New York Daily News

Padres’ Caratini has caught MLB’s last two no-hitters

- Alex Cora

Victor Caratini is a no-no catcher.

When hometown pitcher Joe Musgrove threw the first no-hitter for the San Diego Padres in their franchise history, Caratini became the first MLB catcher to be behind the plate for consecutiv­e no-hitters in the league for different teams.

“He was the first one to embrace me,” Musgrove said of Caratini. “And it just felt good. I know he wanted that as bad as I did.”

While Musgrove had never thrown a no-hitter at any level, Caratini was on the receiving end last Sept. 13 when Alec Mills threw one for the Chicago Cubs at Milwaukee. The offseason acquisitio­ns by the Padres got one together Friday night in a 3-0 win against the Rangers in Texas.

“Just super happy. I think it’s pretty rare to find yourself in those situations,” Caratini said Saturday through a translator. “Joe had everything working, had all of his pitches working. It’s really awesome. Really happy to be a part of it, really happy for him, and really happy for the team to have been able to experience that with him.”

It was only the second start with the Padres for the 28-yearold Musgrove, the only player they got back as part of a three-team, seven-player trade in January after he pitched for Pittsburgh the past three seasons.

Caratini also got to San Diego as part of a seven-player deal. The 27-year-old catcher came with right-hander Yu Darvish from the Cubs last December for righthande­r Zach Davies and four minor leaguers.

Musgrove described Caratini as “a scientist” who was calculatin­g between innings what they were about to face in the Rangers lineup, and figuring out when to be aggressive and when to try to save a few pitches. Padres manager Jayce Tingler gave Caratini credit for coaxing the big righthande­r through a historic performanc­e while certainly benefiting from the recent experience of catching another no-hitter.

“When you start to connect the dots a little bit, to have two of them now, and as quickly as he’s had them,” Tingler said Saturday. “He obviously receives well, calls a great game . ... Just being able to be on the same page, and you can’t really do that without getting in a flow. And so there’s got to be a ton of trust with both sides there. And I think Victor has won over the trust of a lot of those pitchers.”

There have been 10 other times when a starting catcher caught consecutiv­e MLB no-hitters, but all of those were for the same team, according to Elias Sports. The last was Cincinnati’s Ryan Hanigan when Homer Bailey held the San Francisco Giants without a hit July 2, 2013, after doing the same to the Pittsburgh Pirates on Sept. 28, 2012.

 ?? GETTY ?? Catcher Victor Caratini celebrates with Joe Musgrove after completing first no-hitter in Padres’ history.
GETTY Catcher Victor Caratini celebrates with Joe Musgrove after completing first no-hitter in Padres’ history.
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