OAKLAND, Calif. — When the ball
pounded off of Phil Hughes' left forearm, he thought it would go
straight up in the air. It glanced off his chest and instead dropped
several feet in front of the mound.
He just plain lost track of it — and
lost his no-hit bid, too.
Catcher Jorge Posada and others yelled
to no avail. The pitcher finally saw Alex Rodriguez pointing. Too late.
Hughes took an impressive no-hit try
into the eighth inning Wednesday night, losing it when Eric Chavez
bounced a hard comebacker off the pitcher's forearm and chest in the New
York Yankees' 3-1 win over the Oakland Athletics.
"To have it end that way is kind of a
bummer. That's the game," Hughes said. "Yeah, frustrated. It's so hard
to do, to throw a no-hitter. You don't get many opportunities to do it."
Hughes (2-0) struck out a career-high
10 in the Yankees' sixth straight win, with his parents Phil and Dori in
the stands to see it after driving up from Orange County for his
outing. Hughes was in complete control until Chavez opened the eighth
with that one-hopper back to the mound.
Hughes had little time to react, and
the 23-year-old righty searched for the ball as Chavez hustled for a
single.
"Sometimes the last place you look is
right in front of you, or you look down at your feet. He was looking for
the baseball and just couldn't find it," manager Joe Girardi said.
Hughes said it would have gotten
through for a hit had he not stopped the ball. Chavez had a good feeling
when he made contact.
"I didn't see it hit him but I knew I
hit decent enough," Chavez said. "He didn't find it and that was good.
You don't go up there in a close game thinking you need to break up the
no-hitter. Everybody knows one swing of the bat and you're right back in
the game. Maybe if it's 5-0, 6-0, yeah, it's 'somebody get a hit!'"
This was the second near-miss for the
defending World Series champions this season. CC Sabathia held Tampa
Bay hitless for 7 2/3 innings on April 10.
Colorado's Ubaldo Jimenez pitched the
majors' only no-hitter of 2010 last Saturday night at Atlanta.
"From the get go I knew he had good
stuff," Posada said. "We talk about the command of his fastball, that
was the difference."
Hughes was trying for the Yankees'
first no-hitter since David Cone's perfect game against Montreal on July
18, 1999. Hughes had come close before — in 2007, during his second
major league start, he had a no-hitter going through 6 1/3 innings at
Texas before he suddenly hurt his left hamstring and had to leave the
game.
"After I got that first out in the
seventh I was just hoping I didn't go down with something," Hughes said,
chuckling. "That was all I was thinking about."
Hughes won the fifth spot in the
Yankees' rotation by pitching well in spring training, and his outing at
Oakland was his best performance this season. After a one-out walk to
Daric Barton in the first inning, Hughes retired 20 straight batters
before Chavez's infield hit.
Overall, Hughes gave up only one hit
in 7 1/3 innings and walked two.
Two batters after Chavez got aboard,
Hughes walked Gabe Gross and was done. He was charged with Oakland's
lone run in the standout 101-pitch performance after pinch-hitter Jake
Fox had an RBI single off Joba Chamberlain.
"I'll take 28 to 30 more of these if I
can," Hughes said.
Mariano Rivera finished the
three-hitter for his sixth save in as many chances.
A-Rod and Robinson Cano hit
back-to-back triples to start the fourth off $10 million A's ace Ben
Sheets (1-1). Posada followed Cano's hit with an RBI groundout. Brett
Gardner's RBI single with two outs in the ninth provided an insurance
run.
"My stuff was a lot better but I
should have been able to throw more strikes and get deeper in the game,"
Sheets said. "How Hughes pitched is irrelevant to me. You look back
and, yeah, he pitched a great game."
New York matched the 1926 Yankees'
franchise record by winning its first five series of the season.
Hughes shut down the A's by pounding
the zone with his spot-on fastball and mixing in an effective curveball.
He quieted the crowd of 30,211 for much of the chilly, breezy spring
evening in the Bay Area. It was Hughes' first career start against
Oakland.
"That's as good as it gets," Girardi
said. "His stuff was great tonight. Ahead in the count all night and it
put them on the defense. His cutter was outstanding to the lefties. His
curveball was great and his fastball command was great. It was a
brilliant performance."
Hughes began last season in the
minors then was called up April 28. He made seven starts before becoming
a reliable reliever as closer Rivera's primary setup man over the final
three months.
The Yankees have held opponents to
three or fewer runs in each game during their winning streak.
Both managers mixed up their lineups
for the middle game of the series. Randy Winn earned a start in right
field for the Yankees in place of Nick Swisher. Oakland manager Bob
Geren rested leadoff hitter and center fielder Rajai Davis for part of
the night, moving Cliff Pennington to the top of the order and putting
catcher Kurt Suzuki in the cleanup spot.
The umpiring crew changed, too. Ed
Rapuano was replaced for the final two games of the series after taking a
foul ball off his facemask Tuesday night as plate umpire. The A's said
Rapuano was taking a few days off as a precaution. Pacific Coast League
umpire Mike Muchlinski was called up to take Rapuano's spot.
Notes
New York last hit consecutive
triples on Aug. 25, 2007, by Melky Cabrera and Johnny Damon vs. Detroit.
… A's LF Travis Buck was a late scratch with a strained right oblique
muscle, replaced by Eric Patterson. … A's reliever Jerry Blevins was
pulled off the mound after experiencing back spasms. … A high school
team from nearby Vallejo, the hometown of Sabathia, hung out on the
field before the game. Sabathia pitches Thursday afternoon's series
finale. … Harlem Globetrotter Moo Moo Evans threw out the ceremonial
first pitch.