Verlander makes history in Detroit
06/12/2007 11:51 PM ET
Verlander makes history in Detroit
Right-hander becomes first Tiger to throw no-no since 1984
By Jason Beck / MLB.com
DETROIT -- The last time a pitcher threw a no-hitter in Detroit, Tigers first
baseman Norm Cash tried to step to the plate with two outs in the ninth
inning with a table leg instead of a bat. Nolan Ryan was that dominant.
The Brewers stepped to the plate with bats, big ones. They had the National
League's two biggest home-run hitters and the Majors' second-highest home-run
total. Justin Verlander had them just as powerless.
And in the end, just as hitless.
"It was what we call in baseball, 'filthy,'" Placido Polanco simply said
after the 4-0 win.
No Tiger had thrown a no-hitter since Jack Morris in 1984, when Verlander was
one year old. None had done it in Detroit since Virgil Trucks did it in 1952
in what was then called Briggs Stadium, not Tiger Stadium.
Most Tigers had no reference for it. Only a handful had ever seen one in the
Majors in person. For many, it felt more like last October than last
half-century. It was a World Series atmosphere, and from the way he was
pitching, it was building from the early innings.
Verlander (7-2) has been putting together dominant starts for much of the
season as he has worked together his changeup and curveball to go with an
upper-90s fastball. He shut out the Rangers for seven innings with six
strikeouts last Wednesday at Arlington. Several Tigers said in retrospect
that they thought he had no-hit stuff that night, too. On this one, all his
pitches seemed to work, and the combination was impossible to solve.
"I think the pressure started mounting in the first inning, when he was
throwing 100 mph with that curveball and changeup, you know?" J.J. Hardy
said. "When he can throw them all for strikes, he's tough to hit."
Or in this case, pretty much impossible.
Hardy, second in the NL in home runs, hit a line drive to mid-range center
field to end the opening inning. Corey Hart hit a sinking line drive in the
seventh inning that required a sliding catch from Magglio Ordonez in what was
shaping to be the play of the game until an inning later. Take away those and
Hardy's fly ball to right to end the game, and everything else was either on
the ground or -- more likely -- not hit at all.
"After the first couple of innings, I knew I had some good stuff going,"
Verlander said. "In the bullpen, it really wasn't that good, to be honest.
But when I got out on the mound and flipped the switch, I had some pretty
good stuff. I had a good fastball with control and I was able to throw my
breaking ball and changeup for strikes."
Verlander (6-2) retired the first seven batters he faced, three of them by
strikeout, before the first of three walks to Bill Hall on the night. He
rebounded to strike out Gabe Gross on three pitches -- two mid-90s fastballs
and an offspeed pitch at 82 mph, then he overpowered Craig Counsell with
three fastballs.
"Guys pitch no-hitters sometimes that don't have good stuff, so it does
happen," manager Jim Leyland said. "When you see somebody that has this kind
of stuff accomplish this, it's not that it means more, but it's a little bit
different. A guy could not have good stuff and they could hit balls at people
all night, things of that nature. But when you see something like this,
that's the way it is."
The 24-year-old struck out the side around a walk in the fourth, including a
big curveball that looped onto the outside corner for a called third strike
on NL home run leader Prince Fielder in his return to his onetime childhood
home.
Once Verlander sent down Geoff Jenkins swinging at a changeup to lead off the
fifth, the Tigers' suspicions about a special night were looking more like
reality.
"Fifth inning, I'm looking up [at the scoreboard] and there's zeroes up
there," first baseman Sean Casey. "I'm thinking if we could just get it to
the seventh, he's got a shot."
It didn't matter that he was clutching onto a 1-0 lead at that point. Jeff
Suppan (7-7), a pitching mainstay on the Cardinals team that beat the Tigers
in the World Series last October, had retired 12 of 13 batters through four
innings. The only hit in the game at that point was Brandon Inge's home run
in the third.
Detroit's offense, which had been carrying the club to victories for much of
the past couple weeks, took care of its part soon enough. Curtis Granderson
tripled in Inge in the sixth and scored on a Placido Polanco sacrifice fly.
Three consecutive hits chased Suppan in the seventh, capped by a Neifi Perez
single scoring Craig Monroe.
Inge went 2-for-2 with a walk and accounted for three of Detroit's four runs.
He also accounted for what turned out to be a key out in the second inning
when he snagged a high chop from Hart to throw him out at first. Yet for the
handful of defensive gems -- including a diving stop up the middle from
Perez, who flipped behind his back to start a double play to end the eighth
-- Verlander was the center of it all.
"That's about as proud as I've been for a teammate," Inge said. "I mean, he's
going out there in the ninth inning throwing 100 miles per hour."
That, he would admit, was as much feeding off the crowd as anything. He
struck out Counsell and Tony Graffanino swinging at offspeed pitches, then
fired his first pitch to Hardy at 101 mph on the stadium radar gun -- 102 on
the telecast. It was his 109th pitch of the game.
Pitch 110 hit at 101 mph.
"That's why with one strike left and two outs, I stepped off the back of the
mound and really just took a breather," Verlander said. "I kind of looked
around for a second. I wasn't soaking it up or anything, I was just trying to
calm myself down."
Hardy didn't have a table leg to trot out. When he flied the next pitch to
right, catcher Ivan Rodriguez was out to hug Verlander by the time Ordonez
caught the ball.
"I think I was more excited than him," Rodriguez said. "That moment when you
see the fly ball go into his glove in slow motion, there's no greater feeling
than that. I'm sure that he feels awesome; I feel great. I feel like I
pitched a no-hitter myself.
"It was like winning in the World Series, to be honest with you."
--
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