years, a then-Major League record. Octavio Dotel struck out four Yankees in the eighth inning, the first Astros pitcher to pull off the feat since 1986.
- ^ Previous no-hitter almost fourteen years earlier.
- ^ Diamondbacks are most recent team to perform a no-hitter then suffer the following one. First MLB no-hitter in 6,364 games, the longest gap between no-hitters in history as measured by games played. Randy Johnson, most recent pitcher to throw a no-hitter at the time, took a no-hitter into the seventh inning the same day.
- ^ Buehrle faced the minimum 27 batters. The only base-runner (Sammy Sosa) was picked off of first base.
- ^ First no-hitter at Comerica Park.
- ^ Second career game for Buchholz.
- ^ First time since the 1974 California Angels that one team had last two no-hitters in the majors. Varitek sets the record for most no-hitters caught.
- ^ Played at Miller Park in Milwaukee because of Hurricane Ike, making it the first no-hitter at a neutral site.
- ^ Only base-runner came on Juan Uribe's error with one out in the 8th. Sánchez was 2-8 on the season with a 5.30 ERA at the time and had recently been demoted to the bullpen.
- ^ Second perfect game in White Sox history. Umpire Eric Cooper called both of Buehrle's no-hitters. In the ninth, new center fielder DeWayne Wise leapt over the wall to take a potential home run away from Gabe Kapler. Buehrle retired first 17 batters in his next start to set the record for consecutive batters retired at 45 (later broken by Yusmeiro Petit), spanning three starts.
- ^ First no-hitter in Rockies franchise history.
- ^ Second perfect game in 12 months. This game was also held on Mother's Day. It was the second perfect game in Oakland Athletics history.
- ^ Shortest span between perfect games (20 days). Home plate umpire Mike DiMuro's father, Lou, was umpire for Jim Palmer's 1969 no-hitter.
- ^ Jackson walked eight and hit a batter on 149 pitches, the most ever for a no-hitter in MLB history.[75] The Rays became the first team since the 2001 Padres to be no-hit twice in a season, and the first team in history to be no-hit three times within a one-year span.
- ^ Garza faced the minimum (only base-runner allowed was retired on a double play). Opposing starter Max Scherzer threw 5⅔ no-hit innings. The Rays are the first team since 1991 to pitch a no-hitter and be no-hit in the same season, and the first since 1956 to be involved in three no-hitters in one season. Game televised nationally on ESPN.
- ^ Game 1 of the 2010 NLDS. Second no-hitter in postseason history, after Don Larsen's perfect game in the 1956 World Series. Halladay became the fifth pitcher to pitch two no-hitters in the same calendar year (including the postseason), and the first one to do it with a perfect game. One batter reached base.
- ^ First complete game of Liriano's career, in 95 starts. His season ERA entering the game was 9.13.
- ^ Verlander faced the minimum 27 batters.
- ^ Third perfect game in White Sox history and the first no-hitter thrown at Safeco Field. This was also Humber's only career complete game. Game was televised regionally by Fox; the network cut away from a New York Yankees-Boston Red Sox game to show the final inning nationally.
- ^ First no-hitter in Mets history and the first no-hitter thrown at Citi Field. A ball hit by St. Louis' Carlos Beltrán was controversially ruled foul by the third base umpire, preserving the no-hitter in the 6th inning.
- ^ Third no-hitter in Mariners history and the second no-hitter thrown at T-Mobile Park (then Safeco Field). Millwood left with an injury after the sixth inning. Tied record for most pitchers used in a combined no-hitter. For Pryor, it was his first career victory.
- ^ First perfect game in Giants history.
- ^ First perfect game in Mariners history. Seattle becomes the first team with a combined no-hitter and a traditional no-hitter in a single season.
- ^ First no-hitter by a Reds pitcher since Browning's perfect game in 1988. Pirates were no-hit for the first time since 1971.
- ^ Bailey is the first pitcher since Nolan Ryan in 1974–75 to have thrown the Major Leagues' last two no-hitters.
- ^ First no-hitter ever thrown in San Diego's Petco Park. Lincecum was the losing pitcher in Bailey's no-hitter 11 days earlier.
- ^ 5th no-hitter in Marlins history, and the first ever thrown at Marlins Park. The Marlins scored the winning run in the bottom of the ninth on a wild pitch, with Álvarez standing in the on-deck circle. It was the first no-hitter to end in walk-off fashion since Cordova and Rincon combined for a 10-inning no-no in 1997. It was also the first no-hitter thrown on the last day of the regular season since Mike Witt's perfect game on September 30, 1984.
- ^ Twenty-fourth no-hitter in Dodgers franchise history and the second thrown at Citizens Bank Park. Beckett fanned six and walked three on his 128 pitch outing. In the ninth inning, he struck out Chase Utley to secure the victory.
- ^ Rockies' only base-runner came on a throwing error in the seventh. Kershaw became the first MLB pitcher ever with 15 strikeouts without allowing a single hit or walk. It was also the 3rd no-hitter by a reigning Cy Young Award winner, following Sandy Koufax (1963 CY, 1964 NH) and Bob Gibson (1970 CY, 1971 NH).
- ^ Lincecum's second no-hitter in less than a year. Lincecum became the second pitcher all-time, after Addie Joss, to no-hit the same team twice.
- ^ Nationals rookie Steven Souza Jr., who came in as a defensive replacement in the top of the ninth inning, made a diving catch in left-center field to retire Christian Yelich for the final out. First no-hitter for the Nationals since the team moved to Washington, and the first by any Washington pitcher since Bobby Burke in 1931. This was the final game for both teams for the 2014 season, and it was the second year in a row in which a no-hitter had been thrown on the final day of the regular season. Henderson Álvarez, who had thrown Miami's no-hitter on the final day of the 2013 season, was the losing pitcher in this game.
- ^ Seventeenth no-hitter in Giants franchise history, and the second no-hitter thrown at Citi Field. Heston was the 22nd rookie pitcher to throw a no-hitter. He did not walk a batter, but he hit three of them, joining Wiltse in 1908 and Brown in 1997 as no-hitter pitchers whose only base-runners came on hit batsmen. Heston's is the first such game to feature more than one hit by pitch.
- ^ Scherzer was perfect through 8⅔ innings when he hit pinch-hitter José Tábata to allow the Pirates' only base-runner of the game. Fifth no-hitter pitcher after Wiltse, Burdette, Brown, and Heston to only allow their base-runners on hit batsmen, and the second after Wiltse to lose a perfect game with two outs in the ninth inning on a hit batsman. Scherzer threw a one-hitter, having been perfect for 6 innings, in his previous start, and was perfect through 5 in his next start after this no-hitter.
- ^ Fifth pitcher, after Blue, Witt, Mercker, and Millwood, to pitch a complete game no-hitter as well as contribute to a combined no-hitter. Kris Bryant flew out to Odubel Herrera, who tripped after losing the ball in the sun, on a full count for the final out. This was also the first time that the Cubs were no-hit since Sandy Koufax's perfect game in 1965, and the first no-hitter thrown at Wrigley Field since 1972. Hamels' last start with the Phillies as he was traded to the Texas Rangers six days later.
- ^ Second Japanese pitcher to throw a Major League no-hitter, after Hideo Nomo. First no-hitter in an American League game since teammate Félix Hernández's perfect game almost exactly three years prior, breaking a string of 12 straight NL no-hitters.
- ^ Eleventh no-hitter in Astros history, and the first no-hitter for the Astros as an American League team. This was also the first complete-game no-hitter by an Astros pitcher since Darryl Kile did it in 1993.
- ^ Dodgers no-hit for the second time in 9 days; this is the shortest interval since the 1923 Philadelphia Athletics and the first time a team were no-hit twice in one calendar month since the 1971 Cincinnati Reds.
- ^ Second game of a doubleheader. Scherzer's second no-hitter of the season; both of which also featured no walks. Scherzer was perfect through 5 innings before an error by 3B Yunel Escobar. Scherzer's 17 strikeouts tied Nolan Ryan's record for most in a no-hitter and included 9 straight. Second highest game score ever for a nine-inning game, with 104, following Kerry Wood's 1998 one-hit complete-game shutout. Scherzer becomes the fifth pitcher to throw two no-hitters in the same season.
- ^ Fifteenth no-hitter in Cubs history. Most run support in a no-hitter since 1884. First regular season no-hitter against the Reds since 1971. Fourth no-hitter thrown by a reigning Cy Young Award winner. Game televised by ESPN.
- ^ Sixth no-hitter in Marlins history. Vólquez faced the minimum 27 batters. Thrown on the birthday of Vólquez's friend and teammate Yordano Ventura, who had died in a car crash the previous January.
- ^ Twelfth no-hitter in Athletics history and the first no-hitter since Dallas Braden's perfect game in 2010. Red Sox no-hit for the first time since 1993. Red Sox came into the game with a record of 17-2, the best winning percentage by a team who had a no-hitter thrown against them in history. First time since 1988 that a no-hitter was thrown against that season's World Series champions.
- ^ Game played in Monterrey, Mexico. First no-hitter thrown outside the United States or Canada. Second no-hitter thrown at a neutral site. Buehler's third career start.
- ^ Sixth no-hitter in Mariners history. Second no-hitter thrown by a Canadian pitcher, first since 1945 (Dick Fowler), and first by a Canadian pitcher in Canada. Third different country in which a no-hitter was thrown in 2018.
- ^ Thirteenth no-hitter in Athletics history. Mike Fiers becomes the 35th pitcher in MLB history to throw two no-hitters.
- ^ Eleventh no-hitter and the second combined no-hitter in Angels history. Largest run differential in a no-hitter by an AL team since 1938. In their first home games since his death on July 1st, the Angels were honoring pitcher Tyler Skaggs, having every team member wear his jersey. First no-hitter involving the use of an opener.
- ^ Twelfth no-hitter and the second combined no-hitter in Astros history. First start by Sanchez since being acquired from the Toronto Blue Jays along with Biagini. Sanchez came into the game without a win in his last 17 starts and with a 6.07 ERA, worst among all starting pitchers. Mariners are the first team to have two combined no-hitters against them in one season.
- ^ Thirteenth no-hitter in Astros history. Retired the last twenty-six batters in a row after a first-inning walk. Verlander became the third pitcher after Addie Joss and Tim Lincecum to no-hit the same opponent twice, and the first to do so on the road. He also became the sixth pitcher in MLB history to throw three career no-hitters. Astros scored the only runs of the game on Abraham Toro's two-run home run with two outs in the top of the ninth inning.
- ^ Nineteenth no-hitter in White Sox history. Giolito struck out 13, the most ever in a White Sox no-hitter, and allowed only one base-runner, a four-pitch walk to Erik Gonzalez in the fourth inning. Took place with no fans in attendance due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- ^ Mills' first complete game and 15th career start, the fewest by a Cubs pitcher before throwing a no-hitter since 1972. With Lucas Giolito 19 days earlier, this was the first time both Chicago teams threw a no-hitter in the same season. Second no-hitter at Miller Park; the first was also by a Cubs pitcher, Carlos Zambrano in 2008. Took place with no fans in attendance due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- ^ First no-hitter in Padres history. First no-hitter at Globe Life Field. Musgrove didn't walk a batter, the only baserunner coming when he hit Joey Gallo with a pitch in the fourth inning.
- ^ Rodón had a perfect game broken up with one out in the 9th after hitting Roberto Pérez with a pitch.
- ^ First no-hitter by an Orioles pitcher since 1969, and the first on the road since 1912. Means faced the minimum 27 batters, the only base-runner coming on a dropped third strike with one out in the 3rd inning. This is the only known instance of a perfect game being broken up in such a way.
- ^ At the age of 34 years and 175 days, Miley was the oldest pitcher to throw his first no-hitter since David Cone in 1999. First time the Indians were no-hit twice in a season. Zach Plesac was the opposing pitcher in both games and Jordan Luplow was the final out both times. Additionally, the Reds became the first team to no–hit their interleague rival and only the second team to no–hit a team from the opposite league that plays their home games in the same state as them, after Don Larsen’s perfect game. It was also the first time two interleague no-hitters were thrown in the same season.
- ^ Eighth no-hitter in Tigers history, and first since 2011. First time there had been five no-hitters thrown this early in a season since 1917. Mariners were no-hit at home for the second time in 13 days, the first team to do that since 1923.
- ^ First no-hitter by a Yankees pitcher since Cone's perfect game in 1999, and first on the road since 1951. First time there were no-hitters thrown on consecutive days since 1969. First time there had been six no-hitters thrown this early in a season. First time three teams were no-hit twice in the same season. First time five no-hitters were thrown on the road in the same season. Second month with four no-hitters (June 1990).
- ^ Seventh no-hitter of 2021, tying a modern-era MLB record. First time seven no-hitters had been thrown before July. First time six no-hitters were thrown on the road in the same season. 20th time the Dodgers were no-hit, breaking an MLB record. The Dodgers were the first reigning World Series champions to be no-hit since the 2013 San Francisco Giants, and the first team to have three MVPs in the lineup (Mookie Betts, Cody Bellinger, and Albert Pujols) to be no-hit. The eight walks given up by the Cubs were the most in a no-hitter since Edwin Jackson in 2010.
- ^ Eighth no-hitter of 2021, tying an MLB record set in 1884. This was Gilbert's first career MLB start; he became the fourth player to throw a no-hitter in their first MLB start, and the first since Holloman in 1953. First no-hitter thrown by the Diamondbacks at Chase Field, and their third overall, following Johnson and Jackson.
- ^ Ninth no-hitter of 2021, breaking an MLB record set in 1884. First time seven no-hitters were thrown on the road in the same season. Second no-hitter in Brewers history; first to be a combined no-hitter. Indians became the first team to be no-hit three times in one season; Zach Plesac was the opposing pitcher all three times. It was also the first time three interleague no-hitters were thrown in the same season.
- ^ While such games ending in a tie are excluded from baseball standings and (usually) re-played at a later date, individual player statistics are counted.
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External links[]
- Baseball pitching
- Baseball accomplishments
- Lists of Major League Baseball no-hitters by franchise
- Major League Baseball lists
- Major League Baseball statistics