The Denver Post

World Series gem shows how baseball has changed

- By PAUL NEWBERRY

For those who gripe about baseball squanderin­g far too much time wallowing in its past — yep, count me in — the only nohitters in World Series history prove just how much the game has, indeed, changed.

About the only similarity between Don Larsen’s perfect game for the New York Yankees and the Houston Astros’ combined no-no Wednesday night was the number of pitches thrown by the starters.

Larsen needed just 97 of them to mow down all 27 batters he faced in Game 5 of the 1956 World Series against the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Cristian Javier tossed that exact same number in Game 4 at Philadelph­ia but went only six innings before calling it a night, giving way to a trio of relievers to finish off the masterpiec­e.

Larsen pitched in an era when one was expected to finish what he started. That season, with 16 teams playing a 154-game schedule, 758 complete games were recorded — more than 61% of all regular-season contests.

Eight more were thrown in the World Series, five by the Yankees and three by the Dodgers.

Compare that with the current state of the game, when starters are feted like royalty if they last five or six innings. With nearly double the teams and a 162-game schedule, there were just 36 complete games during the regular season — less than 1.5% of the starts.

There haven’t been any in the postseason, but that’s nothing new. Houston’s Justin Verlander was the last pitcher to throw a complete game in October or November, five long years ago when he beat the New York Yankees 2-1 in Game 2 of the 2017 AL Championsh­ip Series.

These days, you’ve got a better chance of spotting Bigfoot than catching a pitcher going nine innings in a playoff game, a phenomenon that has become even more pronounced

with the emphasis on bullpens that can come at hitters in 100 mph waves.

Astros manager Dusty Baker wasn’t thinking of posterity when he turned to his ’pen. In fact, he expected someone to get a hit off the three relievers he planned to use.

“A combined no-hitter

is, I mean, that’s hard to do because usually somebody’s going to give it up,” Baker said.

Still, as impressive as Javier was, there was zero chance of him getting a chance to match the hitless part of what Larsen did over a full game (a perfect game was already out of reach since the Astros starter walked two). No worries.

The Dominican flamethrow­er wasn’t the least bit peeved about having to watch the final three frames from the dugout. The subject didn’t even come up at his news conference afterward.

Why would it? Javier had already been part of another combined nohitter this season, going seven innings in a 3- 0 victory over the New York Yankees on June 25. Two relievers completed that one, including the same closer — Ryan Pressly — who finished the job against the Phillies.

Javier and Pressly are not just the first pitchers to be part of two combined no-hitters in the same season, in the same two games, they are the first to do it in a career.

They surely won’t be the last.

Of the 317 no-hitters in major league history, just 19 have involved more than one pitcher. But eight of those joint efforts have occurred in the last five seasons, coinciding with the rise of third-timethroug­h-the-batting- order analytics and overstocke­d bullpens.

The Astros and Phillies are both carrying 13 pitchers on their World Series rosters — half of their available players.

Back in 1956, the Yankees went with a 10-man staff (as did the Dodgers) and each team only used eight arms through the entirety of their seven-game series.

Barring the games being cut from nine to six innings, Larsen will likely remain the lone pitcher to complete a no-hitter in the World Series — much less a perfect game.

Which is not meant in any way to degrade the stellar performanc­e turned in by Javier and his three teammates. They deserve to be mentioned right alongside Larsen, who died in 2020 at the age of 90.

It was just ... hmm, what’s the word?

Different.

Baseball, you see, can change.

 ?? MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? From left, Houston Astros relief pitcher Rafael Montero, relief pitcher Bryan Abreu, starting pitcher Cristian Javier, catcher Christian Vazquez and relief pitcher Ryan Pressly celebrate a combined no-hitter after Game 4 of the World Series between the Astros and the Philadelph­ia Phillies on Wednesday in Philadelph­ia. The Astros won 5-0 to tie the series 2-2.
MATT SLOCUM — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS From left, Houston Astros relief pitcher Rafael Montero, relief pitcher Bryan Abreu, starting pitcher Cristian Javier, catcher Christian Vazquez and relief pitcher Ryan Pressly celebrate a combined no-hitter after Game 4 of the World Series between the Astros and the Philadelph­ia Phillies on Wednesday in Philadelph­ia. The Astros won 5-0 to tie the series 2-2.

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