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First Mets No Hitter ever

jack

The Legendary Troll King
For more than 50 years, the New York Mets chased that elusive no-hitter. Johan Santana finally finished the job.

CALLING FOUL

Should Santana's no-no have an asterisk? Watch the play and decide.

Santana pitched the first no-hitter in team history, helped by an umpire's missed call and an outstanding catch in left field in an 8-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals on Friday night.
After a string of close calls over the last five decades, Santana went all the way in the Mets' 8,020th game.
''Finally, the first one,'' he said. ''That is the greatest feeling ever.''
He needed a couple of key assists to pull it off.
Carlos Beltran, back at Citi Field for the first time since the Mets traded him last July, hit a line drive over third base in the sixth inning that hit the foul line and should have been called fair. But third base umpire Adrian Johnson ruled it foul and the no-hitter was intact — even though a replay clearly showed a mark where the ball landed on the chalk line.
''I saw the ball hitting outside the line, just foul,'' Johnson told a pool reporter.
The umpire acknowledged that he saw the replay afterward but declined to comment.

NO MAN'S LAND

It's another "year of the pitcher." See photos from 2012's no-hitters.

''It was in front of his face, and he called it foul. I thought it was a fair ball,'' Beltran said. ''At the end of the day, one hit wasn't going to make a difference in the ballgame. We needed to score more runs and we didn't do that.''
Hometown kid Mike Baxter then made a tremendous catch in left field to rob Yadier Molina of extra bases in the seventh. Baxter crashed into the wall, injured his shoulder and left the game.
Making his 11th start since missing last season after shoulder surgery, Santana (3-2) threw a career-high 134 pitches in his second consecutive shutout. Relying on a sneaky fastball and the baffling changeup that's always been his signature, he struck out eight and walked five.
''Amazing,'' Santana said after tossing the majors' third no-hitter this year. ''Coming into this season I was just hoping to come back and stay healthy and help this team, and now I am in this situation in the greatest city for baseball.''
Before the game, Mets manager Terry Collins said he planned to limit Santana to 110-115 pitches all season.
''I just couldn't take him out,'' a choked-up Collins said afterward.
Born in 1962, the Mets have been built on pitching when they've fielded their best teams. But neither Nolan Ryan, Tom Seaver nor Dwight Gooden could throw a no-hitter for the Mets — though all three are among the seven pitchers who tossed one after leaving the team.













</div></div> </div> Philip Humber is another one. He pitched a perfect game for the Chicago White Sox at Seattle on April 21, and Jered Weaver of the Los Angeles Angels no-hit Minnesota on May 2.
''I'm really happy for them,'' said Boston manager Bobby Valentine, who managed the Mets from 1996-2002. ''That's been an albatross over the pitching in that franchise forever, since '62. One of the best pitchers they've ever had threw it and that also gives credibility to it.''
Following the game, Santana addressed his teammates in the clubhouse. He thanked them and said: ''Yeah, baby! Believe it!''
Santana got a warm ovation as he headed out to the mound for the ninth inning, and the two-time Cy Young Award winner quickly retired Matt Holliday and Allen Craig on shallow fly balls as frenzied fans high-fived each other and captured video of it all on their cell phones.
With the crowd of 27,069 on its feet, World Series MVP David Freese went to a 3-2 count before his foul tip was caught by Josh Thole, just activated from the disabled list earlier in the day.
Santana pumped his left fist and slammed it into his glove as Thole showed the ball to plate umpire Gary Cederstrom and then went running out toward the mound.
''I don't think anybody expected that tonight. Everything came out perfect for him,'' Beltran said. ''It should mean a lot for him after battling last year with the injuries. ... I'm not happy about it, but at the same time he's a good man and I'm happy for him.''

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VIDEO: FAN'S BIG MOMENT

Watch as a Mets fan joins in the revelry of Johan Santana's no-hitter before being tackled by security.

The Mets rushed out of the dugout and mobbed Santana in a raucous dogpile as security tackled a fan who ran onto the field near home plate. Moments later, the pitcher raised his right arm and saluted the crowd, which was chanted his name from the eighth inning on. The big scoreboard in center flashed Santana's picture and read ''No-Han.''
''It was a crazy night — my fastball moving all over the place,'' Santana said. ''I don't think I've ever thrown a no-hitter in video games.''
The Cardinals, the top-hitting team in the NL this season, should have had a hit in the sixth.
Beltran, traded by the Mets to San Francisco last July after 6 1/2 rocky seasons in New York, led off with a low liner over third. Television replays showed the ball nicked the foul line just behind the bag on the dirt, taking a small chunk of chalk with it. But Johnson called it foul immediately and Beltran eventually grounded out.
''It was tough because it happened so quick. I wasn't able to see anything,'' Santana said.
''The umpire made his call and that was the end of it,'' he said.
But with the next batter at the plate, Cardinals third base coach Jose Oquendo twice got in Johnson's face for heated arguments — the two even appeared to bump each other. Rookie manager Mike Matheny also came out to protest, but nobody was ejected.

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2012'S NO-HITTERS




Almost exactly two years ago — on June 2, 2010 — Armando Galarraga lost a perfect game when first base umpire Jim Joyce admittedly blew a call that should've resulted in the final out. The miss in Detroit instead gave Cleveland's Jason Donald a single with two outs in the ninth.
Major League Baseball had considered expanding replay for this season to review fair-or-foul calls and trapped balls. The change required the approval of MLB and the unions representing the umpires and the players — when there was no agreement, extra replay was postponed until at least 2013.
Santana cruised from there into the seventh, when Molina hit a one-out drive to deep left. Baxter, who grew up rooting for the Mets only 10 minutes from where Citi Field stands, raced back and made a terrific catch before crashing full force into the fence.
Baxter stayed down on the warning track as Mets trainers, players and coaches rushed out to him. Santana crouched in the infield with a couple of teammates and then made a few warmup tosses to stay loose.
''When I saw him running back onto the warning track and he made that play, it was amazing. An outstanding play and he saved the game,'' said Santana, traded to the Mets by Minnesota before the 2008 season. ''All these guys, I want to thank them for what we accomplished.''
Baxter walked off the field under his own power, with trainer Ray Ramirez holding the outfielder's left arm because Baxter had no feeling in it. The Mets said Baxter has a bruised left shoulder and was having more tests.
''I'm glad I had a chance to be part of it. It's a great night for the Mets,'' Baxter said.

OH NO-NO!

Get complete coverage of this season's pitching gems.

Lucas Duda hit a three-run homer off Adam Wainwright (4-6) and drove in four runs, tying a career high. Daniel Murphy added three RBI.
The San Diego Padres, who started play in 1969, are now the only team without a no-hitter.
The Mets' seemingly endless pursuit had become something of a famous quest, with at least one website even dedicated to counting off their total number of games without one each day during the season.
The list of pitchers who have thrown no-hitters after leaving the Mets includes Ryan and Seaver, both Hall of Famers, plus Gooden, David Cone, Mike Scott, Hideo Nomo and Humber.
Ryan, in fact, pitched a record seven no-hitters. Now the president of the AL champion Texas Rangers, he's still aware of the Mets' no-hit history — or lack thereof.
''To me, it was phenomenal,'' he said through a team spokesman on the 37th anniversary of a no-hitter he threw for the Angels. ''If you look at the history of their organization and the type of pitching they had at times, plus the fact they had pitchers throw no-hitters with other clubs.''
Seaver came within two outs of a perfect game in 1969 and fell one out shy of a no-hitter in 1975, the previous time a Mets pitcher had made it into the ninth without yielding a hit.
NOTES: Santana's previous career high was 125 pitches. ... It was the eighth no-hitter pitched against St. Louis, which was leading the NL in batting this season, and the first since Fernando Valenzuela for the Los Angeles on June 29, 1990. ... Mets 3B David Wright said in a radio interview on WFAN that he won't talk to the team about a new contract until after the season because he doesn't want his situation to be a distraction for the team. Wright's salary is $15 million this season and New York holds a $16 million option for 2013, which gets voided if he is traded. After that, he can become a free agent. ... Replays showed Cardinals pinch-hitter Shane Robinson was hit on the hand by a pitch in the eighth. He started toward first, but Cederstrom called it a ball.
 
I watched it. I got misty. I'm a happy pappy.

The "asteriskers" can stuff it -- until instant replay is expanded to cover things besides home run calls, dem's da breaks. This ain't a steroid scandal, it happens all the time.

I still can't believe that Tom Seaver, Nolan Ryan, Jon Matlack, Jerry Koosman, Dwight Gooden, Ron Darling, David Cone, Bret Saberhagen, Sid Fernandez, and AL Leiter never threw no-hitters in a Met uniform.
 
I forget the details, but wasn't there a kid who had his first MLB no-hitter taken away a couple years ago by a terrible ref call? IIRC even the ref himself said he blew it, but they didn't reverse it. So screw the asterix; human error is a part of the game. Congrats Mets fans...
 
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Commentary: Santana secures place in Mets lore
The veteran lefty has given this franchise his all, and that now includes a no-hitter

Updated: June 2, 2012, 3:06 AM ET
By Ian O'Connor | ESPNNewYork.com

Video here

Johan Santana was the right man to do it, the right pitcher to deliver a magical moment that escaped more than a half-century's worth of New York Mets. Truth is, he had this no-hitter coming to him since the day he tried to lift the Mets into the playoffs with a torn meniscus in his left knee.

At the end of 2008, his first season with the Mets, Santana declared his historical worthiness on short rest, throwing a three-hit shutout at the Florida Marlins only four days after firing a career-high 125 pitches. He knew his knee was shot when he took the mound that day, and yet his commitment to excellence won out over pure common sense.

It didn't matter that the Mets failed to make the postseason the following day; Santana won just by showing up. He'd endure knee and elbow and shoulder surgeries between then and now, and he'd come back from it all strong enough and tough enough to carry the burdens of a bum-luck franchise Friday night, when he did something Tom Seaver and Doc Gooden and David Cone could not.

He completed a game in the colors of the Mets without surrendering even one single, double, triple or home run.

Santana had never pulled this off, not in the minor leagues, not even in his childhood in Venezuela. "I don't even think I've thrown a no-hitter in video games," Santana said in his postgame news conference at Citi Field.

This was his own video game come to life, and legions of New Yorkers were glued to their TV sets to see if the same left shoulder that cost Santana the entire 2011 season could go the distance against the St. Louis Cardinals.

"They are the world champs," Santana would say. "To talk about a no-hitter coming into this game, no way."

It made no sense, of course it didn't. But this is the way curses and hexes are broken. The Boston Red Sox won it all in 2004 in an absurd show, winning four straight sudden-death games against the New York Yankees, and maybe that was the only way the Red Sox would ever put Babe Ruth's ghost to bed.

The Mets had gone more than 8,000 games without a no-hitter, their surgically repaired starter was supposed to be limited to 110-115 pitches, give or take, and their young catcher, Josh Thole, had just come off the DL. The Cardinals no longer dressed Albert Pujols, but they were still the Cardinals, still the team that had just won it all.

The Cardinals were also the team that denied the Mets a trip to the 2006 World Series, stealing the NLCS at Shea. Adam Wainwright struck out Carlos Beltran looking to end that Game 7, a game won by Yadier Molina's homer. It was fitting that six seasons later, all three assumed leading roles in a night most Mets fans figured they'd never live to see.

Wainwright took the loss. His new teammate, Beltran, lined a ball down the line in the sixth that hit the chalk and should've terminated the no-hit bid, if only an umpire named Adrian Johnson had gotten the call right.

Molina? He sent a deep drive to left in the seventh, one that looked destined to end the madness, and yet Mike Baxter, a Mets fan from Queens, made the team's best catch since Endy Chavez's in that doomed Game 7. Chavez went over the wall at Shea; Baxter nearly crashed through the wall at Citi.

"That's the way Mike's always played," his legendary coach at Archbishop Molloy High, Jack Curran, said Friday night by phone. "It's his nature. He's going to do everything he can to help his team win, and on that catch the wall just got in his way. I hope he's not hurt too badly. He was so happy as a Mets fan to become a Met, and now he's a part of their history."

Santana wrote that history with 134 pitches, a new career high. He wrote that history while his manager, Terry Collins, waged a fierce battle against himself in the dugout, weighing the magnitude of what was unfolding against the well-being of his man.

"I just couldn't take him out," an emotional Collins would say in his news conference. "I just couldn't do it."

Collins said if Santana's arm is hurting in five days, "I'm not going to feel very good." But the manager believes in empowering his players, in giving them a voice, and Santana was ordering his boss to back up and let him finish the job.

"You're my hero," Collins told him in the seventh.

"I'm not coming out of the game," Santana responded.

Santana ended the game on a full-count changeup to a World Series MVP, David Freese, who put a feeble cut on the pitch. The Mets mobbed Santana, sprayed him with champagne, celebrated him as if he'd just seized the championship he came to New York to win.

"To do what he had to do," Collins said, "to have the [shoulder] surgery done and to have people say, 'He's not coming back, his career's over, he'll be just another guy who had surgery.' ...It's an amazing story."

In April, a former Met named Philip Humber threw a perfect game for the Chicago White Sox, the 18th no-hitter in that team's history. At the time, it felt like another practical joke on the Mets; Humber was traded in the deal to obtain Santana.

But Friday night, in the middle of their 51st season, the Mets finally found a pitcher who could make it unscathed from the first inning to the ninth, the five walks be damned. In spring training, Santana said, "We didn't even know if I was going to break camp with the team. We didn't even know if I was going to be ready for Opening Day.

"We've been through a lot of things, but I will never give up."

Santana made that clear at the end of his first season in New York when he pitched a win-or-else classic on one leg. That was the day he introduced himself as a man worthy of ending the drought.

The Mets have been liberated for keeps. So whatever happens over the balance of his career, Santana will be remembered for his resilience, his grit and for a regular-season performance against the St. Louis Cardinals that no $137.5 million contract could buy.

:yes:
 
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