Los Angeles Times

Anderson’s no-hit bid ends in ninth

Angels’ Ohtani smacks a one-out triple to right to halt effort by Dodgers’ left-hander.

- By Jack Harris

It was a no-hitter bid that began with, initially, a base hit.

In the very first at-bat of a memorable night at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday, Angels outfielder Taylor Ward lifted a shallow fly ball to right-center field.

Right as Mookie Betts tracked it down, he collided with teammate Cody Bellinger, the impact jarring the ball loose as he crashed to the ground.

Initially, the play was ruled a single by official scorer Jerry White. A few minutes later, however, the decision was changed to an error. For the next two and half hours, a zero hung in the Angels’ hit column.

It would be eight more innings before the total changed again.

In the best performanc­e of his career, left-hander Tyler Anderson carried a nohitter almost all the way to the end, coming up just two outs shy of history when Shohei Ohtani laced a triple with one out in the ninth inning of the Dodgers’ eventual 4-1 win.

As Ohtani’s line drive evaded Betts’ diving effort near the foul line, Anderson

squinted into the distance as 50,812 fans rose to their feet. As manager Dave Roberts came to the mound, he shared with his pitcher a few proud words and a congratula­tory tap of his chest.

Then, Anderson headed for the dugout, tipping his cap to the crowd to complete a night he’ll never forget.

“You may never have a chance to do that again, in however many years of pitching,” he said. “Throwing eight no-hit — I’ve taken some into the fifth and sixth, maybe the seventh, before — but getting through eight, you just want to give it a chance.”

That much, Roberts permitted Anderson to attempt — despite the pitcher’s unheralded track record as a journeyman former first-round pick, and the manager’s well-establishe­d reputation for pulling pitchers in the middle of no-hit bids.

Wednesday, however, was different, Roberts said. Anderson was coming off an extra day of rest. The Dodgers will have a couple of more days off before he’s scheduled to pitch again.

Just as important, Anderson faced little stress, starting when Ward was thrown out while trying to reach second on the dropped ball in the first — a play neither Anderson, Roberts nor apparently anyone else in the Dodgers dugout realized had initially been ruled a hit — and continuing over the course of his careerhigh 123-pitch outing.

“Everything lined up,” Roberts said, “to give him that opportunit­y.”

After working around a walk later in the first, and a hit batter to begin the second, Anderson looked unstoppabl­e in dominating the Angels with his underwhelm­ing 90mph fastball, an unrelentin­g changeup that has benefited this year from a new grip and an unusual delivery distinguis­hed by a jerky leg kick.

He retired 17 batters in a row between the second and seventh innings, a stretch that was snapped only by a throwing error he made after fielding a dribbling ball up the first base line in the seventh.

Though he slipped on the mound in the fifth inning and fidgeted with his arm and elbow at various points in the game — something he said was a normal routine, not a sign of any discomfort or injury — Anderson’s pursuit of history continued into the eighth.

“You can feel the energy in situations like that,” Anderson said. “You don’t get that very often.”

After a strikeout of Ward stranded a runner in the eighth, Anderson returned to the dugout already past his career-high pitch count.

Roberts decided to send him back to the mound anyway.

The ninth began with a called third strike against Mike Trout, Anderson’s eighth strikeout of the night.

But then, on the verge of what would have been the 24th no-hitter in club history, he threw a cutter to Ohtani on the next pitch that was hammered down the right-field line.

“I kind of laughed that he dove for it,” Anderson said of Betts’ lastditch attempt. “It’s a very nice gesture. But [he was] so far away.”

As the crowd roared in appreciati­on, Roberts emerged to finally remove the 32-year-old from the game.

Before taking the ball, Roberts stopped his left-hander — who is now 8-0 with a 2.82 ERA in his first year with the Dodgers — and offered him one last embrace.

“It was pure joy for him,” Roberts said. “It was his moment, that’s what I told him. He said, ‘It would have been better if I’d got two more outs.’ But, it’s as good a performanc­e as he’s ever had.”

 ?? Mark J. Terrill Associated Press ?? DODGERS MANAGER Dave Roberts offers some encouragem­ent to Tyler Anderson as he leaves game.
Mark J. Terrill Associated Press DODGERS MANAGER Dave Roberts offers some encouragem­ent to Tyler Anderson as he leaves game.
 ?? Michael Owens Getty Images ?? SHOHEI OHTANI swings at the first pitch he sees from Tyler Anderson with one out in the ninth and hits a triple to right-field corner to put an end to the Dodgers left-hander’s bid for a no-hitter.
Michael Owens Getty Images SHOHEI OHTANI swings at the first pitch he sees from Tyler Anderson with one out in the ninth and hits a triple to right-field corner to put an end to the Dodgers left-hander’s bid for a no-hitter.

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