Toronto Star

Sox’s Rodon falls short of perfect game by just a foot

- JAY COHEN

CHICAGO—Carlos Rodon jumped around near the mound, surrounded by exuberant teammates. All the injuries, all the uncertaint­y, it seemed like a lifetime ago.

From no roster spot to no-hitter — Rodon had arrived at his moment.

The left-hander threw the second no-hitter 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.

“It just feels good to finally sit here and tell you I dominated today, and it felt good,” Rodon said. “I’ve never really done that. I’ve never done that on this level at least, and it feels good to say I did it.”

The 28-year-old pitcher got some help from AL MVP Jose Abreu, who picked up Josh Naylor’s slow bouncer leading off the ninth and got his toe on first base in the nick of time. The pandemic-limited crowd of 7,148, bundled up on a cool, crisp night, had to endure a quick replay review when the Indians challenged, but the call was upheld.

Rodon then plunked Roberto Perez on the back foot with an 0-2 slider — the only runner he allowed. An incredulou­s Rodon looked on almost in bewilderme­nt as Perez made his way to first, asking the veteran catcher if the ball actually hit him.

It had. A perfect game saved by inches — then lost by a foot.

Rodon regained his composure in time to strike out Yu Chang looking and retire Jordan Luplow on a sharp grounder to third baseman Yoan Moncada, starting a joyous celebratio­n. Rodon held out his arms as Moncada jumped toward him and backup catcher Zack Collins joined the impromptu party.

“That was the most incredible thing that I’ve ever been a part of behind the plate,” the 26year-old Collins said.

Sidelined by a string of injuries throughout his career, Rodon was out of a job for a while last winter. Back in December, the White Sox declined to offer him a 2021 contract. The No. 3 pick in the 2014 amateur draft re-signed with the team as a free agent, agreeing to a oneyear deal for $3 million (U.S.) on Feb. 1.

Rodon (2-0) won a spot in the rotation in spring training and pitched five scoreless innings in his first start of the season. He was supposed to pitch Monday against Cleveland, but was scratched because of an upset stomach.

“There’s an old saying: ‘There’s not a lot of justice in this game, but every once in a while,’ ” Chicago manager Tony La Russa said. “(He) proved to me he’s a finisher, and that’s a really good thing for his future and ours.”

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.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada