White Sox starter Lucas Giolito twirls 1st no-hitter of season to beat Pirates
2019 all-star strikes out 13, walks just 1 en route to victory
Lucas Giolito pitched the first no-hitter of the pandemic-delayed major league season, striking out 13 and permitting just one runner in leading the Chicago White Sox over the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-0 Tuesday night.
"I've been working for this type of game for a while now and it's really cool that we got it done," Giolito said.
An all-star last year, the 26-year-old Giolito (3-2) matched his career high for strikeouts set in his previous start against Detroit.
Only a four-pitch walk to Gonzalez leading off the fourth inning got in Giolito's way of perfection. The right-hander threw 101 pitches and made quick work of the Pirates — Pittsburgh came into the game batting just .229 this season and has the worst record in the majors.
LUCAS GIOLITO DID IT <a href="https://t.co/7dFkR2Afdq">pic.twitter.com/7dFkR2Afdq</a>
—@NBCSWhiteSox
The White Sox rushed toward the mound after the final out to celebrate Giolito's first career no-hitter.
Giolito was fully aware in the later innings what was at stake.
"After the seventh, six more outs, looking at who I was facing, became very, very, very possible," he said, "and then we were able to get it done."
Giolito said his approach never wavered.
Giolito pitched the 19th no-hitter in White Sox history and first since Philip Humber threw a perfect game at Seattle in 2012. This was the seventh time the Pirates have been held hitless, previously by Washington's Max Scherzer in 2015.
White Sox shortstop Tim Anderson made a nifty play on a grounder by Bryan Reynolds up the middle in the seventh to preserve the gem. In the ninth, Gonzalez hit a liner that Engel, a fleet centre fielder for most of his career, caught on the run at knee-high height.
"Yeah man, I think I got it," Gonzalez said. "With that at-bat, I was a little bit mad because I don't want to be part of history."
Giolito improved to 30-28 in his big league career. He made his debut with Washington in 2016, then was traded after that season to the White Sox in a package for outfielder Adam Eaton.