Francisco Liriano throws no-hitter
CHICAGO (AP)—Francisco Liriano(notes) pitched the major leagues’ first no-hitter of the season, throwing his first career complete game in the Minnesota Twins’1-0 victory over the Chicago White Sox on Tuesday night.
Liriano (2-4) walked six and struck out two, throwing 123 pitches in the 95th major league start for the 27-year-old left-hander.
He survived a rocky ninth inning that began when Brent Morel(notes) grounded to shortstop and Matt Tolbert(notes) made a one-hop throw that first baseman Justin Morneau(notes) scooped. Juan Pierre(notes) walked and Alexei Ramirez(notes) popped to shortstop. Liriano fell behind Adam Dunn(notes) 3-0 in the count, then got a pair of strikes. After a foul ball, Dunn lined out to Tolbert as Liriano and his Twins teammates celebrated at the mound. “I can’t explain it. I feel so nervous and so happy right now,” Liriano said. “I can’t explain my feeling right now.” Liriano threw just 66 of 123 pitches for strikes but kept Chicago off-balance in a game that took just 2 hours, 9 minutes. In his previous start, he lasted just three innings in an 8-2 loss to Tampa Bay. The shutout lowered his ERA for the season to 6.61. It was the seventh no-hitter for the Twins-Washington Senators franchise and the first since Eric Milton’s(notes) against the Angels on Sept. 11, 1999. It was the first no-hitter in the major leagues since Philadelphia’s Roy Halladay’s(notes) against Cincinnati in last year’s NL division series. The White Sox were no-hit for the 13th time, the first since they were beaten by Kansas City’s Bret Saberhagen on Aug. 26, 1991.
Liriano (2-4) walked six and struck out two, throwing 123 pitches in the 95th major league start for the 27-year-old left-hander.
He survived a rocky ninth inning that began when Brent Morel(notes) grounded to shortstop and Matt Tolbert(notes) made a one-hop throw that first baseman Justin Morneau(notes) scooped. Juan Pierre(notes) walked and Alexei Ramirez(notes) popped to shortstop. Liriano fell behind Adam Dunn(notes) 3-0 in the count, then got a pair of strikes. After a foul ball, Dunn lined out to Tolbert as Liriano and his Twins teammates celebrated at the mound. “I can’t explain it. I feel so nervous and so happy right now,” Liriano said. “I can’t explain my feeling right now.” Liriano threw just 66 of 123 pitches for strikes but kept Chicago off-balance in a game that took just 2 hours, 9 minutes. In his previous start, he lasted just three innings in an 8-2 loss to Tampa Bay. The shutout lowered his ERA for the season to 6.61. It was the seventh no-hitter for the Twins-Washington Senators franchise and the first since Eric Milton’s(notes) against the Angels on Sept. 11, 1999. It was the first no-hitter in the major leagues since Philadelphia’s Roy Halladay’s(notes) against Cincinnati in last year’s NL division series. The White Sox were no-hit for the 13th time, the first since they were beaten by Kansas City’s Bret Saberhagen on Aug. 26, 1991.
Updated 16 minutes ago
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