Historic Cole-powered no-hitter
Phillies' Hamels handcuffs Cubs for first time in 50 years
The scouts packed the seats behind home plate, and Cole Hamels put on quite a show.
The lanky left-hander was near perfect on a picturesque afternoon at Wrigley Field.
Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Cole Hamels delivers during the sixth inning of his no-hitter against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field in Chicago on Saturday. Matt Marton / AP |
Quite the timing, too.
In what might be his final start for the Phillies, Hamels struck out 13 in baseball's third no-hitter of the season, leading Philadelphia to a 5-0 victory over the Chicago Cubs on Saturday.
The 2008 World Series MVP has been mentioned prominently in trade talks as the July 31 deadline approaches.
"It's something where you just go out there and enjoy the moment," Hamels said. "What I want is to be successful. I enjoyed the moment and this happened."
Hamels (6-7) was in control right from the start against the contending Cubs, and then got some help from rookie center fielder Odubel Herrera in the final two innings.
It was the fourth no-hitter for catcher Carlos Ruiz, including the playoffs, according to STATS - tops in NL history and tied with Jason Varitek for the major league record.
"I was thinking about one inning at a time," Ruiz said. "I got the feeling something special could happen today."
It was the 13th no-hitter for the Phillies, who have MLB's worst record and could rebuild their farm system with a big haul from a Hamels deal.
The 31-year-old lefty also was part of Philadelphia's previous no-hitter, teaming with three relievers for a gem last Sept 1 at Atlanta.
Since 1900, only two pitchers have thrown a no-hitter and then been traded in the same season: Cliff Chambers from Pittsburgh to St. Louis in 1951, and Edwin Jackson from Tampa Bay to the White Sox in 2010.
"Today was vintage Cole Hamels," Phillies manager Pete Mackanin said.
It was the first no-hitter against Chicago since Sandy Koufax pitched a perfect game at Dodger Stadium in 1965. Dexter Fowler walked twice, but he was the only baserunner for the Cubs.
Hamels "definitely increased his value, I would imagine," Cubs manager Joe Maddon said. "You're going to get that higher-tier prospect because of that performance today."
Ryan Howard hit a three-run homer off Jake Arrieta (11-6) in the third, but Herrera had the two biggest plays.
With one out in the eighth, he ran a long way into the gap in left-center to grab David Ross' fly and then spilled onto the warning track.
Cubs rookie Kris Bryant launched a long fly with two outs in the ninth, but Herrera raced back and managed to lean forward for the catch after slipping on the track in front of the brick wall.
"It feels awesome. I feel proud to be part of it," Herrera said.
Hamels had a big smile on his face as he hugged Howard and Ruiz after the final out. The rest of the Phillies then mobbed the pitcher near the mound while the crowd of 41,863 delivered a long standing ovation.
"He looked like he was extremely focused," Mackanin said. "He looked focused in the past and I think he may have been trying too hard not to pitch poorly.
"I think he just made his mind up that he is going to be who he is and 'I'm going to do what I do best.' He looked like he was on a mission."
Before Saturday's outing, it looked as if all the trade rumors were taking a toll on the usually dependable Hamels. He allowed 14 runs and 20 hits over 6 1-3 innings in his previous two starts. He was 0-4 with a 5.56 ERA during a nine-game winless streak, which matched a career high.
But Hamels said he likes pitching in Chicago, and it showed on the three-year anniversary of his six-year, $144 million contract with the Phillies.