Calhoun Times

Mchugh pitches seven shutout innings, gets no decision in first start in Majors

- By Steve Megargee

Collin McHugh walked off the mound after the seventh and final inning of his first major league appearance, tried to remain stone-faced and raised his right hand to touch his cap for the 13 family and friends watching from the stands.

“It was still a tight game so I (didn’t) want to do anything crazy,” he said.

McHugh, a former star at Berry College, had a dazzling debut for the New York Mets on Thursday, as the 25-yearold right-hander allowed just two hits, struck out nine and walked one in seven shutout innings.

His strong outing went to waste, however, as the Mets lost to the Rockies, 1-0, in the series finale. McHugh did not get the decision for the Mets, who lost their fifth straight game.

Taking the rotation slot of injured ace Johan Santana, McHugh threw 63 of 100 pitches for strikes.

After Charlie Blackmon’s oppositefi­eld double to left leading off the game, McHugh retired 20 of 22 batters.

McHugh seems like an interestin­g type. His Twitter account reads “Freelance Meteorolog­ist & Profession­al baseball player.”

“It’s a little joke,” he said. “I can predict the weather — but I do it for a nominal fee.”

He became the sixth Mets starter to pitch shutout ball in his debut, according to STATS, joining Dick Rusteck (1966), Tim Leary (1981), Masato Yoshii (1998), Tyler Yates (2004) and Matt Harvey (July 26 at Arizona).

Only Rusteck pitched longer, throwing a fourhitter against Cincinnati.

“Before the game they said he was Dillon Gee, and that’s exactly what I saw,” Josh Thole said. “Pounded the strike zone.”

Using a big, slow curveball and a fastball from 86-93 mph, McHugh worked out of trouble after the double by Blackmon, who also played high school ball in the Atlanta area.

Sacrificed to third, Blackmon was stranded when McHugh threw a called third strike past Jordan Pacheco and fanned Carlos Gonzalez.

“Had tremendous poise,” Rockies manager Jim Tracy said. “What else can you ask?”

McHugh felt well prepared.

“The anticipati­on is the hardest part, for sure,” he said. “It was trying to contain the nerves.

“A lot of people gave some really good advice and said you’re going to be nervous. It’s a fact. Just contain those and go out and do your thing.”

Colorado, which tied a season high with its fifth straight win, broke through quickly after McHugh’s departure.

Colvin hit the second pitch from Bobby Parnell (2-3) to straightaw­ay center, where the rookie Valdespin took two steps in, then realized he had misjudged the drive. He backpedale­d a halfdozen steps and jumped for a backhand grab, but the ball sailed over his glove.

“The ball jumped off the bat,” Valdespin said.

He’s been a middle infielder for most of his career.

“One of the things you’ve got to be careful of is putting guys out of position in the big leagues, because eventually the ball will find them ,” Collins said. “When you’re in a situation like we are, it’s going to happen at the wrong time, which it has.”

Chris Nelson fouled off a pair of 0-2 pitches, then singled to center past the drawn-in infield.

“I can’t tell you how proud I am of this group,” Tracy said. “Said that many times, it doesn’t take a four-game sweep to say it.”

Rex Brothers ( 8- 2) pitched two innings for the win. Matt Belisle, Colorado’s fifth pitcher, got his first save since June 22, 2010, against Boston following some ninth-inning drama.

Pinch- hitter Justin Turner singled leading off and was sacrificed to second by Valdespin. Daniel Murphy flied to center and David Wright flied to right.

“It’s frustratin­g for everybody,” Thole said. “It’s just not working.”

Colorado swept the four-game set from the Mets, who were 0-for-10 with runners in scoring position in Thursday’s game and 8-for-43 (.186) in the series.

The Mets have been held to two runs or fewer for six straight games for the first time since a streak of seven in a row from Sept. 17-21, 1982, according to STATS LLC.

Collins admitted he’s turned his attention to 2013.

“At this stage of the season, you’ve got to start looking to next year, you’ve got to start looking at the big picture,” he said, pleased with some of his young pitchers such as Matt Harvey and McHugh.

“You look for Sept. 1 now to say who’s going to be the next guy that’s going to whet our taste buds?”

New York is 11-28 since the All-Star break, which includes a 2-14 mark at Citi Field, and is 11 games under .500 for the first time since finishing 70-92 in 2009.

“It’s a nightmare for everybody in this clubhouse,” catcher Josh Thole said after the latest loss.

 ?? FRANK FRANKLIN III \ Associated Press ?? Former Berry starter Collin McHugh looks on from the dugout after pitching seven scoreless innings for the Mets in his Major League Debut last Thursday. McHugh got a no decision despite striking out nine.
FRANK FRANKLIN III \ Associated Press Former Berry starter Collin McHugh looks on from the dugout after pitching seven scoreless innings for the Mets in his Major League Debut last Thursday. McHugh got a no decision despite striking out nine.

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