Clayton Kershaw agreed with Los Angeles Dodgers manager Dave Roberts' decision to pull the plug on his potential perfect game after seven innings.
There have only been 23 perfect games thrown in MLB history, and through seven innings in the Dodgers' 7-0 win against the Minnesota Twins, Kershaw had faced 21 batters and retired them all.
But he would be denied his chance at history when he did not return to the mound for the eighth inning, getting pulled to allow the bullpen to finish off the win.
Kershaw, 34, said there were a number of factors to blame for his withdrawal from the game, but not his manager's decision-making.
"Blame it on the lockout, blame it on me not picking up a baseball until January," he said. "My slider was horrible the last two innings. It didn’t have the bite – it was time.
"At the end of the day, those are individual things, those are selfish goals. We’re trying to win. That’s really all we’re here for.
"As much as I would have wanted to do it, I’ve thrown 75 pitches in a [simulated] game. I hadn’t gone six innings, let alone seven.
"Sure, I would have loved to do it, but maybe we get another chance. Who knows?"
Kershaw became only the second player to ever get pulled that late into a perfect game – with Roberts pulling the plug on the first instance too, with Rich Hill in 2016.
Speaking about his decision after the game, Roberts said it was a decision no manager likes to make, but he feels it was the correct call.
"I love the idea that we’re preventing runs in that particular game," he said. "It’s not a great spot as far as the decision, ultimately, that I have to make.
"But I think if I can look back and I feel it’s the best decision – in the best interest of the player’s health and for the ball club – looking out, then I feel good about it.
"But those guys make it tough on me – but we have good players.
"[Kershaw is] pretty honest and understanding of where he was at, how he was feeling, what’s at stake – the win, the no-hitter, the potential health risk, all that stuff matters.
"There’s no right, 100 per cent answer, but in this case I felt it was very clear to me the right decision was."