MLB

Cease tosses second no-hitter in Padres franchise history with gem against Nationals

By Sports Desk July 25, 2024

Two years ago, Dylan Cease came within one out of throwing a no-hitter.

Against the Washington Nationals on Thursday, he finished the job, recording all 27 outs without allowing a hit.

Cease threw the second no-hitter in San Diego Padres franchise history, baffling the Nationals during a 3-0 win.

Cease improved to 10-8 and struck out nine in his nine sterling innings of work to win his third straight start.

 

Despite walking three batters, Cease faced only one over the minimum, with the Nationals caught stealing in the first inning and grounding into a double play in the fourth.

He threw 71 of his 114 pitches for strikes en route to joining Joe Musgrove as the only San Diego pitchers to throw a no-hitter. Musgrove's came against the Texas Rangers on April 9, 2021.

Baseball's latest no-no is the second of the season after the Houston Astros' Ronel Blanco threw one against the Toronto Blue Jays on April 1.

Cease's achievement also helps take away some of the sting from his near no-hitter from two years ago. 

While pitching for the Chicago White Sox on September 3, 2022, he was one out away from no-hitting the Minnesota Twins, when current teammate Luis Arraez broke it up with a single to right-centre.

In this one, he got CJ Abrams to hit a flyout to right field for the final out.

Cease is in his first year with the Padres after beginning his career with the White Sox, and after a rocky June, has been pitching brilliantly lately.

In his last three outings, he has not allowed a run, while surrendering just two hits and seven walks over 22 innings while piling up 30 strikeouts.

His latest gem helped San Diego to its fifth consecutive win.

The Padres (55-50) didn’t need much offence against the Nationals (47-56) to back Cease, with Ha-Seong Kim plating all three runs on a first-inning single off Patrick Corbin.

 

Kershaw makes season debut in Dodgers' win over Giants

Clayton Kershaw permitted two runs over four innings in his first start of the season and the Los Angeles Dodgers went on to beat the San Francisco Giants 6-4.

The game was tied 4-4 until Nick Ahmed and Shohei Ohtani homered on consecutive pitches in the eighth inning to lead the NL West-leading Dodgers (62-42) to their sixth win in seven games since the All-Star break.

Ohtani's homer was his 31st of the season and his second in the last five games. He also doubled to give him four doubles since the All-Star break.

Kershaw allowed six hits and two walks with six strikeouts, while throwing 47 of his 72 pitches for strikes in his first start since Game 1 of last October's NL Division Series against the Arizona Diamondbacks. The three-time NL Cy Young Award winner had shoulder surgery four weeks later.

Ohtani signed with the Dodgers a month later and this was the first game the Japanese superstar and Kershaw played together.

 

Heliot Ramos led the Giants (49-55) with three hits and drove in a run while Jorge Soler singled twice.

Logan Webb yielded four runs and nine hits, and now has surrendered 15 runs and 25 hits with eight walks over 16 innings in his last three starts.

 

Mets beat Braves in 10 innings to stay hot

Jeff McNeil drove in the winning run with a 10th-inning hit on a ball Ramón Laureano misplayed in the New York Mets' 3-2 win over the Atlanta Braves.

McNeil's hit was just the third of the game for the Mets, and possibly could've been caught had Laureano not overrun it. The ball was hit hard down into the right-field corner and Laureano raced to track it down but ran too far and couldn't catch it as he reached his glove back across his body.

 

Jose Iglesias scored from second base, giving New York (54-48) its fourth straight win, and 10th victory in 13 games.

The Braves (54-47), meanwhile, lost their fifth straight game, as the Mets moved within one-half game of them for the NL's top wild-card spot.

McNeil and Francisco Lindor have been leading the charge for New York.

McNeil has driven in six runs in the last four games, and is hitting .417 with four home runs and nine RBIs in seven games since the All-Star break.

Lindor homered for the fifth time in four games, and is batting .359 with 14 RBIs during a 10-game hitting streak.

Atlanta squandered another stellar outing from Chris Sale.

The eight-time All-Star yielded two runs, two hits and a walk while striking out nine over 7 1/3 innings. It marked the eighth straight start in which he allowed two runs or fewer.

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