Los Angeles Times

ANGELS BROUGHT BACK TO REALITY

Ohtani dismisses talk of needing rest after team loses to complete grueling stretch of 20 games.

- By Mike DiGiovanna

The Angels and Shohei Ohtani hit a wall Wednesday, their bats muffled by a left-hander with a dominant three-pitch mix and the reigning American League most valuable player yielding to the physical demands of his two-way role in a 4-2, 10-inning loss to the Tampa Bay Rays at Angel Stadium.

Ohtani looked relatively sharp in a six-inning start, giving up one run and two hits, striking out five and walking two, his only glaring mistake a hanging 0-and-1 splitfinge­red fastball to Kevin Kiermaier, who drove it into the rightcente­r field seats for a solo homer and a 1-0 lead in the second.

But the right-hander’s average four-seam fastball velocity of 96.0 mph was a tick down from his season average of 97.2 mph, and the last fastball he threw in his 92-pitch outing — to Wander Franco in the

[Detmers, maier’s grounder near the bag to start a double play in the sixth, but none of the plays had a high degree of difficulty.

A better explanatio­n for how Detmers joined Ken Holtzman (1969), Clyde Wright (1970), Jerry Reuss (1980) and Francisco Liriano (2011) as the only pitchers to throw no-hitters with two or fewer strikeouts since divisional play began in 1969 came from the opposing dugout.

“Me personally, I didn’t think it was anything special,” Rays infielder Taylor Walls said. “I just think he did a good job of locating his pitches. He kept us off balance, kept us guessing.

“A lot of times in hitters’ counts, when we were sitting hard, he would throw something soft, and he was able to command it in the zone. When we would take it, he’d get back in the count. So I don’t know … just poor approaches by us and a good job by him.”

Detmers, the 10th overall pick of the 2020 draft out of Louisville, won’t overwhelm opponents with his repertoire, which features a fourseam fastball that averaged 92.3 mph and topped out at 93.9 mph Tuesday night, a looping 72.6-mph curve, an 83.6-mph changeup and an 82.6-mph slider.

But he spun a gem on a magical night in Angel Stadium because he pitched. He changed speeds, moved the ball around the zone and was not afraid to come inside to right-handed hitters. He pitched to contact, and not much of it was loud — the Rays hit only four balls with exit velocities of 100 mph or more.

And he made adjustment­s. Detmers’ best offspeed pitch is his curve, which he threw 27 times, but he also threw his changeup 24 times. The most he had thrown his changeup in a game was nine times.

“We had a plan going into the game and made a couple of pivots,” said Chad Wallach, the veteran who caught the first no-hitter of his career in his second start for the Angels.

“His changeup was incredible tonight. That was probably not the pitch we expected it to be. He spins the ball a lot. We saw the first couple innings how good [the changeup] was, and we just ran with it.”

Detmers had a perfect game through five innings and went to three-ball counts to three batters before walking Walls to start the sixth. Of the five times he had 1-and-1 counts, Detmers threw a strike to get to 1and-2 four times.

“When you get in better counts, hitters become less hitters,” Maddon said. “If you’re getting into bad counts constantly, you’re always behind the hitters. It’s no big secret. The tipping point is normally the 1-1 pitch. When you can go from 1-1 to 1-2 you have a pretty good chance of having a decent night with regularity.

“Everybody’s trying to do that. But sometimes you’re trying to miss bats as opposed to trusting your stuff and staying with your particular game plan. I’d like to see him continue on that path of assertiven­ess, aggressive­ness and challenge hitters more.”

No one, not even Detmers, saw this no-hitter coming. Detmers hadn’t thrown more than six innings in a big league game, and he was occasional­ly effective but mostly erratic in his first five starts this season, going 1-1 with a 5.32 ERA.

He needed 88 pitches to complete five innings against Cleveland on April 28 and 78 pitches to throw 42⁄3 innings at Boston on May 4.

Considerin­g his track record, did Detmers think this was possible?

A day later, he was still trying to process it all.

“It’s still a blur,” Detmers said Wednesday. “Thinking back on it, I remember getting the last out, and that’s pretty much it. I remember hanging out in the locker room. It was a dream come true. It was a crazy day.”

Maddon said throwing a no-hitter, a complete game and being so pitch-efficient could be “transforma­tive” for a young pitcher. Detmers believes it will boost his confidence.

“Obviously, my next outing, I don’t really expect the same thing,” Detmers said. “But just kind of keep the same mentality and trust my stuff like I did [Tuesday night]. That’s what I want to focus on.”

‘Me personally, I didn’t think it was anything special. I just think he did a good job of locating his pitches.’ — Taylor Walls,

Rays infielder

 ?? Ashley Landis Associated Press ?? ROOKIE Reid Detmers, 22, became the fifth pitcher to throw a no-hitter with two or fewer strikeouts.
Ashley Landis Associated Press ROOKIE Reid Detmers, 22, became the fifth pitcher to throw a no-hitter with two or fewer strikeouts.

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