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List of Major League Baseball no-hitters

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the Negro Major League pitchers who have completed this feat, seeList of Negro league baseball no-hitters.
Nolan Ryan threw seven no-hitters in MLB, the most of any pitcher.

Below is alist of Major League Baseball no-hitters, enumerating everyno-hitter pitched inMajor League Baseballhistory. The list also includes no-hit games that were broken up in extra innings or were in shortened games, although they have not been considered official no-hitters since 1991.

Through the 2025 season, there have been 326 no-hitters recognized by Major League Baseball (MLB): 43 before the formation of theAmerican League in 1901, and the rest in the modern era. Three other games are also noted: one in 1875 byJoe Borden that is accepted as a no-hitter in theNational Association butnot as a major league game, one in 1876 by Borden that is disputed and not recognized by MLB, and one in 1901 byPete Dowling that is also disputed and not recognized by MLB. The first no-hitter officially recognized by MLB was pitched byGeorge Bradley on July 15, 1876, during the first season of play in theNational League. The most recent major league no-hitter was thrown byChicago Cubs pitchersShota Imanaga,Nate Pearson, andPorter Hodge against thePittsburgh Pirates on September 4, 2024.

Background

[edit]
Johnny Vander Meer pitched the only consecutive no-hitters in MLB history.

An official no-hit game occurs inMajor League Baseball (MLB) when a pitcher (or pitchers) allows no hits during the entire course of a game, which consists of at least nine innings thrown by the pitcher(s). By definition, aperfect game is also a no-hitter, as no batters reach base (thus there are no hits allowed). In a no-hit game, a batter may still reach base via awalk, anerror, a fielder's choice, an intentional walk, ahit by pitch, apassed ball or wild pitch on strike three, orcatcher's interference.[1] Also, due to these methods of reaching base, it is possible for a team to score runs without getting any hits.

While the vast majority of no-hitters are shutouts, no-hit teams have managed to score runs in their respective games 25 times. Seven times a team has been no-hit and still won the game: two notable victories occurred when theCincinnati Reds defeated theHouston Colt .45s (now called the Houston Astros) 1–0 on April 23, 1964, even though they were no-hit by Houston starterKen Johnson, and theDetroit Tigers defeated theBaltimore Orioles 2–1 on April 30, 1967, even though they were no-hit by Baltimore starterSteve Barber and relieverStu Miller. In another five games, the winning team won despite gaining no hits through eight innings (not needing to play the bottom half of the ninth inning), but these arenear no-hitters under the 1991 rule that nine no-hit innings must be completed in order for a no-hitter to be credited.

The pitcher who holds the record for the shortest time between no-hitters isJohnny Vander Meer, the only pitcher in MLB history to throw no-hitters in consecutive starts, while playing for the Cincinnati Reds in 1938. Besides Vander Meer,Allie Reynolds (in 1951),Virgil Trucks (in 1952),Nolan Ryan (in 1973), andMax Scherzer (in 2015) are the only other major leaguers to throw two no-hitters in the same regular season.Jim Maloney technically threw two no-hitters in the 1965 season, but his first one ended after he allowed a home run in the top of the 11th inning. According to the rules interpretation of the time, this was considered a no-hitter. Later that season, Maloney once again took a no-hitter into extra innings, but this time he managed to preserve the no-hitter after the Reds scored in the top half of the tenth, becoming the first pitcher to throw a complete game extra inning no-hitter since Fred Toney in 1917.[2]Roy Halladay threw two no-hitters in 2010: a perfect game during the regular season and a no-hitter in the2010 National League Division Series. He is the only major leaguer to have thrown no-hitters in regular season and postseason play.

Ryan holds the record for most no-hitters in a career, with seven.Sandy Koufax is second on the list with four no-hitters.

The first black pitcher to toss a no-hitter wasSam Jones who did it for theChicago Cubs in 1955. The first Latin pitcher to throw one wasSan Francisco GiantJuan Marichal in 1963. The first Asian pitcher to throw one wasLos Angeles DodgerHideo Nomo in 1996.

The most recent MLB season completed without a no-hitter was 2025.[notes 1]

Regulation no-hitters

[edit]

The names ofpitchers who threw aperfect game areitalicized. For combined no-hitters by two or more pitchers on the same team, each is listed with his number of innings pitched. Games that were part of adoubleheader are noted as either the first game or second game.

Key

[edit]
Key
ItalicsPerfect game
N/ANot Applicable
RSRuns scored
RARuns allowed
IPInnings pitched
Elected to theBaseball Hall of Fame
Denotes player who is still active
^Team who threw no-hitter lost the game
§Indicates game pitched in thepostseason
Leagues
NLNational League
ALAmerican League
FLFederal League
PLPlayers' League
UAUnion Association
AAAmerican Association
NANational Association
WSWorld Series
InterInterleague play
George Bradley, credited with the first official MLB no-hitter

No-hitters

[edit]
No-hitters
#DatePitcherTeamRSOpponentRALeagueCatcherNotes
July 28, 1875Joe BordenPhiladelphia White Stockings4Chicago White Stockings0NAPop Snyder[3][notes 2]
May 23, 1876Joe BordenBoston Red Caps8Cincinnati Reds0NLJohn Morrill[notes 3]
1July 15, 1876George BradleySt. Louis Brown Stockings2Hartford Dark Blues0NLJohn Clapp[4]
2June 12, 1880Lee RichmondWorcester Worcesters1Cleveland Blues0NLCharlie Bennett[5]
3June 17, 1880John Montgomery WardProvidence Grays5Buffalo Bisons0NLEmil Gross[6]
4August 19, 1880Larry Corcoran(1)Chicago White Stockings6Boston Red Caps0NLSilver Flint(? IP)(1)
King Kelly(? IP)(1)
[3]
5August 20, 1880Pud Galvin(1)Buffalo Bisons1Worcester Worcesters0NLJack Rowe(1)[3]
6September 11, 1882Tony MullaneLouisville Eclipse2Cincinnati Red Stockings0AADan Sullivan(1)[3]
7September 19, 1882Guy HeckerLouisville Eclipse3Pittsburgh Alleghenys1AADan Sullivan(2)[3]
8September 20, 1882Larry Corcoran(2)Chicago White Stockings5Worcester Worcesters0NLSilver Flint(2)[3]
9July 25, 1883Charles RadbournProvidence Grays8Cleveland Blues0NLBarney Gilligan[3]
10September 13, 1883Hugh DailyCleveland Blues1Philadelphia Phillies0NLDoc Bushong[3]
11May 24, 1884Al Atkinson(1)Philadelphia Athletics10Pittsburgh Alleghenys1AAJocko Milligan[3]
12May 29, 1884Ed MorrisColumbus Buckeyes5Pittsburgh Alleghenys0AARudy Kemmler(1)[3]
13June 5, 1884Frank MountainColumbus Buckeyes12Washington Nationals0AARudy Kemmler(2)[3]
14June 27, 1884Larry Corcoran(3)Chicago White Stockings6Providence Grays0NLKing Kelly(2)[3]
15August 4, 1884Pud Galvin(2)Buffalo Bisons18Detroit Wolverines0NLJack Rowe(2)[3]
16August 26, 1884Dick BurnsCincinnati Outlaw Reds3Kansas City Unions1UAJoe Crotty[3]
17September 28, 1884Ed CushmanMilwaukee Brewers5Washington Nationals0UACal Broughton[3]
18October 4, 1884Sam KimberBrooklyn Atlantics0Toledo Blue Stockings0AAJack Corcoran[7][notes 4]
19July 27, 1885John ClarksonChicago White Stockings4Providence Grays0NLSilver Flint(3)[8]
20August 29, 1885Charlie FergusonPhiladelphia Phillies1Providence Grays0NLCharlie Ganzel(1)[9]
21May 1, 1886Al Atkinson(2)Philadelphia Athletics3New York Metropolitans2AAJack O'Brien[10]
22July 24, 1886Adonis Terry(1)Brooklyn Grays1St. Louis Browns0AAJimmy Peoples(1)[11]
23October 6, 1886Matt KilroyBaltimore Orioles6Pittsburgh Alleghenys0AATom Dolan[3]
24May 27, 1888Adonis Terry(2)Brooklyn Bridegrooms4Louisville Colonels0AAJimmy Peoples(2)[12]
25June 6, 1888Henry PorterKansas City Cowboys4Baltimore Orioles0AALaw Daniels[3]
26July 26, 1888Ed SewardPhiladelphia Athletics12Cincinnati Red Stockings2AAWilbert Robinson(1)[13]
27July 31, 1888Gus WeyhingPhiladelphia Athletics4Kansas City Cowboys0AAGeorge Townsend[14]
28September 15, 1890Ledell TitcombRochester Broncos7Syracuse Stars0AAJohn Grim[15]
29June 22, 1891Tom LovettBrooklyn Grooms4New York Giants0NLCon Daily[16]
30July 31, 1891Amos RusieNew York Giants6Brooklyn Grooms0NLDick Buckley[17][notes 5]
31October 4, 1891Ted Breitenstein(1)St. Louis Browns8Louisville Colonels0AAJohn Munyan[18][notes 6]
32August 6, 1892Jack StivettsBoston Beaneaters11Brooklyn Grooms0NLCharlie Ganzel(2)[19]
33August 22, 1892Ben SandersLouisville Colonels6Baltimore Orioles2NLBill Merritt[20]
34October 15, 1892Bumpus JonesCincinnati Reds7Pittsburgh Pirates1NLFarmer Vaughn[21][notes 7]
35August 16, 1893Bill HawkeBaltimore Orioles5Washington Senators0NLWilbert Robinson(2)[22][notes 8]
36September 18, 1897Cy Young(1)Cleveland Spiders6Cincinnati Reds0NLChief Zimmer(1)[23][notes 9]
37April 22, 1898Ted Breitenstein(2)Cincinnati Reds11Pittsburgh Pirates0NLHeinie Peitz(1)[24][notes 10]
38April 22, 1898Jay HughesBaltimore Orioles8Boston Beaneaters0NLBoileryard Clarke[24][notes 11]
39July 8, 1898Red DonahuePhiladelphia Phillies5Boston Beaneaters0NLEd McFarland(1)[25]
40August 21, 1898Walter ThorntonChicago Orphans2Brooklyn Bridegrooms0NLTim Donahue[26][notes 12]
41May 25, 1899Deacon PhillippeLouisville Colonels7New York Giants0NLMalachi Kittridge[27]
42August 7, 1899Vic WillisBoston Beaneaters7Washington Senators1NLMarty Bergen[28]
43July 12, 1900Noodles HahnCincinnati Reds4Philadelphia Phillies0NLHeinie Peitz(2)[29]
June 30, 1901Pete DowlingCleveland Blues7Milwaukee Brewers0ALGeorge Yeager[30][notes 13]
44July 15, 1901Christy Mathewson(1)New York Giants5St. Louis Cardinals0NLJack Warner[35]
45September 20, 1902Nixey CallahanChicago White Sox3Detroit Tigers0ALEd McFarland(2)[36][notes 9]
46September 18, 1903Chick FraserPhiladelphia Phillies10Chicago Cubs0NLChief Zimmer(2)[37][notes 12]
47May 5, 1904Cy Young(2)Boston Americans3Philadelphia Athletics0ALLou Criger(1)[38][notes 14]
48August 17, 1904Jesse TannehillBoston Americans6Chicago White Sox0ALDuke Farrell[39][notes 15]
49June 13, 1905Christy Mathewson(2)New York Giants1Chicago Cubs0NLFrank Bowerman[40][notes 16]
50July 22, 1905Weldon HenleyPhiladelphia Athletics6St. Louis Browns0ALHarry Barton[41][notes 9]
51September 6, 1905Frank Smith(1)Chicago White Sox15Detroit Tigers0ALEd McFarland(3)[42][notes 17]
52September 27, 1905Bill DinneenBoston Americans2Chicago White Sox0ALLou Criger(2)[notes 18]
53May 1, 1906Johnny LushPhiladelphia Phillies6Brooklyn Superbas0NLRed Dooin[43][notes 19]
54July 20, 1906Mal EasonBrooklyn Superbas2St. Louis Cardinals0NLLew Ritter[44][notes 20]
55May 8, 1907Big Jeff PfefferBoston Doves6Cincinnati Reds0NLSam Brown[45]
56September 20, 1907Nick MaddoxPittsburgh Pirates2Brooklyn Superbas1NLGeorge Gibson[46][notes 21]
57June 30, 1908Cy Young(3)Boston Red Sox8New York Highlanders0ALLou Criger(3)[47][notes 22]
58July 4, 1908Hooks WiltseNew York Giants1Philadelphia Phillies0NLRoger Bresnahan[48][notes 23]
59September 5, 1908Nap RuckerBrooklyn Superbas6Boston Doves0NLBill Bergen[49][notes 12]
60September 18, 1908Bob RhoadsCleveland Naps2Boston Red Sox1ALHarry Bemis[50]
61September 20, 1908Frank Smith(2)Chicago White Sox1Philadelphia Athletics0ALBilly Sullivan[51]
62October 2, 1908Addie Joss(1)Cleveland Naps1Chicago White Sox0ALNig Clarke(1)[52]
63April 20, 1910Addie Joss(2)Cleveland Naps1Chicago White Sox0ALNig Clarke(2)[53][notes 24]
64May 12, 1910Chief BenderPhiladelphia Athletics4Cleveland Naps0ALIra Thomas[54]
65July 29, 1911Smoky Joe WoodBoston Red Sox5St. Louis Browns0ALBill Carrigan(1)[55][notes 25]
66August 27, 1911Ed WalshChicago White Sox5Boston Red Sox0ALBruno Block[56]
67July 4, 1912George MullinDetroit Tigers7St. Louis Browns0ALOscar Stanage[57][notes 12]
68August 30, 1912Earl HamiltonSt. Louis Browns5Detroit Tigers1ALWalt Alexander[58][notes 26]
69September 6, 1912Jeff TesreauNew York Giants3Philadelphia Phillies0NLArt Wilson(1)[59][notes 9]
70May 31, 1914Joe BenzChicago White Sox6Cleveland Naps1ALRay Schalk(1)[60][notes 27]
71September 9, 1914Iron DavisBoston Braves7Philadelphia Phillies0NLHank Gowdy[61][notes 28]
72September 19, 1914Ed LafitteBrooklyn Tip-Tops6Kansas City Packers2FLYip Owens[62][notes 9]
73April 15, 1915Rube MarquardNew York Giants2Brooklyn Robins0NLChief Meyers[63]
74April 24, 1915Frank AllenPittsburgh Rebels2St. Louis Terriers0FLClaude Berry[64]
75May 15, 1915Claude HendrixChicago Chi-Feds/Whales10Pittsburgh Rebels0FLArt Wilson(2)[65]
76August 16, 1915Alex MainKansas City Packers5Buffalo Buffeds/Blues0FLTed Easterly[66]
77August 31, 1915Jimmy LavenderChicago Cubs2New York Giants0NLJimmy Archer[67][notes 9]
78September 7, 1915Dave DavenportSt. Louis Terriers3Chicago Chi-Feds/Whales0FLGrover Hartley[68]
79June 16, 1916Tom L. HughesBoston Braves2Pittsburgh Pirates0NLWalt Tragesser
80June 21, 1916Rube FosterBoston Red Sox2New York Yankees0ALBill Carrigan(2)[69]
81August 26, 1916Bullet Joe BushPhiladelphia Athletics5Cleveland Indians0ALVal Picinich(1)[notes 29]
82August 30, 1916Dutch Leonard(1)Boston Red Sox4St. Louis Browns0ALBill Carrigan(3)[70]
83April 14, 1917Eddie CicotteChicago White Sox11St. Louis Browns0ALRay Schalk(2)
84April 24, 1917George MogridgeNew York Yankees2Boston Red Sox1ALLes Nunamaker
85May 2, 1917Fred ToneyCincinnati Reds1Chicago Cubs0NLEmil Huhn[notes 30]
86May 5, 1917Ernie KoobSt. Louis Browns1Chicago White Sox0ALHank Severeid(1)
87May 6, 1917Bob GroomSt. Louis Browns3Chicago White Sox0ALHank Severeid(2)[notes 31]
88June 23, 1917Babe Ruth(0 IP)
Ernie Shore(9 IP)
Boston Red Sox4Washington Senators0ALPinch Thomas(0 IP)
Sam Agnew(9 IP)
[notes 32]
89June 3, 1918Dutch Leonard(2)Boston Red Sox5Detroit Tigers0ALWally Schang
90May 11, 1919Hod EllerCincinnati Reds6St. Louis Cardinals0NLBill Rariden
91September 10, 1919Ray CaldwellCleveland Indians3New York Yankees0ALSteve O'Neill[notes 33]
92July 1, 1920Walter JohnsonWashington Senators1Boston Red Sox0ALVal Picinich(2)[notes 34]
93April 30, 1922Charlie RobertsonChicago White Sox2Detroit Tigers0ALRay Schalk(3)
94May 7, 1922Jesse BarnesNew York Giants6Philadelphia Phillies0NLEarl Smith
95September 4, 1923Sad Sam JonesNew York Yankees2Philadelphia Athletics0ALFred Hofmann[notes 35]
96September 7, 1923Howard EhmkeBoston Red Sox4Philadelphia Athletics0ALVal Picinich(3)[notes 36]
97July 17, 1924Jesse HainesSt. Louis Cardinals5Boston Braves0NLMike González[notes 37]
98September 13, 1925Dazzy VanceBrooklyn Robins10Philadelphia Phillies1NLHank DeBerry[notes 38]
99August 21, 1926Ted LyonsChicago White Sox6Boston Red Sox0ALJohnny Grabowski
100May 8, 1929Carl HubbellNew York Giants11Pittsburgh Pirates0NLBob O'Farrell
101April 29, 1931Wes FerrellCleveland Indians9St. Louis Browns0ALLuke Sewell(1)[notes 39]
102August 8, 1931Bobby BurkeWashington Senators5Boston Red Sox0ALRoy Spencer[notes 40]
103September 21, 1934Paul DeanSt. Louis Cardinals3Brooklyn Dodgers0NLBill DeLancey[notes 41]
104August 31, 1935Vern KennedyChicago White Sox5Cleveland Indians0ALLuke Sewell(2)[notes 42]
105June 1, 1937Bill DietrichChicago White Sox8St. Louis Browns0ALLuke Sewell(3)
106June 11, 1938Johnny Vander Meer(1)Cincinnati Reds3Boston Bees0NLErnie Lombardi(1)[notes 43]
107June 15, 1938Johnny Vander Meer(2)Cincinnati Reds6Brooklyn Dodgers0NLErnie Lombardi(2)[notes 44]
108August 27, 1938Monte PearsonNew York Yankees13Cleveland Indians0ALJoe Glenn[notes 45]
109April 16, 1940Bob Feller(1)Cleveland Indians1Chicago White Sox0ALRollie Hemsley[notes 46]
110April 30, 1940Tex CarletonBrooklyn Dodgers3Cincinnati Reds0NLHerman Franks
111August 30, 1941Lon WarnekeSt. Louis Cardinals2Cincinnati Reds0NLWalker Cooper(1)
112April 27, 1944Jim TobinBoston Braves2Brooklyn Dodgers0NLPhil Masi[notes 47]
113May 15, 1944Clyde ShounCincinnati Reds1Boston Braves0NLRay Mueller[notes 48]
114September 9, 1945Dick FowlerPhiladelphia Athletics1St. Louis Browns0ALBuddy Rosar(1)[notes 49]
115April 23, 1946Ed HeadBrooklyn Dodgers5Boston Braves0NLFerrell Anderson
116April 30, 1946Bob Feller(2)Cleveland Indians1New York Yankees0ALFrankie Hayes
117June 18, 1947Ewell BlackwellCincinnati Reds6Boston Braves0NLRay Lamanno[notes 50]
118July 10, 1947Don BlackCleveland Indians3Philadelphia Athletics0ALJim Hegan(1)[notes 9]
119September 3, 1947Bill McCahanPhiladelphia Athletics3Washington Senators0ALBuddy Rosar(2)[notes 51]
120June 30, 1948Bob LemonCleveland Indians2Detroit Tigers0ALJim Hegan(2)
121September 9, 1948Rex BarneyBrooklyn Dodgers2New York Giants0NLBruce Edwards
122August 11, 1950Vern BickfordBoston Braves7Brooklyn Dodgers0NLWalker Cooper(2)
123May 6, 1951Cliff ChambersPittsburgh Pirates3Boston Braves0NLEd Fitz Gerald[notes 12]
124July 1, 1951Bob Feller(3)Cleveland Indians2Detroit Tigers1ALJim Hegan(3)[notes 9]
125July 12, 1951Allie Reynolds(1)New York Yankees1Cleveland Indians0ALYogi Berra(1)
126September 28, 1951Allie Reynolds(2)New York Yankees8Boston Red Sox0ALYogi Berra(2)[notes 52]
127May 15, 1952Virgil Trucks(1)Detroit Tigers1Washington Senators0ALJoe Ginsberg[notes 53]
128June 19, 1952Carl Erskine(1)Brooklyn Dodgers5Chicago Cubs0NLRoy Campanella(1)
129August 25, 1952Virgil Trucks(2)Detroit Tigers1New York Yankees0ALMatt Batts[notes 54]
130May 6, 1953Bobo HollomanSt. Louis Browns6Philadelphia Athletics0ALLes Moss[notes 55]
131June 12, 1954Jim WilsonMilwaukee Braves2Philadelphia Phillies0NLDel Crandall(1)
132May 12, 1955Sam JonesChicago Cubs4Pittsburgh Pirates0NLClyde McCullough[notes 56]
133May 12, 1956Carl Erskine(2)Brooklyn Dodgers3New York Giants0NLRoy Campanella(2)
134July 14, 1956Mel ParnellBoston Red Sox4Chicago White Sox0ALSammy White
135September 25, 1956Sal MaglieBrooklyn Dodgers5Philadelphia Phillies0NLRoy Campanella(3)[notes 57]
136October 8, 1956 §Don LarsenNew York Yankees (AL)2Brooklyn Dodgers (NL)0WSYogi Berra(3)[notes 58]
137August 20, 1957Bob KeeganChicago White Sox6Washington Senators0ALSherm Lollar[notes 12]
138July 20, 1958Jim Bunning(1)Detroit Tigers3Boston Red Sox0ALRed Wilson[notes 9]
139September 20, 1958Hoyt WilhelmBaltimore Orioles1New York Yankees0ALGus Triandos(1)[notes 59]
140May 15, 1960Don CardwellChicago Cubs4St. Louis Cardinals0NLDel Rice[notes 60]
141August 18, 1960Lew BurdetteMilwaukee Braves1Philadelphia Phillies0NLDel Crandall(2)[notes 61]
142September 16, 1960Warren Spahn(1)Milwaukee Braves4Philadelphia Phillies0NLDel Crandall(3)[notes 62]
143April 28, 1961Warren Spahn(2)Milwaukee Braves1San Francisco Giants0NLCharley Lau[notes 63]
144May 5, 1962Bo BelinskyLos Angeles Angels2Baltimore Orioles0ALBuck Rodgers[notes 64]
145June 26, 1962Earl WilsonBoston Red Sox2Los Angeles Angels0ALBob Tillman(1)[notes 65]
146June 30, 1962Sandy Koufax(1)Los Angeles Dodgers5New York Mets0NLJohn Roseboro(1)[notes 66]
147August 1, 1962Bill MonbouquetteBoston Red Sox1Chicago White Sox0ALJim Pagliaroni(1)
148August 26, 1962Jack KralickMinnesota Twins1Kansas City Athletics0ALEarl Battey[notes 67]
149May 11, 1963Sandy Koufax(2)Los Angeles Dodgers8San Francisco Giants0NLJohn Roseboro(2)[notes 68]
150May 17, 1963Don NottebartHouston Colt .45s4Philadelphia Phillies1NLJohn Bateman(1)
151June 15, 1963Juan MarichalSan Francisco Giants1Houston Colt .45s0NLEd Bailey[notes 69]
152April 23, 1964Ken JohnsonHouston Colt .45s0^Cincinnati Reds1NLJerry Grote[notes 70]
153June 4, 1964Sandy Koufax(3)Los Angeles Dodgers3Philadelphia Phillies0NLDoug Camilli[notes 71]
154June 21, 1964Jim Bunning(2)Philadelphia Phillies6New York Mets0NLGus Triandos(2)[notes 72]
155August 19, 1965Jim Maloney(1)Cincinnati Reds1Chicago Cubs0NLJohnny Edwards(1)[notes 73]
156September 9, 1965Sandy Koufax(4)Los Angeles Dodgers1Chicago Cubs0NLJeff Torborg(1)[notes 74]
157September 16, 1965Dave MoreheadBoston Red Sox2Cleveland Indians0ALBob Tillman(2)[notes 75]
158June 10, 1966Sonny SiebertCleveland Indians2Washington Senators0ALJoe Azcue(1)
159April 30, 1967Steve Barber(8⅔ IP)
Stu Miller(⅓ IP)
Baltimore Orioles1^Detroit Tigers2ALAndy Etchebarren(8 IP)
Larry Haney(1 IP)
[notes 76]
160June 18, 1967Don Wilson(1)Houston Astros2Atlanta Braves0NLDave Adlesh[notes 77]
161August 25, 1967Dean ChanceMinnesota Twins2Cleveland Indians1ALJerry Zimmerman[notes 12]
162September 10, 1967Joel HorlenChicago White Sox6Detroit Tigers0ALJ. C. Martin[notes 78]
163April 27, 1968Tom PhoebusBaltimore Orioles6Boston Red Sox0ALCurt Blefary
164May 8, 1968Catfish HunterOakland Athletics4Minnesota Twins0ALJim Pagliaroni(2)[notes 79]
165July 29, 1968George CulverCincinnati Reds6Philadelphia Phillies1NLPat Corrales[notes 12]
166September 17, 1968Gaylord PerrySan Francisco Giants1St. Louis Cardinals0NLDick Dietz[notes 80]
167September 18, 1968Ray WashburnSt. Louis Cardinals2San Francisco Giants0NLJohnny Edwards(2)[notes 81]
168April 17, 1969Bill Stoneman(1)Montreal Expos7Philadelphia Phillies0NLJohn Bateman(2)[notes 82]
169April 30, 1969Jim Maloney(2)Cincinnati Reds10Houston Astros0NLJohnny Bench[notes 83]
170May 1, 1969Don Wilson(2)Houston Astros4Cincinnati Reds0NLDon Bryant[notes 84]
171August 13, 1969Jim PalmerBaltimore Orioles8Oakland Athletics0ALEllie Hendricks[notes 85]
172August 19, 1969Ken Holtzman(1)Chicago Cubs3Atlanta Braves0NLBill Heath(7⅔ IP)
Gene Oliver(1⅓ IP)
[notes 86]
173September 20, 1969Bob MoosePittsburgh Pirates4New York Mets0NLManny Sanguillén[notes 87]
174June 12, 1970Dock EllisPittsburgh Pirates2San Diego Padres0NLJerry May[notes 88]
175July 3, 1970Clyde WrightCalifornia Angels4Oakland Athletics0ALJoe Azcue(2)[notes 89]
176July 20, 1970Bill SingerLos Angeles Dodgers5Philadelphia Phillies0NLJeff Torborg(2)[notes 90]
177September 21, 1970Vida BlueOakland Athletics6Minnesota Twins0ALGene Tenace(1)[notes 91]
178June 3, 1971Ken Holtzman(2)Chicago Cubs1Cincinnati Reds0NLDanny Breeden[notes 92]
179June 23, 1971Rick WisePhiladelphia Phillies4Cincinnati Reds0NLTim McCarver(1)[notes 93]
180August 14, 1971Bob GibsonSt. Louis Cardinals11Pittsburgh Pirates0NLTed Simmons(1)[notes 94]
181April 16, 1972Burt HootonChicago Cubs4Philadelphia Phillies0NLRandy Hundley(1)[notes 95]
182September 2, 1972Milt PappasChicago Cubs8San Diego Padres0NLRandy Hundley(2)[notes 96]
183October 2, 1972Bill Stoneman(2)Montreal Expos7New York Mets0NLTim McCarver(2)[notes 97]
184April 27, 1973Steve Busby(1)Kansas City Royals3Detroit Tigers0ALFran Healy(1)[notes 98]
185May 15, 1973Nolan Ryan(1)California Angels3Kansas City Royals0ALJeff Torborg(3)
186July 15, 1973Nolan Ryan(2)California Angels6Detroit Tigers0ALArt Kusnyer[notes 99]
187July 30, 1973Jim BibbyTexas Rangers6Oakland Athletics0ALDick Billings
188August 5, 1973Phil NiekroAtlanta Braves9San Diego Padres0NLPaul Casanova
189June 19, 1974Steve Busby(2)Kansas City Royals2Milwaukee Brewers0ALFran Healy(2)[notes 100]
190July 19, 1974Dick BosmanCleveland Indians4Oakland Athletics0ALJohn Ellis[notes 101]
191September 28, 1974Nolan Ryan(3)California Angels4Minnesota Twins0ALTom Egan
192June 1, 1975Nolan Ryan(4)California Angels1Baltimore Orioles0ALEllie Rodríguez
193August 24, 1975Ed HalickiSan Francisco Giants6New York Mets0NLDave Rader[notes 12]
194September 28, 1975Vida Blue(5 IP)
Glenn Abbott(1 IP)
Paul Lindblad(1 IP)
Rollie Fingers(2 IP)
Oakland Athletics5California Angels0ALGene Tenace(2)(6 IP)
Ray Fosse(1)(3 IP)
[notes 102]
195July 9, 1976Larry DierkerHouston Astros6Montreal Expos0NLEd Herrmann[notes 103]
196July 28, 1976Blue Moon Odom(5 IP)
Francisco Barrios(4 IP)
Chicago White Sox2Oakland Athletics1ALJim Essian[notes 104]
197August 9, 1976John CandelariaPittsburgh Pirates2Los Angeles Dodgers0NLDuffy Dyer[notes 105]
198September 29, 1976John MontefuscoSan Francisco Giants9Atlanta Braves0NLGary Alexander
199May 14, 1977Jim ColbornKansas City Royals6Texas Rangers0ALDarrell Porter(1)
200May 30, 1977Dennis EckersleyCleveland Indians1California Angels0ALRay Fosse(2)[notes 106]
201September 22, 1977Bert BlylevenTexas Rangers6California Angels0ALJim Sundberg[notes 107]
202April 16, 1978Bob Forsch(1)St. Louis Cardinals5Philadelphia Phillies0NLTed Simmons(2)[notes 108]
203June 16, 1978Tom SeaverCincinnati Reds4St. Louis Cardinals0NLDon Werner[notes 109]
204April 7, 1979Ken ForschHouston Astros6Atlanta Braves0NLAlan Ashby(1)[notes 110]
205June 27, 1980Jerry ReussLos Angeles Dodgers8San Francisco Giants0NLSteve Yeager[notes 111]
206May 10, 1981Charlie LeaMontreal Expos4San Francisco Giants0NLGary Carter[notes 112]
207May 15, 1981Len BarkerCleveland Indians3Toronto Blue Jays0ALRon Hassey(1)[notes 113]
208September 26, 1981Nolan Ryan(5)Houston Astros5Los Angeles Dodgers0NLAlan Ashby(2)[notes 114]
209July 4, 1983Dave RighettiNew York Yankees4Boston Red Sox0ALButch Wynegar[notes 115]
210September 26, 1983Bob Forsch(2)St. Louis Cardinals3Montreal Expos0NLDarrell Porter(2)[notes 116]
211September 29, 1983Mike WarrenOakland Athletics3Chicago White Sox0ALMike Heath[notes 117]
212April 7, 1984Jack MorrisDetroit Tigers4Chicago White Sox0ALLance Parrish(1)[notes 118]
213September 30, 1984Mike WittCalifornia Angels1Texas Rangers0ALBob Boone[notes 119]
214September 19, 1986Joe CowleyChicago White Sox7California Angels1ALRon Karkovice(1)[notes 120]
215September 25, 1986Mike ScottHouston Astros2San Francisco Giants0NLAlan Ashby(3)[notes 121]
216April 15, 1987Juan NievesMilwaukee Brewers7Baltimore Orioles0ALBill Schroeder[notes 122]
217September 16, 1988Tom BrowningCincinnati Reds1Los Angeles Dodgers0NLJeff Reed[notes 123]
218April 11, 1990Mark Langston(7 IP)
Mike Witt(2 IP)
California Angels1Seattle Mariners0ALLance Parrish(2)[notes 124]
219June 2, 1990Randy Johnson(1)Seattle Mariners2Detroit Tigers0ALScott Bradley[notes 125]
220June 11, 1990Nolan Ryan(6)Texas Rangers5Oakland Athletics0ALJohn Russell
221June 29, 1990Dave StewartOakland Athletics5Toronto Blue Jays0ALTerry Steinbach(1)[notes 126]
222June 29, 1990Fernando ValenzuelaLos Angeles Dodgers6St. Louis Cardinals0NLMike Scioscia(1)[notes 11][notes 127]
223August 15, 1990Terry MulhollandPhiladelphia Phillies6San Francisco Giants0NLDarren Daulton[notes 128]
224September 2, 1990Dave StiebToronto Blue Jays3Cleveland Indians0ALPat Borders[notes 129]
225May 1, 1991Nolan Ryan(7)Texas Rangers3Toronto Blue Jays0ALMike Stanley[notes 130]
226May 23, 1991Tommy GreenePhiladelphia Phillies2Montreal Expos0NLDarrin Fletcher[notes 131]
227July 13, 1991Bob Milacki(6 IP)
Mike Flanagan(1 IP)
Mark Williamson(1 IP)
Gregg Olson(1 IP)
Baltimore Orioles2Oakland Athletics0ALChris Hoiles[notes 132]
228July 28, 1991Dennis MartínezMontreal Expos2Los Angeles Dodgers0NLRon Hassey(2)[notes 133]
229August 11, 1991Wilson ÁlvarezChicago White Sox7Baltimore Orioles0ALRon Karkovice(2)[notes 134]
230August 26, 1991Bret SaberhagenKansas City Royals7Chicago White Sox0ALBrent Mayne[notes 135]
231September 11, 1991Kent Mercker(6 IP)
Mark Wohlers(2 IP)
Alejandro Peña(1 IP)
Atlanta Braves1San Diego Padres0NLGreg Olson[notes 136]
232August 17, 1992Kevin GrossLos Angeles Dodgers2San Francisco Giants0NLMike Scioscia(2)
233April 22, 1993Chris BosioSeattle Mariners2Boston Red Sox0ALDave Valle[notes 137]
234September 4, 1993Jim AbbottNew York Yankees4Cleveland Indians0ALMatt Nokes[notes 138]
235September 8, 1993Darryl KileHouston Astros7New York Mets1NLScott Servais(1)[notes 139]
236April 8, 1994Kent MerckerAtlanta Braves6Los Angeles Dodgers0NLJavy Lopez
237April 27, 1994Scott EricksonMinnesota Twins6Milwaukee Brewers0ALMatt Walbeck
238July 28, 1994Kenny RogersTexas Rangers4California Angels0ALIván Rodríguez(1)[notes 140]
239July 14, 1995Ramón MartínezLos Angeles Dodgers7Florida Marlins0NLMike Piazza(1)[notes 141]
240May 11, 1996Al LeiterFlorida Marlins11Colorado Rockies0NLCharles Johnson(1)[notes 142]
241May 14, 1996Dwight GoodenNew York Yankees2Seattle Mariners0ALJoe Girardi(1)[notes 143]
242September 17, 1996Hideo Nomo(1)Los Angeles Dodgers9Colorado Rockies0NLMike Piazza(2)[notes 144]
243June 10, 1997Kevin BrownFlorida Marlins9San Francisco Giants0NLCharles Johnson(2)[notes 145]
244July 12, 1997Francisco Córdova(9 IP)
Ricardo Rincón(1 IP)
Pittsburgh Pirates3Houston Astros0NLJason Kendall[notes 146]
245May 17, 1998David WellsNew York Yankees4Minnesota Twins0ALJorge Posada[notes 147]
246June 25, 1999José JiménezSt. Louis Cardinals1Arizona Diamondbacks0NLAlberto Castillo[notes 148]
247July 18, 1999David ConeNew York Yankees (AL)6Montreal Expos (NL)0InterJoe Girardi(2)[notes 149]
248September 11, 1999Eric MiltonMinnesota Twins7Anaheim Angels0ALTerry Steinbach(2)[notes 150]
249April 4, 2001Hideo Nomo(2)Boston Red Sox3Baltimore Orioles0ALJason Varitek(1)[notes 151]
250May 12, 2001A. J. BurnettFlorida Marlins3San Diego Padres0NLCharles Johnson(3)[notes 152]
251September 3, 2001Bud SmithSt. Louis Cardinals4San Diego Padres0NLEli Marrero[74]
252April 27, 2002Derek LoweBoston Red Sox10Tampa Bay Devil Rays0ALJason Varitek(2)
253April 27, 2003Kevin MillwoodPhiladelphia Phillies1San Francisco Giants0NLMike Lieberthal[notes 153]
254June 11, 2003Roy Oswalt(1 IP)
Pete Munro(2⅔ IP)
Kirk Saarloos(1⅓ IP)
Brad Lidge(2 IP)
Octavio Dotel(1 IP)
Billy Wagner(1 IP)
Houston Astros (NL)8New York Yankees (AL)0InterBrad Ausmus[notes 154]
255May 18, 2004Randy Johnson(2)Arizona Diamondbacks2Atlanta Braves0NLRobby Hammock[notes 155]
256September 6, 2006Aníbal SánchezFlorida Marlins2Arizona Diamondbacks0NLMiguel Olivo(1)[notes 156]
257April 18, 2007Mark Buehrle(1)Chicago White Sox6Texas Rangers0ALA. J. Pierzynski(1)[notes 157]
258June 12, 2007Justin Verlander(1)Detroit Tigers (AL)4Milwaukee Brewers (NL)0InterIván Rodríguez(2)[notes 158]
259September 1, 2007Clay BuchholzBoston Red Sox10Baltimore Orioles0ALJason Varitek(3)[notes 159]
260May 19, 2008Jon LesterBoston Red Sox7Kansas City Royals0ALJason Varitek(4)[notes 160]
261September 14, 2008Carlos ZambranoChicago Cubs5Houston Astros0NLGeovany Soto[notes 161]
262July 10, 2009Jonathan SánchezSan Francisco Giants8San Diego Padres0NLEli Whiteside[notes 162]
263July 23, 2009Mark Buehrle(2)Chicago White Sox5Tampa Bay Rays0ALRamón Castro[notes 163]
264April 17, 2010Ubaldo JiménezColorado Rockies4Atlanta Braves0NLMiguel Olivo(2)[notes 164]
265May 9, 2010Dallas BradenOakland Athletics4Tampa Bay Rays0ALLandon Powell[notes 165]
266May 29, 2010Roy Halladay(1)Philadelphia Phillies1Florida Marlins0NLCarlos Ruiz(1)[notes 166]
267June 25, 2010Edwin JacksonArizona Diamondbacks (NL)1Tampa Bay Rays (AL)0InterMiguel Montero(1)[notes 167]
268July 26, 2010Matt GarzaTampa Bay Rays5Detroit Tigers0ALKelly Shoppach[notes 168]
269October 6, 2010 §Roy Halladay(2)Philadelphia Phillies4Cincinnati Reds0NLCarlos Ruiz(2)[notes 169]
270May 3, 2011Francisco LirianoMinnesota Twins1Chicago White Sox0ALDrew Butera(1)[notes 170]
271May 7, 2011Justin Verlander(2)Detroit Tigers9Toronto Blue Jays0ALAlex Avila[notes 171]
272July 27, 2011Ervin SantanaLos Angeles Angels of Anaheim3Cleveland Indians1ALBobby Wilson
273April 21, 2012Philip HumberChicago White Sox4Seattle Mariners0ALA. J. Pierzynski(2)[notes 172]
274May 2, 2012Jered WeaverLos Angeles Angels of Anaheim9Minnesota Twins0ALChris Iannetta
275June 1, 2012Johan SantanaNew York Mets8St. Louis Cardinals0NLJosh Thole[notes 173]
276June 8, 2012Kevin Millwood(6 IP)
Charlie Furbush(⅔ IP)
Stephen Pryor(⅓ IP)
Lucas Luetge(⅓ IP)
Brandon League(⅔ IP)
Tom Wilhelmsen(1 IP)
Seattle Mariners (AL)1Los Angeles Dodgers (NL)0InterJesús Montero[notes 174]
277June 13, 2012Matt CainSan Francisco Giants10Houston Astros0NLBuster Posey(1)[notes 175]
278August 15, 2012Félix HernándezSeattle Mariners1Tampa Bay Rays0ALJohn Jaso[notes 176]
279September 28, 2012Homer Bailey(1)Cincinnati Reds1Pittsburgh Pirates0NLRyan Hanigan(1)[notes 177]
280July 2, 2013Homer Bailey(2)Cincinnati Reds3San Francisco Giants0NLRyan Hanigan(2)[notes 178]
281July 13, 2013Tim Lincecum(1)San Francisco Giants9San Diego Padres0NLBuster Posey(2)[notes 179]
282September 29, 2013

Henderson Álvarez

Miami Marlins (NL)1Detroit Tigers (AL)0InterKoyie Hill[notes 180]
283May 25, 2014Josh BeckettLos Angeles Dodgers6Philadelphia Phillies0NLDrew Butera(2)[notes 181]
284June 18, 2014Clayton KershawLos Angeles Dodgers8Colorado Rockies0NLA. J. Ellis[notes 182]
285June 25, 2014Tim Lincecum(2)San Francisco Giants4San Diego Padres0NLHéctor Sánchez[notes 183]
286September 1, 2014Cole Hamels(6 IP)
Jake Diekman(1 IP)
Ken Giles(1 IP)
Jonathan Papelbon(1 IP)
Philadelphia Phillies7Atlanta Braves0NLCarlos Ruiz(3)[notes 184]
287September 28, 2014Jordan ZimmermannWashington Nationals1Miami Marlins0NLWilson Ramos(1)[notes 185]
288June 9, 2015Chris HestonSan Francisco Giants5New York Mets0NLBuster Posey(3)[notes 186]
289June 20, 2015Max Scherzer(1)Washington Nationals6Pittsburgh Pirates0NLWilson Ramos(2)[notes 187]
290July 25, 2015Cole HamelsPhiladelphia Phillies5Chicago Cubs0NLCarlos Ruiz(4)[notes 188]
291August 12, 2015Hisashi IwakumaSeattle Mariners3Baltimore Orioles0ALJesús Sucre[notes 189]
292August 21, 2015Mike Fiers(1)Houston Astros (AL)3Los Angeles Dodgers (NL)0InterJason Castro[notes 190]
293August 30, 2015Jake Arrieta(1)Chicago Cubs2Los Angeles Dodgers0NLMiguel Montero(2)[notes 191]
294October 3, 2015Max Scherzer(2)Washington Nationals2New York Mets0NLWilson Ramos(3)[notes 192]
295April 21, 2016Jake Arrieta(2)Chicago Cubs16Cincinnati Reds0NLDavid Ross[notes 193]
296June 3, 2017Edinson VólquezMiami Marlins3Arizona Diamondbacks0NLJ. T. Realmuto(1)[notes 194]
297April 21, 2018Sean ManaeaOakland Athletics3Boston Red Sox0ALJonathan Lucroy[notes 195]
298May 4, 2018Walker Buehler(6 IP)
Tony Cingrani(1 IP)
Yimi García(1 IP)
Adam Liberatore(1 IP)
Los Angeles Dodgers4San Diego Padres0NLYasmani Grandal

[notes 196]

299May 8, 2018James PaxtonSeattle Mariners5Toronto Blue Jays0ALMike Zunino[notes 197]
300May 7, 2019Mike Fiers(2)Oakland Athletics (AL)2Cincinnati Reds (NL)0InterJosh Phegley[notes 198]
301July 12, 2019Taylor Cole(2 IP)
Félix Peña(7 IP)
Los Angeles Angels13Seattle Mariners0ALDustin Garneau[notes 199]
302August 3, 2019Aaron Sanchez(6 IP)
Will Harris(1 IP)
Joe Biagini(1 IP)
Chris Devenski(1 IP)
Houston Astros9Seattle Mariners0ALMartín Maldonado[notes 200]
303September 1, 2019Justin Verlander(3)Houston Astros2Toronto Blue Jays0ALRobinson Chirinos[notes 201]
304August 25, 2020Lucas GiolitoChicago White Sox (AL)4Pittsburgh Pirates (NL)0InterJames McCann[notes 202]
305September 13, 2020Alec MillsChicago Cubs12Milwaukee Brewers0NLVíctor Caratini(1)[notes 203]
306April 9, 2021Joe MusgroveSan Diego Padres (NL)3Texas Rangers (AL)0InterVíctor Caratini(2)[notes 204]
307April 14, 2021Carlos RodónChicago White Sox8Cleveland Indians0ALZack Collins[notes 205]
308May 5, 2021John MeansBaltimore Orioles6Seattle Mariners0ALPedro Severino[notes 206]
309May 7, 2021Wade MileyCincinnati Reds (NL)3Cleveland Indians (AL)0InterTucker Barnhart[notes 207]
310May 18, 2021Spencer TurnbullDetroit Tigers5Seattle Mariners0ALEric Haase(1)[notes 208]
311May 19, 2021Corey KluberNew York Yankees2Texas Rangers0ALKyle Higashioka(1)[notes 209]
312June 24, 2021Zach Davies(6 IP)
Ryan Tepera(1 IP)
Andrew Chafin(1 IP)
Craig Kimbrel(1 IP)
Chicago Cubs4Los Angeles Dodgers0NLWillson Contreras[notes 210]
313August 14, 2021Tyler GilbertArizona Diamondbacks7San Diego Padres0NLDaulton Varsho[notes 211]
314September 11, 2021Corbin Burnes(8 IP)
Josh Hader(1 IP)
Milwaukee Brewers (NL)3Cleveland Indians (AL)0InterOmar Narváez[notes 212]
315April 29, 2022Tylor Megill(5 IP)
Drew Smith(1⅓ IP)
Joely Rodríguez(1 IP)
Seth Lugo(⅔ IP)
Edwin Díaz(1 IP)
New York Mets3Philadelphia Phillies0NLJames McCann(2)[notes 213]
316May 10, 2022Reid DetmersLos Angeles Angels12Tampa Bay Rays0ALChad Wallach[notes 214]
317June 25, 2022Cristian Javier(7 IP)
Héctor Neris(1 IP)
Ryan Pressly(1 IP)
Houston Astros3New York Yankees0ALMartín Maldonado(2)[notes 215]
318November 2, 2022 §Cristian Javier(6 IP)
Bryan Abreu(1 IP)
Rafael Montero(1 IP)
Ryan Pressly(1 IP)
Houston Astros (AL)5Philadelphia Phillies (NL)0WSChristian Vázquez[notes 216]
319June 28, 2023Domingo GermánNew York Yankees11Oakland Athletics0ALKyle Higashioka(2)[notes 217]
320July 8, 2023Matt Manning(6⅔ IP)
Jason Foley(1⅓ IP)
Alex Lange(1 IP)
Detroit Tigers2Toronto Blue Jays0ALEric Haase(2)[notes 218]
321August 1, 2023Framber ValdezHouston Astros2Cleveland Guardians0ALMartín Maldonado(3)[notes 219]
322August 9, 2023Michael LorenzenPhiladelphia Phillies7Washington Nationals0NLJ. T. Realmuto(2)[notes 220]
323April 1, 2024Ronel BlancoHouston Astros10Toronto Blue Jays0ALYainer Díaz[notes 221]
324July 25, 2024Dylan CeaseSan Diego Padres3Washington Nationals0NLLuis Campusano[notes 222]
325August 2, 2024Blake SnellSan Francisco Giants3Cincinnati Reds0NLPatrick Bailey[notes 223]
326September 4, 2024Shota Imanaga(7 IP)
Nate Pearson(1 IP)
Porter Hodge(1 IP)
Chicago Cubs12Pittsburgh Pirates0NLMiguel Amaya[notes 224]

No-hitters by team

[edit]

Current teams

[edit]
TeamNo-hitters pitchedNo-hitters pitched againstMost recent pitchedMost recent pitched against
Los Angeles Dodgers2620May 4, 2018June 24, 2021
Chicago White Sox2013April 14, 2021May 3, 2011
Chicago Cubs187September 4, 2024July 25, 2015
Boston Red Sox1812May 19, 2008April 21, 2018
San Francisco Giants1816August 2, 2024July 2, 2013
Houston Astros175April 1, 2024June 13, 2012
Cincinnati Reds1714May 7, 2021August 2, 2024
Cleveland Guardians1413May 15, 1981August 1, 2023
Atlanta Braves1417April 8, 1994September 1, 2014
Philadelphia Phillies1421August 9, 2023November 2, 2022
New York Yankees137June 28, 2023June 25, 2022
Athletics1315May 7, 2019June 28, 2023
Los Angeles Angels127May 10, 2022September 11, 1999
St. Louis Cardinals109September 3, 2001June 1, 2012
Baltimore Orioles (modern)1015May 5, 2021August 12, 2015
Detroit Tigers914July 8, 2023September 29, 2013
Washington Nationals (modern)76October 3, 2015July 25, 2024
Minnesota Twins79May 3, 2011May 2, 2012
Miami Marlins63June 3, 2017September 28, 2014
Seattle Mariners67May 8, 2018May 18, 2021
Pittsburgh Pirates614July 12, 1997September 4, 2024
Texas Rangers56July 28, 1994May 19, 2021
Kansas City Royals42August 26, 1991May 19, 2008
Arizona Diamondbacks33August 14, 2021June 3, 2017
Milwaukee Brewers (modern)24September 11, 2021September 13, 2020
New York Mets28April 29, 2022October 3, 2015
San Diego Padres210July 25, 2024August 14, 2021
Colorado Rockies13April 17, 2010June 18, 2014
Tampa Bay Rays16July 26, 2010May 10, 2022
Toronto Blue Jays18September 2, 1990April 1, 2024

Source:[76]

Italics: Multiple pitchers used for combined no-hitter

Bold: Perfect Game

Defunct teams

[edit]
TeamNo-hitters pitchedNo-hitters pitched against
Louisville Colonels42
Philadelphia Athletics40
Baltimore Orioles (AA/NL)32
Buffalo Bisons21
Columbus Buckeyes20
Providence Grays23
Brooklyn Tip-Tops10
Chicago Chi-Feds/Whales11
Cincinnati Outlaw Reds10
Cleveland Blues12
Cleveland Spiders10
Kansas City Cowboys (AA)11
Kansas City Packers11
Milwaukee Brewers (UA)10
Pittsburgh Rebels11
Rochester Broncos10
St. Louis Brown Stockings10
St. Louis Terriers11
Worcester Worcesters12
Buffalo Blues01
Detroit Wolverines01
Hartford Dark Blues01
Kansas City Cowboys (UA)01
New York Metropolitans01
Syracuse Stars01
Toledo Blue Stockings01
Washington Nationals (AA)01
Washington Nationals (UA)01
Washington Senators (AA/NL)02

Near no-hitters

[edit]

Regulation games in which a pitcher or staff pitches less than nine full innings, or in which a hit is allowed in extra innings, are not recognized by MLB as no-hitters. However, before the rules were tightened in 1991, such games were recognized as official no-hitters.

Regulation no-hit losses ending in the middle of the ninth

[edit]
Silver King

Since the bottom of the ninth inning is not played if the team batting last already has a lead, the pitcher(s) of the team batting first can complete a full game without allowing a hit, but not be credited with an official no-hitter. The winning team may not need to bat in the bottom of the ninth due to runs scored by walks, errors, or anything else not involving hits, in which case the losing team's pitcher(s) will not be credited with an official no-hitter, because they pitched less than nine innings. This has happened only five times in major-league history.[77][78]

Such games were recognized as no-hitters before 1991; however, MLB no longer recognizes such games, past or present, as no-hitters. They are still recognized by the Hall of Fame Museum in Cooperstown, NY and certain record books that are not directly affiliated with Major League Baseball. While in modern baseball the home team always bats last, the visiting team sometimes batted last in the early days of professional baseball.

Players' League

[edit]
  • June 21, 1890 –Silver King,Chicago Pirates 0Brooklyn Ward's Wonders 1
    • Brooklyn's run scored on an error, sacrifice bunt, and fielder's choice in the seventh inning. Note that Chicago, the home team, opted to bat first in this game, as was allowed at the time; thus, Brooklyn did not bat in the bottom of the ninth.[79]

National League

[edit]

American League

[edit]

Interleague play

[edit]

Shortened games

[edit]

Under certain circumstances, if a game cannot continue because of the weather, darkness, or any other reason, but at least five innings have been completed, the result can stand as an officially completed game. No-hitters pitched under such circumstances were recognized before 1991 (although not generally in the same caliber as games that were played to their natural conclusion), but are no longer recognized by MLB as official no-hitters. In many instances, these games were shortened by rain, by darkness (in the era before lights), or due to timing constraints when teams needed to travel on regularly scheduled trains. Some games were scheduled for less than nine innings as part of adoubleheader, decided "by agreement" between managers prior to the start of the game (to avoid darkness or in consideration of travel schedules), or by league rule (2020–21 MLB rules because of pandemic restrictions).

Names listed inbold signify the pitcher was pitching aperfect game at the time the game was ended; such games arenot recognized as official perfect games.

National League

[edit]

American League

[edit]

American Association

[edit]

Union Association

[edit]

Nine-inning no-hitters broken up in extra innings

[edit]

MLB previously recognized no-hitters when the only hits allowed occurred inextra innings, until the rules were tightened in 1991. They are still recognized by the Hall of Fame Museum in Cooperstown, NY and certain record books that are not directly affiliated with Major League Baseball. Names listed inbold signify the pitcher was pitching a perfect game through nine innings.

National League

[edit]

American League

[edit]

Interleague

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Major League Baseball seasons since 1901 without a no-hitter pitched are1909,1913,1921,19271928,19321933,1936,1939,19421943,1949,1959,1982,1985,1989,2000,2005 and2025.
  2. ^Major League Baseball does not recognize theNational Association as a major league.
  3. ^Some baseball historians claim this was the first no-hitter in National League history, but contemporary newspaper reports differ; seeJoe Borden#1876 season.
  4. ^10 inning tie. First extra inning no-hitter and first that did not result in a win for the pitching team. Only no-hitter to result in a tie.
  5. ^At 20 years and two months old, Rusie is the youngest pitcher to throw a no-hitter.
  6. ^First career start. First game of a doubleheader on the final day of the season.
  7. ^First career game.
  8. ^First no-hitter at modern pitching distance of 60'6".
  9. ^abcdefghiFirst game of a doubleheader.
  10. ^First of two no-hitters on the same day.
  11. ^abSecond of two no-hitters on the same day.
  12. ^abcdefghiSecond game of a doubleheader.
  13. ^Not officially recognized by Major League Baseball for unknown reasons. There is some discrepancy over whether this was a no-hitter.Baseball Reference andRetrosheet[31] both credit Dowling with giving up no hits. Newspaper accounts, however, state that Milwaukee'sWid Conroy reached on an infield single in the 7th.[32][33] Conroy's career statistics, though, do not credit him with a hit in this game.[34]
  14. ^Part of a streak of 25.1 consecutive hitless innings by Young, still a Major League record.
  15. ^Tannehill's brother,Lee, played third base for the White Sox and went 0–3.
  16. ^Only base-runners came on errors byBill Dahlen andBilly Gilbert.
  17. ^Second game of a doubleheader. The Tigers lineup included 18-year-oldTy Cobb, who was playing in his 10th career game and went 0–2 with a walk.
  18. ^First game of a doubleheader. Dinneen would later be the home plate umpire for five no-hitters.
  19. ^The Phillies would not have another no-hitter untilJim Bunning's perfect game in 1964.
  20. ^Eason was the losing pitcher in the previous no-hitter, a feat not duplicated until 1947. He would be the home plate umpire for Davis' no-hitter in 1914. Remains the last time the Cardinals have been no-hit at home.
  21. ^Third career start for Maddox. Last no-hitter in Pittsburgh until 1971. A Pirate pitcher would not throw a no-hitter at home again until 1976.
  22. ^Young retired the final 27 batters in a row after a leadoff walk. He also drove in four runs.
  23. ^First game of a doubleheader. 10 innings, only base-runner was on aHit by pitch with 2 outs in the ninth.
  24. ^To date, Joss is one of only three pitchers in modern history to no-hit the same team twice.
  25. ^First game of a doubleheader. Wood had a no-hitter broken up in the 9th inning against the Browns three weeks earlier.
  26. ^Hamilton did not strike out a batter.
  27. ^Benz took a no-hitter into the 9th inning two starts later.
  28. ^Second game of a doubleheader. First no-hitter atFenway Park.
  29. ^Bush retired 27 batters in a row after a leadoff walk in the first inning. He also started against Cleveland a day earlier and gave up five runs in just three innings. The Athletics went 36–117, making them the worst team to pitch a no-hitter. This was the final game in the career of future Hall of FamerNap Lajoie.
  30. ^10 innings; SeeDouble No-Hitter
  31. ^The same teams, in the same park, on the next day as the previous no-hitter, but the second game of a doubleheader. Groom also pitched two hitless innings in relief during the first game. The White Sox went on to win the1917 World Series—to date, the only time a team won a World Series after being no-hit twice in the same season.
  32. ^First game of a doubleheader. Ruth and Thomas were ejected for arguing balls and strikes after walking the first batter, who was then caught stealing. Shore retired the next 26 in a row for a no-hitter completely in relief.[71]
  33. ^First game of a doubleheader. Two weeks earlier, Caldwell had been struck by lightning while on the mound during a game against the Athletics.
  34. ^Only base-runner came onBucky Harris' error leading off the 7th.
  35. ^Jones did not strike out a batter the entire game.
  36. ^In the sixth inning, Athletics pitcherSlim Harriss hit a ball to left field but was tagged out after not touching first base. Two innings later,Frank Welch was credited with a hit that was later changed to an error on Red Sox left fielderMike Menosky. Ehmke pitched a one-hit shutout in his next start four days later, the only hit coming on the first batter of the game whenHowie Shanks misplayed a ground ball that was ruled a hit instead of an error.
  37. ^Only no-hitter the Cardinals would have atSportsman's Park, their home from 1920 to 1966.
  38. ^First game of a doubleheader. Vance had thrown a one-hit shutout against the Phillies five days earlier.
  39. ^Also hit a home run. Ferrell's brother,Rick, started at catcher for the Browns and went 0–3.
  40. ^Only no-hitter ever thrown atGriffith Stadium, home of the Senators from 1911 to 1960.
  41. ^Second game of a doubleheader. In the first game, Paul's brotherDizzy had a no-hitter for 8 innings but finished with a 3-hit shutout. First no-hitter in 1140 days, the longest gap between no-hitters in the modern era as measured by days.
  42. ^First no-hitter ever thrown atComiskey Park.
  43. ^First of two no-hitters in back-to-back starts.
  44. ^Second of two no-hitters in back-to-back starts. First-ever night game atEbbets Field
  45. ^Second game of a doubleheader. First no-hitter atYankee Stadium.
  46. ^Opening Day
  47. ^Tobin pitched a one-hit shutout in his previous start. He would be the losing pitcher in Shoun's no-hitter eighteen days later.
  48. ^Only base-runner was a walk to the opposing pitcher in the third inning. A day earlier, Shoun's teammateBucky Walters had a no-hitter broken up with two outs in the eighth inning.
  49. ^Second game of a doubleheader. First no-hitter by a Canadian-born pitcher. The winning run was scored in the bottom of the ninth inning. Fowler was making his first start in nearly three years after serving inWorld War II. This was his only victory of the season.
  50. ^Against the Brooklyn Dodgers four days later, Blackwell nearly duplicated Vander Meer's double no-hit feat but had this bid broken up in the ninth.
  51. ^Only base-runner came onFerris Fain's error with one out in the 2nd. McCahan had been the losing pitcher in Black's no-hitter earlier in the season.
  52. ^First game of a doubleheader. The win gave the Yankees a share of the 1951 pennant, which they clinched outright in the second game.
  53. ^Tigers won on a walk-off home run in the bottom of the ninth inning.
  54. ^Trucks pitched two no-hitters in 1952 but went 5–19. Yankees' shortstopPhil Rizzuto was initially credited with a hit in the third inning but it was later changed to an error on Tigers' shortstopJohnny Pesky.
  55. ^First major league start; Holloman would win only two more Major League games.
  56. ^First no-hitter by black pitcher. Jones walked the bases loaded with no one out in the ninth inning but then struck out the final three batters to end the game.
  57. ^Maglie would be the losing pitcher in Larsen's perfect game 13 days later.
  58. ^Game 5 of the1956 World Series; the first of threepostseason no-hitters. Firstperfect game in the majors since 1922. Game was televised byNBC.
  59. ^Wilhelm had pitched primarily in relief prior to this season; this was only his ninth career start. The Yankees would go on to win theWorld Series, and wouldn't be no-hit again until 2003.
  60. ^Second game of a doubleheader. First start after being traded by Phillies to Cubs. Cardwell retired the last 26 batters he faced after a first inning walk. First no-hitter against the Cardinals in 41 years.
  61. ^Burdette scored the game's only run. He faced the minimum and didn't issue a walk. The only base-runner came on a hit by pitch in the fifth inning, who was then retired on a double play.
  62. ^Spahn's first no-hitter came in his 506th career start, the most in Major League history. He would pitch his second just six starts later. First time since 1917 a team no-hit the same opponent twice in a season, a feat that hasn't happened since.
  63. ^Faced the minimum 27 batters, with the only two base-runners being retired on double plays. Spahn's second no-hitter in a span of six starts.
  64. ^Belinsky's fourth career game. First no-hitter atDodger Stadium. Belinsky's gem was also the first inLos Angeles Angels of Anaheim history, and the first since major league baseball came to California with the Giants and Dodgers in 1958.
  65. ^Wilson also hit a home run.
  66. ^First no-hitter by a Dodgers pitcher atDodger Stadium (see Bo Belinsky's entry above) and the first in team history since the move from Brooklyn in 1958.
  67. ^Only base-runner was a walk in the 9th.
  68. ^Koufax retiredHarvey Kuenn for the final out. Kuenn would also be the last out inKoufax's perfect game two years later.
  69. ^Marichal was the losing pitcher in Koufax's no-hitter earlier in the season.
  70. ^9-inning home loss. Only run scored on an error with two outs in the ninth inning.
  71. ^Koufax faced the minimum 27 batters (the only base-runner was caught stealing).
  72. ^Father's Day. First game of a doubleheader.
  73. ^10 innings. Maloney threw 187 pitches, walked 10 and hit a batter. Two months earlier, Maloney also had a no-hitter thru 10 innings before it was broken up in the 11th.
  74. ^Dodgers only managed 2 base-runners and one hit, setting records for fewest base-runners and hits in a game by both teams combined. The last no-hitter thrown against the Cubs until July 25, 2015. As of 2011, first of only two perfect games atDodger Stadium – the other was pitched by Dennis Martínez in 1991.
  75. ^On the same day, the Red Sox firedPinky Higgins as their general manager. At 1,247 this was the lowest attended no-hitter until Lucas Giolito pitched one on August 25, 2020 with no fans in attendance due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
  76. ^First game of a doubleheader. 9-inning home loss. Tigers had at least one base-runner in every inning except one. Barber walked 10, hit two batters and committed an error.
  77. ^First no-hitter on artificial turf and in a domed stadium.
  78. ^First game of a doubleheader. Horlen didn't walk a batter, the only two basrunners coming on a hit by pitch and an error.
  79. ^Hunter also batted in three of Oakland's four runs.
  80. ^The next day in the same park, the Cardinals no-hit the Giants.
  81. ^The previous day in the same park, the Giants no-hit the Cardinals.
  82. ^Stoneman's fifth career start; ninth game in Expos franchise history. Sets a record for the earliest no-hitter recorded in a franchise's history.
  83. ^First game of a two-game series, in which both were no-hitters.
  84. ^Second game of a two-game series, in which both were no-hitters.
  85. ^Palmer came off thedisabled list four days earlier. Home plate umpire Lou DiMuro's son Mike was umpire forRoy Halladay's 2010 perfect game.
  86. ^Holtzman did not strike out a batter the entire game.
  87. ^The Mets would go on to win the1969 World Series.
  88. ^First game of a doubleheader. Ellis later claimed to have been under the influence ofLSD.[72]
  89. ^In apre-game ceremony, Wright had been inducted into theNAIA Hall of Fame.
  90. ^Singer didn't issue a walk but did hit a batter and commit a throwing error.
  91. ^Blue's third career win and eighth start. He had lost a no-hitter with two outs in the 8th inning two starts earlier. All four no-hitters of 1970 had been pitched inCalifornia.
  92. ^Holtzman scored the game's only run.
  93. ^Also hit 2 home runs. All-time hits leaderPete Rose hit a hard line drive right at Phillies third basemanJohn Vukovich for the final out. Reds were the first team since 1923 to be no-hit at home twice in a season.
  94. ^First no-hitter inPittsburgh in 64 years. Pirates were no-hit at home for the first time since 1886, when they were a member of theAmerican Association. First (and to date only) no-hitter with both a Hall of Fame pitcher and catcher.
  95. ^Hooton's fourth career start.
  96. ^Walk with 2 outs in 9th inning only base-runner for Padres
  97. ^First game of a doubleheader. First no-hitter pitched in a regular-season game in Canada. Stoneman also pitched the first one in Montreal on April 17, 1969.
  98. ^First no-hitter by a pitcher who did not come to bat the entire game, under the American League's newdesignated hitter rule.
  99. ^Pitched seven innings of no-hit ball in next start. Closest to tying Vander Meer's back-to-back no-hitters sinceEwell Blackwell in 1947. Ryan's 17 strikeouts set a record for a no-hitter, tied in 2015 byMax Scherzer. He also became the fourth pitcher to throw two no-hitters in the same season.
  100. ^Busby took a no-hitter into the 6th inning in his next start, setting an AL record by retiring 33 consecutive batters (the record stood until 1998). He is the only pitcher to throw a no-hitter in each of his first two seasons in the Majors.
  101. ^Bosman's own fielding error with 2 outs in the 4th allowed Oakland's only base-runner (Sal Bando). Bosman threw only 79 pitches, 60 of which were for strikes.
  102. ^Final day of the regular season. First no-hitter involving more than two pitchers. The Athletics had already clinched the division title and removed Blue after five innings to rest him for the postseason.
  103. ^First no-hitter thrown against the Expos, and the third the Expos had participated in (the other 2 were by Bill Stoneman in April 1969 and October 1972).
  104. ^Odom was removed after walking his ninth batter to lead off the sixth inning. This would be the last win of his career.
  105. ^Candelaria became the first Pirates pitcher to throw a no-hitter at home since 1907. Game was televised onABC.
  106. ^Eckersley had pitched seven hitless innings to finish his previous start, then took a no-hit bid into the sixth inning in his next. His 21 consecutive hitless innings was the longest streak sinceCy Young in 1904. Eckersley spent nine more seasons as a starter before becoming a Hall of Fame closer. He retired with 390 saves, the most by any pitcher who also threw a no-hitter.
  107. ^Blyleven's last start with the Rangers. He was traded to the Pittsburgh Pirates after the season.
  108. ^First no-hitter atBusch Memorial Stadium.
  109. ^Seaver had two previous bids broken up in the ninth, including a perfect game bid in 1969 while pitching for the Mets.
  110. ^Bob and Ken Forsch are the only set of brothers to have thrown no-hitters.
  111. ^Only base-runner came onBill Russell's error with 2 outs in the 1st inning
  112. ^Second game of a doubleheader. Third no-hitter in Expos history. Only no-hitter thrown by an Expos pitcher at Olympic Stadium. Previous 2 were one in Philadelphia and one also in Montreal, but at Jarry Park (Bill Stoneman in 1969 and 1972).
  113. ^First no-hitter thrown against the Blue Jays – the first no-hitter by a Toronto pitcher would also be played in Cleveland; see the entry for Dave Stieb's 1990 no-hitter.
  114. ^Broke Sandy Koufax's old record of no-hitters. The Dodgers would go on to win the1981 World Series. Game was televised byNBC.
  115. ^First no-hitter for the Yankees since Don Larsen's perfect game.
  116. ^Only base-runners came on a hit by pitch and an error in the second inning.
  117. ^Warren's ninth career start. He would win just four more games in his career and finish with a record of 9–13.
  118. ^Game was televised onNBC. Fourth game of Tigers 1984 season. Detroit would start 9–0 and were 35–5 after 40 games. Went on to win 1984 World Series overSan Diego Padres.
  119. ^Final day of the regular season.
  120. ^Last win of his career. Cowley is the last pitcher to be charged with an earned run in a no-hitter.
  121. ^Houston clinched theNL West title in this game.
  122. ^Robin Yount made a diving catch in center field to robEddie Murray of a hit for the final out. Brewers' ninth win in a row to start the season; they would go on to win their first 13 games, tying the Major League record.
  123. ^The start of the game was delayed two and a half hours by rain. Browning's teammateRon Robinson lost a perfect game with two outs in the ninth inning earlier in the season. The Dodgers would go on to win the1988 World Series. Browning lost a perfect game in the ninth inning the next season, the closest any pitcher has come to throwing two perfect games.
  124. ^Langston was making his Angels debut after signing a $16 million contract — at the time the largest in history — in the offseason. Witt is the only pitcher to throw a perfect game and be involved in a combined no-hitter. This was his first relief appearance since 1983.
  125. ^Johnson also threw aperfect game fourteen years later, the largest gap between no-hitters.
  126. ^First of two no-hitters thrown on the same day. First no-hitter against the Blue Jays in Toronto
  127. ^First month with four no-hitters.
  128. ^Only base-runner came on third basemanCharlie Hayes's error leading off the 7th. Hayes would later make a spectacular catch to end the game. Mulholland faced the minimum.
  129. ^Stieb lost three potential no-hitters in the ninth inning over the previous 2 years, including one that would have been a perfect game.
  130. ^Ryan's 7th and last no-hitter. At 44, Ryan is the oldest pitcher to throw a no-hitter.
  131. ^Second no-hitter thrown at Olympic Stadium in Montreal and the fourth one all time in Canada
  132. ^First Orioles no-hitter since 1969, also against the Athletics. Milacki was hit on the hand by a ground ball in the sixth inning and had to leave the game after completing the inning.
  133. ^Hassey becomes the first catcher of two Major League perfect games. Fourth and final no-hitter in Montreal Expos history and the only perfect game. Dodgers pitcherMike Morgan also took a perfect game into the sixth inning. Game was televised in Canada byTSN.
  134. ^Second career start and first game with White Sox. Alvarez came into the game with a career ERA of infinity; in his only previous start, with Texas two seasons earlier, he had given up three runs without recording an out.
  135. ^In the fifth inning,Dan Pasqua hit a fly ball to left field that deflected off the glove ofKirk Gibson. After initially being ruled a hit, the play was later changed to an error on Gibson.
  136. ^Mercker had been primarily a reliever before this game and was making his third career start after 81 games out of the bullpen. Padres Hall of FamerTony Gwynn made the final out, less than two months after his brotherChris was the last out of Martinez's perfect game.
  137. ^Bosio walked the first two batters of the game, then retired 27 in a row.
  138. ^Abbott was born without a right hand.
  139. ^The Mets scored a run in the fourth inning on a walk, a wild pitch, and an error.
  140. ^Fifth no-hitter in Rangers history and the fourteenth perfect game in MLB history. Preserved by a diving catch in the ninth inning by rookie center fielderRusty Greer. Season shortened by the1994–95 Major League Baseball strike.
  141. ^22nd no-hitter in Dodgers history. Martínez lost a perfect game with two outs in the eighth inning due to a walk by the Marlins' only base-runner.
  142. ^First no-hitter in Marlins history
  143. ^Gooden became the first right-handed pitcher to throw a no-hitter at Yankee Stadium sinceDon Larsen 40 years earlier.
  144. ^First no-hitter thrown atCoors Field. First Japanese pitcher to record no-hitter.
  145. ^Only base-runner was ahit by pitch with two outs in the 8th.
  146. ^10 innings. Pinch-hitterMark Smith hit a walk-off 3-run home run with two outs in the bottom of the tenth inning to secure the no-hitter.
  147. ^Part of a streak of 38 consecutive batters retired by Wells, a new AL record that stood until 2007. Wells claims to have beenhung over.[73]
  148. ^Ten days later, Jiménez again shut out the Diamondbacks 1–0, allowing only two hits.Randy Johnson was the losing pitcher in both games. Cardinals scored the only run of the game onThomas Howard's RBI single with two outs in the top of the ninth inning. First no-hitter atChase Field, then Bank One Ballpark.
  149. ^First no-hitter/perfect game in regular-seasoninterleague play. Pitched onYogi Berra Day at Yankee Stadium, with Berra andDon Larsen in attendance.
  150. ^The Los Angeles Angels currently hold the longest streak the majors of not being no-hit. This was the last time it occurred. Game began at 11 a.m. local time due to aUniversity of Minnesota football game that was scheduled to be played at theMetrodome that same night.
  151. ^Nomo's first start with Red Sox. Second game of the season. Until 2024, earliest no-hitter by the calendar. First no-hitter atCamden Yards. The start of the game was delayed by 43 minutes due to a power outage in the stadium.
  152. ^7 strikeouts and 9 walks, most ever in a no-hitter.
  153. ^OnPhillie Phanatic's birthday and their last season atVeterans Stadium. Occurred during the2003 NFL draft. ESPN broke away from covering the draft to air the ninth inning.
  154. ^Last no-hitter thrown at the original Yankee Stadium before it closed in 2008. Oswalt left with an injury in the second inning. Originally held the record for most pitchers used in a combined no-hitter, which was tied on June 8, 2012 when the Mariners no-hit the Dodgers. First interleague no-hitter thrown by away team. First no-hitter thrown by an NL team against an AL team. First official no-hitter against the Yankees in 44 years, a then-Major League record.Octavio Dotel struck out four Yankees in the eighth inning, the first Astros pitcher to pull off the feat since 1986.
  155. ^Previous no-hitter almost fourteen years earlier.
  156. ^Diamondbacks are most recent team to perform a no-hitter then suffer the following one. First MLB no-hitter in 6,364 games, the longest gap between no-hitters in history as measured by games played.Randy Johnson, most recent pitcher to throw a no-hitter at the time, took a no-hitter into the seventh inning the same day.
  157. ^Buehrle faced the minimum 27 batters. The only base-runner (Sammy Sosa) was picked off of first base.
  158. ^First no-hitter atComerica Park.
  159. ^Second career game for Buchholz.
  160. ^First time since the 1974California Angels that one team had last two no-hitters in the majors. Varitek sets the record for most no-hitters caught.
  161. ^Played atMiller Park inMilwaukee because ofHurricane Ike, making it the first no-hitter at a neutral site.
  162. ^Only base-runner came onJuan Uribe's error with one out in the 8th. Sánchez was 2–8 on the season with a 5.30ERA at the time and had recently been demoted to the bullpen.
  163. ^Second perfect game in White Sox history. UmpireEric Cooper called both of Buehrle's no-hitters. In the ninth, new center fielderDeWayne Wise leapt over the wall to take a potential home run away fromGabe Kapler. Buehrle retired first 17 batters in his next start to set the record for consecutive batters retired at 45 (later broken byYusmeiro Petit), spanning three starts.
  164. ^First no-hitter in Rockies franchise history.
  165. ^Second perfect game in 12 months. This game was also held on Mother's Day. It was the second perfect game inOakland Athletics history.
  166. ^Shortest span between perfect games (20 days). Home plate umpire Mike DiMuro's father, Lou, was umpire for Jim Palmer's 1969 no-hitter.
  167. ^Jackson walked eight and hit a batter on 149 pitches, the most ever for a no-hitter in MLB history.[75] The Rays became the first team since the 2001 Padres to be no-hit twice in a season, and the first team in history to be no-hit three times within a one-year span.
  168. ^Garza faced the minimum (only base-runner allowed was retired on adouble play). Opposing starterMax Scherzer threw 5⅔ no-hit innings. The Rays are the first team since 1991 to pitch a no-hitter and be no-hit in the same season, and the first since 1956 to be involved in three no-hitters in one season. Game televised nationally onESPN.
  169. ^Game 1 of the2010 NLDS. Second no-hitter in postseason history, after Don Larsen's perfect game in the 1956 World Series. Halladay became the fifth pitcher to pitch two no-hitters in the same calendar year (including the postseason), and the first one to do it with aperfect game. One batter reached base. Game was televised byTBS.
  170. ^First complete game of Liriano's career, in 95 starts. His seasonERA entering the game was 9.13.
  171. ^Verlander faced the minimum 27 batters.
  172. ^Third perfect game in White Sox history and the first no-hitter thrown atSafeco Field. This was also Humber's only career complete game. Game was televised regionally byFox; the network cut away from aNew York Yankees-Boston Red Sox game to show the final inning nationally.
  173. ^First no-hitter inMets history and the first no-hitter thrown atCiti Field. A ball hit by St. Louis' Carlos Beltrán was controversially ruled foul by the third base umpire, preserving the no-hitter in the 6th inning.
  174. ^Third no-hitter in Mariners history and the second no-hitter thrown at T-Mobile Park (then Safeco Field). Millwood left with an injury after the sixth inning. Tied record for most pitchers used in a combined no-hitter. For Pryor, it was his first career victory.
  175. ^First perfect game inGiants history.
  176. ^First perfect game inMariners history. Seattle becomes the first team with a combined no-hitter and a traditional no-hitter in a single season.
  177. ^First no-hitter by a Reds pitcher sinceBrowning's perfect game in 1988. Pirates were no-hit for the first time since 1971.
  178. ^Bailey is the first pitcher since Nolan Ryan in 1974–75 to have thrown the Major Leagues' last two no-hitters.
  179. ^First no-hitter ever thrown in San Diego'sPetco Park. Lincecum was the losing pitcher in Bailey's no-hitter 11 days earlier.
  180. ^5th no-hitter in Marlins history, and the first ever thrown atMarlins Park. The Marlins scored the winning run in the bottom of the ninth on a wild pitch, with Álvarez standing in the on-deck circle. It was the first no-hitter to end in walk-off fashion since Cordova and Rincon combined for a 10-inning no-no in 1997. It was also the first no-hitter thrown on the last day of the regular season sinceMike Witt's perfect game on September 30, 1984.
  181. ^Twenty-fourth no-hitter in Dodgers franchise history and the second thrown atCitizens Bank Park. Beckett fanned six and walked three on his 128 pitch outing. In the ninth inning, he struck outChase Utley to secure the victory.
  182. ^Rockies' only base-runner came on a throwing error in the seventh. Kershaw became the first MLB pitcher ever with 15 strikeouts without allowing a single hit or walk. It was also the 3rd no-hitter by a reigning Cy Young Award winner, following Sandy Koufax (1963 CY, 1964 NH) and Bob Gibson (1970 CY, 1971 NH).
  183. ^Lincecum's second no-hitter in less than a year. Lincecum became the second pitcher all-time, afterAddie Joss, to no-hit the same team twice.
  184. ^Labor Day. First combined no-hitter in Phillies history and twelfth overall.
  185. ^Nationals rookieSteven Souza Jr., who came in as a defensive replacement in the top of the ninth inning, made a diving catch in left-center field to retireChristian Yelich for the final out. First no-hitter for the Nationals since the team moved to Washington, and the first by any Washington pitcher since Bobby Burke in 1931. This was the final game for both teams for the 2014 season, and it was the second year in a row in which a no-hitter had been thrown on the final day of the regular season.Henderson Álvarez, who had thrown Miami's no-hitter on the final day of the 2013 season, was the losing pitcher in this game.
  186. ^Seventeenth no-hitter in Giants franchise history, and the second no-hitter thrown atCiti Field. Heston was the 22nd rookie pitcher to throw a no-hitter. He did not walk a batter, but he hit three of them, joining Wiltse in 1908, Burdette in 1960, and Brown in 1997 as no-hitter pitchers whose only base-runners came on hit batsmen. Heston's is the first such game to feature more than one hit by pitch.
  187. ^Scherzer wasperfect through 8⅔ innings when hehit pinch-hitterJosé Tábata to allow the Pirates' only base-runner of the game. Fifth no-hitter pitcher after Wiltse, Burdette, Brown, and Heston to only allow their base-runners on hit batsmen, and the second after Wiltse to lose a perfect game with two outs in the ninth inning on a hit batsman. Scherzer threw a one-hitter, having been perfect for 6 innings, in his previous start, and was perfect through 5 in his next start after this no-hitter.
  188. ^Fifth pitcher, after Blue, Witt, Mercker, and Millwood, to pitch a complete game no-hitter as well as contribute to a combined no-hitter.Kris Bryant flew out toOdubel Herrera, who tripped after losing the ball in the sun, on a full count for the final out. This was also the first time that the Cubs were no-hit since Sandy Koufax's perfect game in 1965, and the first no-hitter thrown atWrigley Field since 1972. Hamels' last start with the Phillies as he was traded to theTexas Rangers six days later.
  189. ^Second Japanese pitcher to throw a Major League no-hitter, afterHideo Nomo. First no-hitter in an American League game since teammateFélix Hernández's perfect game almost exactly three years prior, breaking a string of 12 straight NL no-hitters.
  190. ^Eleventh no-hitter in Astros history, and the first no-hitter for the Astros as an American League team. This was also the first complete-game no-hitter by an Astros pitcher since Darryl Kile did it in 1993. First complete game no-hit shutout pitched by Houston since Mike Scott in 1986.
  191. ^Dodgers no-hit for the second time in 9 days; this is the shortest interval since the 1923 Philadelphia Athletics and the first time a team were no-hit twice in one calendar month since the 1971 Cincinnati Reds.
  192. ^Second game of a doubleheader. Scherzer's second no-hitter of the season; both of which also featured no walks. Scherzer wasperfect through 5 innings before an error by 3BYunel Escobar. Scherzer's 17 strikeouts tiedNolan Ryan's record for most in a no-hitter and included 9 straight. Second highestgame score ever for a nine-inning game, with 104, followingKerry Wood's 1998 one-hit complete-game shutout. Scherzer becomes the fifth pitcher to throw two no-hitters in the same season.
  193. ^Fifteenth no-hitter in Cubs history. Most run support in a no-hitter since 1884. First regular season no-hitter against the Reds since 1971. Fourth no-hitter thrown by a reigningCy Young Award winner. Game televised byESPN.
  194. ^Sixth no-hitter in Marlins history. Vólquez faced the minimum 27 batters. Thrown on the birthday of Vólquez's friend and teammateYordano Ventura, who had died in a car crash the previous January.
  195. ^Twelfth no-hitter in Athletics history and the first no-hitter sinceDallas Braden's perfect game in 2010. Red Sox no-hit for the first time since 1993. Red Sox came into the game with a record of 17–2, the best winning percentage by a team who had a no-hitter thrown against them in history. First time since 1988 that a no-hitter was thrown against that season's World Series champions.
  196. ^Game played inMonterrey,Mexico. First no-hitter thrown outside the United States or Canada. Second no-hitter thrown at a neutral site. Buehler's third career start.
  197. ^Sixth no-hitter in Mariners history. Second no-hitter thrown by a Canadian pitcher, first since 1945 (Dick Fowler), and first by a Canadian pitcher in Canada. Third different country in which a no-hitter was thrown in 2018.
  198. ^Thirteenth no-hitter in Athletics history. Mike Fiers becomes the 35th pitcher in MLB history to throw two no-hitters.
  199. ^ Eleventh no-hitter and the second combined no-hitter in Angels history. Largest run differential in a no-hitter by an AL team since 1938. In their first home games since his death on July 1st, the Angels were honoring pitcherTyler Skaggs, having every team member wear his jersey. First no-hitter involving the use of anopener.
  200. ^ Twelfth no-hitter and the second combined no-hitter in Astros history. First start by Sanchez since being acquired from theToronto Blue Jays along with Biagini. Sanchez came into the game without a win in his last 17 starts and with a 6.07 ERA, worst among all starting pitchers. Mariners are the first team to have two combined no-hitters against them in one season.
  201. ^ Thirteenth no-hitter in Astros history. Retired the last twenty-six batters in a row after a first-inning walk. Verlander became the third pitcher afterAddie Joss andTim Lincecum to no-hit the same opponent twice, and the first to do so on the road. He also became the sixth pitcher in MLB history to throw three career no-hitters. Astros scored the only runs of the game onAbraham Toro's two-run home run with two outs in the top of the ninth inning.
  202. ^Nineteenth no-hitter in White Sox history. Giolito struck out 13, the most ever in a White Sox no-hitter, and allowed only one base-runner, a four-pitch walk toErik Gonzalez in the fourth inning. Took place with no fans in attendance due to theCOVID-19 pandemic.
  203. ^Mills' first complete game and 15th career start, the fewest by a Cubs pitcher before throwing a no-hitter since 1972. With Lucas Giolito 19 days earlier, this was the first time both Chicago teams threw a no-hitter in the same season. Second no-hitter atMiller Park; the first was also by a Cubs pitcher,Carlos Zambrano in 2008. Took place with no fans in attendance due to theCOVID-19 pandemic. First NL-site no-hitter wheredesignated hitters were used.
  204. ^First no-hitter in Padres history. First no-hitter atGlobe Life Field. Musgrove didn't walk a batter, the only baserunner coming when he hitJoey Gallo with a pitch in the fourth inning.
  205. ^Rodón had aperfect game broken up with one out in the 9th after hittingRoberto Pérez with a pitch.
  206. ^First no-hitter by an Orioles pitcher since 1969, and the first on the road since 1912. Means faced the minimum 27 batters, the only base-runner coming on a dropped third strike with one out in the 3rd inning. This is the only known instance of a perfect game being broken up in such a way.
  207. ^At the age of 34 years and 175 days, Miley was the oldest pitcher to throw his first no-hitter sinceDavid Cone in 1999. First time the Indians were no-hit twice in a season.Zach Plesac was the opposing pitcher in both games andJordan Luplow was the final out both times. Additionally, the Reds became the first team to no-hit their interleague rival and only the second team to no-hit a team from the opposite league that plays their home games in the same state as them, afterDon Larsen’s perfect game. It was also the first time two interleague no-hitters were thrown in the same season.
  208. ^Eighth no-hitter in Tigers history, and first since 2011. First time there had been five no-hitters thrown this early in a season since 1917. Mariners were no-hit at home for the second time in 13 days, the first team to do that since 1923.
  209. ^First no-hitter by a Yankees pitcher since Cone's perfect game in 1999, and first on the road since 1951. First time there were no-hitters thrown on consecutive days since 1969. First time there had been six no-hitters thrown this early in a season. First time three teams were no-hit twice in the same season. First time five no-hitters were thrown on the road in the same season. Second month with four no-hitters (June 1990).
  210. ^Seventh no-hitter of 2021, tying a modern-era MLB record. First time seven no-hitters had been thrown before July. First time six no-hitters were thrown on the road in the same season. 20th time the Dodgers were no-hit, breaking an MLB record. The Dodgers were the first reigning World Series champions to be no-hit since the2013 San Francisco Giants, and the first team to have three MVPs in the lineup (Mookie Betts,Cody Bellinger, andAlbert Pujols) to be no-hit. The eight walks given up by the Cubs were the most in a no-hitter sinceEdwin Jackson in 2010.
  211. ^Eighth no-hitter of 2021, tying an MLB record set in 1884. This was Gilbert's first career MLB start; he became the fourth player to throw a no-hitter in their first MLB start, and the first since Holloman in 1953. First no-hitter thrown by the Diamondbacks atChase Field, and their third overall, following Johnson and Jackson. Last no-hitter in which pitchers were obligated to bat, prior to the National League's permanent adoption of the designated hitter.
  212. ^Ninth no-hitter of 2021, breaking an MLB record set in 1884. First time seven no-hitters were thrown on the road in the same season. Second no-hitter in Brewers history; first to be a combined no-hitter. Indians became the first team to be no-hit three times in one season;Zach Plesac was the opposing pitcher all three times. It was also the first time three interleague no-hitters were thrown in the same season.
  213. ^Second no-hitter in Mets history; first to be a combined no-hitter. 20th time the Phillies were no-hit, tying the record set by the Dodgers. Mets pitchers combined to throw 159 pitches, the most in any no-hitter on record.
  214. ^12th no-hitter in Angels history. 25th time a rookie has thrown a no-hitter. Also the first time Detmers and Wallach werebatterymates.
  215. ^14th no-hitter in Astros history.
  216. ^Game 4 of the2022 World Series. Game was televised byFox. 15th no-hitter in Astros history. First time a team has thrown two combined no-hitters in the same season. Javier and Pressly are the first pitchers to contribute to multiple combined no-hitters. 21st time the Phillies were no-hit, breaking the MLB record set by the Dodgers. First combined no-hitter, and second overall, in World Series history. First no-hitter in the month of November.
  217. ^Fourth perfect game in Yankees history and 13th no-hitter.
  218. ^First combined no-hitter in Tigers history and ninth overall.
  219. ^16th no-hitter in Astros history, first by a left-handed pitcher. Faced the minimum 27 batters. Valdez pitched seven hitless innings four starts later before being removed from the game.
  220. ^14th no-hitter in Phillies history. Lorenzen was making his second start with the Phillies, and first at home, since being acquired eight days earlier. First time the Nationals were no-hit since moving to Washington.
  221. ^17th no-hitter in Astros history. Earliest calendar date for a no-hitter in MLB history.
  222. ^Second no-hitter in Padres history.
  223. ^18th no-hitter in Giants history. Snell’s first win as a Giant.
  224. ^2nd combined no-hitter thrown in Cubs history and 18th overall. First Cubs no-hitter thrown atWrigley Field since 1972. Imanaga becomes the third Japanese-born pitcher to throw a no-hitter, and the first sinceHisashi Iwakuma in 2015. The losing pitcher,Domingo Germán, threw a perfect game against the Athletics the previous year, the 24th in baseball history.
  225. ^While such games ending in a tie are excluded from baseball standings and (usually) re-played at a later date, individual player statistics are counted.

References

[edit]
  1. ^The Official Site of Major League Baseball: Official info: Rules, Regulations and Statistics
  2. ^Wolf, Gregory H."Jim Maloney".SABR.
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  7. ^"The National Game".The Sun (New York). October 5, 1884.
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  10. ^"Won In The Last Inning".The Sun (New York). May 2, 1886.
  11. ^"In The Base Ball Field".The Sun (New York). July 25, 1886.
  12. ^"A Big Day For Terry".The Sun (New York). May 28, 1888.
  13. ^"The Game of His Life".St. Paul Daily Globe. July 27, 1888.
  14. ^"Athletic 4; Kansas City 0".The Sun (New York). August 1, 1888.
  15. ^"Rochester 7; Syracuse 0".The Sun (New York). September 16, 1890.
  16. ^"Not Even A Base Hit".The Sun (New York). June 23, 1891.
  17. ^"Not A Single Hit Off Rusie".The Sun (New York). August 1, 1891.
  18. ^"Only A Few More Games".The Sun (New York). October 5, 1891.
  19. ^"Boston 11; Brooklyn 0".The Sun (New York). August 7, 1892.
  20. ^"Louisville 6; Baltimore 2".The Sun (New York). August 23, 1892.
  21. ^"Cincinnati 7; Pittsburgh 1".The Sun (New York). October 16, 1892.
  22. ^"Baltimore 5; Washington 0".The Sun (New York). August 17, 1893.
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  39. ^"Tannehill Makes Record".St. Paul Globe. August 18, 1904. RetrievedJune 19, 2012.
  40. ^"M'Graw Put Matty In To Beat The Cubs".The Evening World. July 13, 1905.
  41. ^"Howell Beat "Rube"".The St. Louis Republic. July 23, 1905.
  42. ^"Notes of the Game".The St. Louis Republic. September 7, 1905.
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  50. ^"Cellar Champs Beat Leaders".Los Angeles Herald. September 19, 1908.
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  53. ^"Joss Blanks Sox".The Salt Lake Herald-Republican. April 21, 1910.
  54. ^"Naps Fail To Hit Big Chief Bender".San Francisco Call. May 13, 1910.
  55. ^"St. Louis Breaks Even".San Francisco Call. July 30, 1911.
  56. ^"Walsh Tosses No Hit No Run Game".San Francisco Call. August 28, 1911.
  57. ^"Wood's String of Victories Broken".San Francisco Call. July 5, 1912.
  58. ^"Senators Yank One From Yanks".San Francisco Call. August 31, 1912.
  59. ^"Tesreau Enters Hall Of Fame".San Francisco Call. September 7, 1912.
  60. ^"Benz Pitches No Hit Game".The Sun (New York). June 1, 1914.
  61. ^"Braves Advance Step More".Omaha Bee. September 10, 1914.
  62. ^"Brooklyn Wins Two".Washington Herald. September 20, 1914.
  63. ^"Marquard Stars In No Hit Performance".Washington Times. April 16, 1915.
  64. ^"Pitches No Hit Games".Washington Herald. April 25, 1915.
  65. ^"At Pittsburgh".The Sun (New York). May 16, 1915.
  66. ^"Not A Run Or Hit Off Main".The Sun (New York). August 17, 1915.
  67. ^"Nary A Hit Can Giants Get Off Jim Lavender".The Sun (New York). September 1, 1915.
  68. ^"Federal League".The Sun (New York). September 8, 1915.
  69. ^"George Foster throws first no-hitter at Fenway Park".Globe (Boston). June 22, 1916.
  70. ^"Dutch Leonard throws Fenway's 2d no-hitter of the year".Globe (Boston). August 31, 1916.
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  72. ^"No Mas Presents: Dock Ellis & The LSD No-No by James Blagden". YouTube. 2009-11-11.Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved2013-03-26.
  73. ^Mark Feinsand (March 1, 2003)."Book 'em, David: Wells explains".MLB.com. RetrievedOctober 2, 2009.
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  77. ^American League No Hitters by Baseball Almanac.
  78. ^The Chronology – 1890|BaseballLibrary.comArchived 2008-05-26 at theWayback Machine.
  79. ^Zinn, John G."June 21, 1890: No hits — but no win for Silver King".SABR. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  80. ^"Cincinnati Reds vs Pittsburgh Pirates, May 15, 2022 Box Score".MLB.com. May 15, 2022. RetrievedMay 15, 2022.
  81. ^"Chicago White Sox 4, New York Yankees 0".Retrosheet. July 1, 1990. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  82. ^Thornley, Stew."July 1, 1990: Andy Hawkins no-hitter is 'no winner' for Yankees".SABR. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  83. ^"Cleveland Indians 2, Boston Red Sox 1 (1)".Retrosheet. April 12, 1992. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  84. ^Raylesberg, Alan."April 12, 1992: Boston's Matt Young loses the game but throws a no-hitter against Indians".SABR. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  85. ^"Los Angeles Dodgers 1, Anaheim Angels 0".Retrosheet. June 28, 2008. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  86. ^"Sporting Matters: Getzien and Gastfield, With a Little Aid, Play a Wonderful Game".Detroit Free Press. October 2, 1884. p. 7. RetrievedApril 28, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  87. ^"Providence Wins Easily Enough".Chicago Tribune. October 8, 1885. p. 3. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  88. ^"Could Not Find the Curves: The Smoky City Boys Shut Out in Seven Innings".Chicago Tribune. June 22, 1888. p. 6. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  89. ^"Pittsburg Loses to Chicago".The Times. Philadelphia. June 22, 1888. p. 3. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  90. ^"New York, 3; Washington, 0".The Boston Globe. September 28, 1888. p. 3. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  91. ^"Boston in a Walk".St. Louis Post-Dispatch. October 16, 1892. p. 23. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  92. ^"Rallying Reds: They Neatly Win Two Games From the Champion Bostons".The Pittsburgh Press. September 24, 1893. p. 6. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  93. ^"National League".Democrat and Chronicle.Democrat and Chronicle. June 3, 1894. p. 2. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  94. ^"Two Victories for New York Nationals, One a Shut-out".The New York Sun. September 15, 1903. p. 10. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  95. ^"Red Ames".Retrosheet. RetrievedApril 27, 2021.
  96. ^"Brooklyn Breaks Even".Pittsburgh Post. August 25, 1906. p. 6. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  97. ^"McGlynn Twirls No-Hit Contest".St. Louis Globe-Democrat. September 25, 1906. p. 13. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  98. ^"Brooklyns Win and Draw with Cardinals".Brooklyn Times-Union. September 25, 1906. p. 5. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  99. ^"Phillies Twice Blanked".The Washington Post. September 27, 1906. p. 8. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  100. ^"Not A Hit Off Karger".Pittsburgh Post. August 12, 1907. p. 7. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  101. ^"Pirates Win Double Bill From Giants: New York Blanked Without a Hit in the Second Encounter".The Pittsburgh Press. August 24, 1907. p. 7. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  102. ^"Tim Jordan's Muff Gave St. Louis the Victory".Brooklyn Times-Union. August 7, 1908. p. 8. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  103. ^"Cardinals Drop Both of Final Games to Cubs: Cubs Capture Both Games in Easy Style".St. Louis Globe-Democrat. August 1, 1910. p. 11. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  104. ^"Brooklyn Dodgers 5, Cincinnati Reds 0".Retrosheet. August 27, 1937. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  105. ^"Boston Braves 7, Philadelphia Phillies 0 (2)".Retrosheet. June 22, 1944. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  106. ^Wolf, Gregory H."June 22, 1944: Abba Dabba does it again: Jim Tobin's 5-inning no-hitter".SABR. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  107. ^"San Francisco Giants 3, Philadelphia Phillies 0".Retrosheet. June 12, 1959. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  108. ^"McCormick Modest on Five Inning No-Hitter".Oakland Tribune.AP. June 13, 1959. p. 13. RetrievedApril 26, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  109. ^"San Francisco Giants 4, St. Louis Cardinals 0".Retrosheet. September 26, 1959. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  110. ^"Montreal Expos 4, St. Louis Cardinals 0 (2)".Retrosheet. April 21, 1984. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  111. ^King, Norm."April 21, 1984: David Palmer throws five perfect innings in Expos' rain-shortened win".SABR. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  112. ^"Montreal Expos 1, Philadelphia Phillies 0".Retrosheet. September 24, 1988. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  113. ^Brown, Kevin (April 27, 2021)."Davey Martinez thinks Bumgarner definitely deserves a no-hitter".NBC Sports. RetrievedApril 27, 2021.
  114. ^"D-backs 7, Braves 0".MLB.com. April 25, 2021. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  115. ^"Waddell Puzzling".Buffalo Courier. August 16, 1905. p. 9. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  116. ^Sanborn, Sy (May 27, 1907)."Snatch Victory from the Clouds".Chicago Tribune. p. 10. RetrievedApril 27, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  117. ^"Senators Made Philly Go 15 Innings To Win".Buffalo Courier. October 6, 1907. p. 32. RetrievedApril 26, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  118. ^Hill, David (October 5, 2016)."Athletics History: Rube Vickers has Day of His Life".calltothepen.com. RetrievedApril 27, 2021.
  119. ^"Washington Makes Clean Sweep of Series with Cleveland".The Boston Globe. August 21, 1912. p. 6. RetrievedApril 26, 2021 – via newspapers.com.
  120. ^"Washington Senators 2, St. Louis Browns 0".Retrosheet. August 25, 1924. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  121. ^"St. Louis Browns 4, Detroit Tigers 0 (2)".Retrosheet. August 5, 1940. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  122. ^Wolf, Gregory H."August 5, 1940: John Whitehead tosses abbreviated no-hitter for last big-league victory".SABR. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  123. ^"Minnesota Twins 2, Boston Red Sox 0".Retrosheet. August 6, 1967. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  124. ^Thornley, Stew."August 6, 1967: Dean Chance is perfect for five innings".SABR. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  125. ^"Chicago White Sox 8, New York Yankees 0".Retrosheet. July 12, 1990. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  126. ^"Boston Red Sox 9, Baltimore Orioles 0".Retrosheet. October 1, 2006. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  127. ^Nowlin, Bill."October 1, 2006: Devern Hansack throws an 'unofficial' no-hitter for Red Sox".SABR. RetrievedApril 26, 2021.
  128. ^"Chicago Cubs 1, New York Giants 0".Retrosheet. June 11, 1904. RetrievedApril 29, 2021.
  129. ^"Pittsburgh Pirates 1, Brooklyn Superbas 0".Retrosheet. August 1, 1906. RetrievedApril 29, 2021.
  130. ^"Brooklyn Superbas 3, New York Giants 0".Retrosheet. April 15, 1909. RetrievedApril 29, 2021.
  131. ^"Cincinnati Reds 1, Chicago Cubs 0".Retrosheet. May 2, 1917. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  132. ^Lynch, Mike."May 2, 1917: Fred Toney and Reds prevail 1–0 in double no-hitter against Cubs' Hippo Vaughn".SABR. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  133. ^"Milwaukee Braves 2, Cincinnati Reds 1".Retrosheet. May 26, 1956. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  134. ^Wolf, Gregory H."May 26, 1956: Braves walk off in 11th to preserve Crone's complete-game gem".SABR. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  135. ^"Milwaukee Braves 1, Pittsburgh Pirates 0".Retrosheet. May 26, 1959. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  136. ^Miller, Mark."May 26, 1959: Harvey Haddix pitches 12 perfect innings, loses in 13th".SABR. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  137. ^"New York Mets 1, Cincinnati Reds 0".Retrosheet. June 14, 1965. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  138. ^Wolf, Gregory H."June 14, 1965: Reds' Jim Maloney strikes out 18 in 10-inning no-hitter — then loses to Mets".SABR. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  139. ^"Los Angeles Dodgers 1, Montreal Expos 0".Retrosheet. July 26, 1991. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  140. ^Belleville, Gary."July 26, 1991: Mark Gardner loses game, no-hitter in extra innings".SABR. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  141. ^"Montreal Expos 1, San Diego Padres 0".Retrosheet. June 3, 1995. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  142. ^Gallagher, Danny."June 3, 1995: Pedro Martinez's nearly perfect game".SABR. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  143. ^"Pittsburgh Pirates 1, Los Angeles Dodgers 0".Retrosheet. August 23, 2017. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  144. ^"Chicago White Sox 4, Cleveland Blues 2".Retrosheet. May 9, 1901. RetrievedApril 29, 2021.
  145. ^"Cleveland Naps 5, New York Highlanders 0 (2)".Retrosheet. August 30, 1910. RetrievedApril 29, 2021.
  146. ^"Washington Senators 1, Chicago White Sox 0".Retrosheet. May 14, 1914. RetrievedApril 29, 2021.
  147. ^"Boston Red Sox 2, St. Louis Browns 1".Retrosheet. September 18, 1934. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.
  148. ^Riis, Richard."September 18, 1934: Browns' Bobo Newsom tosses no-no through nine, loses in 10th".SABR. RetrievedApril 28, 2021.

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