San Antonio Express-News

Rookie’s no-hitter latest wow factor

- By Scott Miller

ANAHEIM, Calif. — It takes a lot to swing the Los Angeles Angels’ spotlight away from Shohei Ohtani and Mike Trout.

You might even say it takes something like a change-up — the pitch that Reid Detmers, a rookie left-hander, threw so spectacula­rly in no-hitting the Tampa Bay Rays in Angel Stadium on Tuesday night.

Detmers, 22, making only his 11th career start, recorded the latest mustsee moment in an Angels season that is gathering momentum. He struck out only two batters in a 12-0 victory in which Trout smashed two home runs and Anthony Rendon, a right-handed batter, blasted a homer from the left side.

After cruising through eight quiet innings, Detmers had to wait out his team’s offense in an extended bottom half of the eighth. He showed zero evidence of jitters or jinxes when he finally did get back to the mound, retiring Vidal Bruján on a foul pop to the catcher and outfielder Kevin Kiermaier on a ground ball to second.

Then he stamped his name into the record books, recording the 12th no-hitter in Angels history by inducing another ground ball, this one from Yandy Díaz.

It was the second nohitter in the majors this season after five New York Mets pitchers combined for one last month. Last year, MLB pitchers recorded nine no-hitters, breaking a single-season record that had been set in 1884.

“Getting the last out was the coolest part,” Detmers said after joining the exclusive club. “It’s just something I’ve dreamed ever since I was a little kid. I didn’t think it would ever happen.”

The long wait before finishing things off came after the game took a turn toward the absurd. Trailing 8-0 in the eighth inning, Tampa Bay moved Brett Phillips, the team’s plucky outfielder and would-be pitcher, from right field to the mound for mop-up duty.

The Angels scored four times against Phillips while banging out five hits, which left Detmers marooned on the bench. Trout and Rendon’s homers off Phillips each came off 54-mph sliders.

In Rendon’s case, an unlikely record was set: He had appeared as a righthande­d batter 4,528 times before homering in his first at-bat from the left side of the plate. Angels manager Joe Maddon said Rendon had experiment­ed with hitting from the left side in batting practice. He had been a full-time righthande­d hitter since at least his days at Houston Lamar High School.

“I thought it was great theater. Baseball is looking for fun moments like that,” Maddon said of Phillips’ adventure on the mound, adding: “It was a cool inning. I was only concerned that it was taking too long and Reid was on the bench thinking about it.”

Phillips took the moment in stride.

“Honestly, I didn’t even know that was him until he crossed the plate and I saw his last name,” he said of Rendon.

After Phillips got out of the eighth, Detmers made quick work of Tampa Bay.

The Angels’ top pick in the 2020 MLB draft, Detmers entered this season as Baseball America’s top-ranked left-handed pitching prospect. He was 1-1 with a 5.32 ERA in five

starts going into Tuesday’s action and had been working with Angels pitching coach Matt Wise and assistant pitching coach Dom Chiti on better placement of his inside fastball to right-handed hitters and working his changeup off his fastball.

“If he learns to do that on a regular basis, with the other stuff he has, that’s going to be a big part of his success,” Maddon said.

In turn, that could be an enormous part of the Angels’ success. That the spotlight swung to the mound on this night in Anaheim is an encouragin­g developmen­t for the Angels, whose all-bat, noarms status over much of the past decade has kept them out of the playoffs since 2014.

The Angels, 21-11 after Tuesday’s game, continued to lead the AL West, one game ahead of the Astros.

Entering Wednesday’s action, they were 10 games over .500 for the first time since April 14, 2018, when they were 13-3.

The 108-pitch complete game was the longest outing of Detmers’ career. He entered with single-game career highs of six innings pitched and 97 pitches thrown.

The only heart-stopping moment came in the seventh inning when, with one out, first baseman Jared Walsh failed to handle a Phillips ground ball. It was ruled an error, and history marched on.

 ?? Ashley Landis / Associated Press ?? Members of the Angels mob rookie lefthander Reid Detmers (48) after he threw his first career no-hitter against the Rays on Tuesday. In only his 11th career start, Detmers struck out two and walked one. Mike Trout had two home runs and Anthony Rendon added one.
Ashley Landis / Associated Press Members of the Angels mob rookie lefthander Reid Detmers (48) after he threw his first career no-hitter against the Rays on Tuesday. In only his 11th career start, Detmers struck out two and walked one. Mike Trout had two home runs and Anthony Rendon added one.

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