Houston Chronicle

Rodon pitches no-hitter against Cleveland

Lefthander’s bid for perfect game ends when he hits a batter in ninth

- By Jay Cohen

CHICAGO — Carlos Rodon threw the second nohitter of the young baseball season Wednesday night, losing his bid for a perfect game on a hit batter with one out in the ninth inning, and the Chicago White Sox cruised to an 8-0 victory over the Cleveland Indians.

The lefthander retired his first 25 batters before he plunked Roberto Perez on the back foot with an 0-2 slider. An incredulou­s Rodon looked on almost in bewilderme­nt as Perez made his way to first.

Rodon regained his composure in time to strike out Yu Chang looking and retire Jordan Luplow on a sharp grounder to third, starting a joyous celebratio­n. The crowd of 7,148 cheered as Rodon (2-0) jumped around with teammates near the mound.

“It’s a pretty special moment,” Rodon said. “It feels good to say I did it.”

It was the first no-hitter for the White Sox since Lucas Giolito pitched one Aug. 25 last year against Pittsburgh and No. 20 in franchise history, secondmost among major league teams behind the Los Angeles Dodgers (23).

“He was very determined,” White Sox manager Tony La Russa said. “Proved to me he’s a finisher.”

Rodon’s gem came just five days after Joe Musgrove threw a no-hitter for his hometown Padres at Texas — the first no-no in club history. San Diego had been the only MLB franchise without a no-hitter.

Working quickly in short sleeves with the top of his jersey unbuttoned on a cool Chicago night, Rodon threw 75 of his 114 pitches for strikes. The No. 3 pick in the 2014 amateur draft out of North Carolina State struck out seven in his first career shutout and second complete game.

The closest call for Rodon and the White Sox occurred when Josh Naylor led off the ninth with a slow bouncer. First baseman Jose Abreu picked it up and got his toe on the bag just ahead of a sliding Naylor. The call stood after a video review, delighting the bundled-up crowd.

The game-time temperatur­e was 45 degrees, and most of the other players had on long sleeves. But the cold didn’t seem to bother Rodon at all.

He was in control right from the start. Franmil Reyes saw eight pitches leading off the fifth, but he bounced to third on a 2-2 offering. The crowd cheered loudly when Jose Ramirez lined to left on a 3-1 pitch for the final out of the seventh.

“He kind of overwhelme­d us,” Indians manager Terry Francona said. “When he’s good, he gets stronger as the game goes on and you saw him touch 99 (mph) on pitch 110 and his breaking ball got better and he even threw some changeups. He got into a rhythm and just got stronger as the game went.”

Rodon was helped by a six-run first inning that included another long homer by rookie Yermin Mercedes.

With one out and runners on the corners, Mercedes turned on a Zach Plesac fastball and drove it an estimated 431 feet to left for his third homer. He went 3 for 5 to run his batting average to .500 (19 for 38).

Leury Garcia hit an RBI double and scored on Nick Madrigal’s single before Francona pulled Plesac (1-2) with two out.

 ?? David Banks / Associated Press ?? White Sox starting pitcher Carlos Rodon, center, celebrates his no-hitter against Cleveland with his teammates on Wednesday night at Chicago.
David Banks / Associated Press White Sox starting pitcher Carlos Rodon, center, celebrates his no-hitter against Cleveland with his teammates on Wednesday night at Chicago.

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