Good for him though. It's a rare feet. Though, there was almost one a few weeks back too...can't remember who now, but I'm thinking there was an outfield error that kept it from happening.
I went on a 3 week baseball trip in July '99. We went to Yankee Stadium the day before Cone's perfecto and were going to go back the next day but decided to head out of town that day and skip the game. Damn.
Wow, he's had a heck of a month! Got the meet and talk to the President of the United States, AT the All-Star game, then pitches a Perfect Game! Aside from having children, it would be hard to top this month for him. Just wow!
Chicago’s Buehrle Retires 45 Straight Batters to Set MLB Record
July 29 (Bloomberg) -- Mark Buehrle of the Chicago White Sox retired 45 consecutive batters to set a Major League Baseball record.
After throwing the 16th perfect game in the modern era on July 23, Buehrle retired the first 17 Minnesota Twins batters he faced last night to beat by four the mark held by San Francisco Giants pitcher Jim Barr and White Sox teammate Bobby Jenks.
Buehrle beat the old record in the fifth inning and his run ended when he walked Alexi Casilla in the sixth. The 30-year-old left-hander (11-4) was then replaced at the end of the sixth after allowing five runs on as many hits.
“It’s just frustrating after a loss,” Buehrle said after the Twins won 5-3 at the Metrodome in Minneapolis. “It might mean more tomorrow or the next day, once I cool off, but I’m not too happy right now.”
The pitcher’s no-hitter ended when Denard Span singled a line drive to Dewayne Wise in the bottom of the sixth.
Wise preserved Buehrle’s perfect game against the American League champion Tampa Bay Rays when he ran up the wall in left- center field to prevent a home run by Gabe Kapler for the first out of the ninth inning.
Wise’s play helped Buehrle to become the first pitcher since Randy Johnson on May 18, 2004, to retire all 27 batters.
Barr retired 41 batters in 1972 and Jenks duplicated the feat in 2007.
The Twins are “known for being able to hit the ball on the ground and run,” Jenks said, so the record’s “pretty impressive.”
Buehrle’s run began July 18 when Nick Markakis of the Baltimore Orioles was caught in center field.
Minnesota and Chicago, both 51-50, are two games behind American League Central division leader the Detroit Tigers.
To contact the reporter on this story: Nancy Kercheval in Washington at nkercheval@bloomberg.net.
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Folks Who Bite Get Bitten. Folks Who Don't Bite Get Eaten.
Comments
<< <i>And against my Rays
That Wise catch off the bat of Capler saved the perfect game for Buehrle. Your Rays have some heavy hitters, so that was a very impressive perfecto.
Kiss me twice.....let's party.
Steve
I hope he keeps it up.
I had posted this somewhere - found it by accident - probably in demand now?
mike
Chicago’s Buehrle Retires 45 Straight Batters to Set MLB Record
July 29 (Bloomberg) -- Mark Buehrle of the Chicago White Sox retired 45 consecutive batters to set a Major League Baseball record.
After throwing the 16th perfect game in the modern era on July 23, Buehrle retired the first 17 Minnesota Twins batters he faced last night to beat by four the mark held by San Francisco Giants pitcher Jim Barr and White Sox teammate Bobby Jenks.
Buehrle beat the old record in the fifth inning and his run ended when he walked Alexi Casilla in the sixth. The 30-year-old left-hander (11-4) was then replaced at the end of the sixth after allowing five runs on as many hits.
“It’s just frustrating after a loss,” Buehrle said after the Twins won 5-3 at the Metrodome in Minneapolis. “It might mean more tomorrow or the next day, once I cool off, but I’m not too happy right now.”
The pitcher’s no-hitter ended when Denard Span singled a line drive to Dewayne Wise in the bottom of the sixth.
Wise preserved Buehrle’s perfect game against the American League champion Tampa Bay Rays when he ran up the wall in left- center field to prevent a home run by Gabe Kapler for the first out of the ninth inning.
Wise’s play helped Buehrle to become the first pitcher since Randy Johnson on May 18, 2004, to retire all 27 batters.
Barr retired 41 batters in 1972 and Jenks duplicated the feat in 2007.
The Twins are “known for being able to hit the ball on the ground and run,” Jenks said, so the record’s “pretty impressive.”
Buehrle’s run began July 18 when Nick Markakis of the Baltimore Orioles was caught in center field.
Minnesota and Chicago, both 51-50, are two games behind American League Central division leader the Detroit Tigers.
To contact the reporter on this story: Nancy Kercheval in Washington at nkercheval@bloomberg.net.
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