MLB

Blue Jays' offence a no-show as Tigers pitch combined no-hitter

Three Detroit Tigers pitchers combined to no-hit the visiting Toronto Blue Jays in a 2-0 win on Saturday. It was the first combined no-hitter in Tigers history.

Toronto was no-hit for the 7th time in franchise history

Three male baseball pitchers and a catcher from the same team pose for a picture on the field with their arms around each other's shoulders.
From left: Tigers pitchers Matt Manning, Jason Foley and Alex Lange pose alongside catcher Eric Haase after combining to no-hit the Blue Jays in a 2-0 win on Saturday at Comerica Park in Detroit. (Paul Sancya/The Associated Press)

Matt Manning wasn't upset about being pulled while pitching a no-hitter.

He said he didn't even realize it until someone told him in the dugout.

"I had no idea," he said. "I was like, 'well, dang,"'

By the time the game was over, everyone at Comerica Park knew what Manning and relievers Jason Foley and Alex Lange had achieved.

Foley and Lange finished what Manning started, and the Tigers no-hit the Toronto Blue Jays in a 2-0 win Saturday.

Manning (3-1) pitched 6 2/3 innings and Foley got four straight outs.

Lange, the Tigers closer, came in for the ninth and struck out Bo Bichette on three pitches.

Brandon Belt lined out to centre field, and Vladimir Guerrero Jr. grounded out to third on an 0-2 pitch.

It was the ninth no-hitter in Tigers history and the first combined one. It was the first no-hitter for the franchise since Spencer Turnbull no-hit the Seattle Mariners on May 18, 2021. Detroit no-hit the Blue Jays for the second time — Justin Verlander did it at Toronto on May 7, 2011.

Verlander also pitched the most recent no-hitter against the Blue Jays, doing it for Houston on Sept. 1, 2019.

It's second no-hitter in the majors this season after Domingo German's perfect game for the New York Yankees at Oakland on June 28.

The last combined no-hitter in the regular season was by the Houston Astros against the Yankees on June 25, 2022, and the Astros repeated the feat — again with Cristian Javier as the starting pitcher — against the Philadelphia Phillies in Game 4 of the World Series on Nov. 2.

'How about that, Detroit?'

The Tigers celebrated at the mound with Manning and Foley joining the crowd.

"How about that, Detroit?" Lange yelled to the crowd while being interviewed on the field with Manning, Foley and catcher Eric Haase. "Thank you for sitting through the rain to cheer for us."

Manning was replaced after walking Cavan Biggio with two outs in the seventh. He walked three batters and hit one while striking out five. He threw 91 pitches.

"He was labouring a ton," Tigers manager A.J. Hinch said. "I almost took him out after the fifth and after the sixth. I sent him out for the seventh, but once a runner gets on, we have to worry about winning the game."

Foley retired Whit Merrifield in the seventh before pitching a perfect eighth.

"I thought Matty was going to keep going, but I got in there and tried to throw strikes," he said. "This is pretty awesome — I couldn't ask for two better guys to do this with."

Gausman allows 2 runs early

Kevin Gausman (7-5) allowed two runs in the first inning.

Riley Greene singled in his first at-bat since May 30 and scored on Spencer Torkelson's one-out double in the first.

Kerry Carpenter followed with an RBI triple to make it 2-0, but Javier Baez hit into an inning-ending double play.

Carpenter made a spectacular catch to start the fourth inning, sliding in foul territory to catch Guerrero Jr's pop fly down the right-field line.

Baez made a big play in the sixth. He raced into left field to catch Bichette's fly ball with left fielder Matt Vierling shifted to left centre field.

"You have to tip your cap to good pitching and some great defence," Blue Jays manager John Schneider said. "Javi made a great play on Bo's ball and Carpenter made the catch on Vladdy. That's usually what happens — you have good pitching backed up by some good plays."

The start of the game was delayed an hour and 22 minutes by rain and a hard shower fell in the first inning.

"I think that helped me a lot — battling through adversity early like that," said Manning, who started the game by hitting Bichette and walking Belt. "I got into rhythm with Haase and it felt really good."

Haase also caught Turnbull's no-hitter.

"About the sixth inning, you start counting outs," he said. "Matt was keeping them uncomfortable and then Foley came in and shut the door before Lange did what he does."

The Tigers lost 12-2 to the Blue Jays on Friday.

"Our approach at the plate was whatever we didn't do last night," Haase said. "That's baseball — we got our teeth kicked in last night and get a combined no-hitter today."

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