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Consecutive innings pitched without allowing a walk. 84.1 – Bill Fischer, Kansas City Athletics – August 3 through September 30, 1962; Consecutive innings pitched without allowing a home run (modern era) 269.1 – Greg Minton, San Francisco Giants – June 1, 1979 through May 1, 1982; Consecutive innings pitched without allowing a home run ...
Previously, Walter Johnson of the 1913 Washington Senators had held the consecutive scoreless innings record, at 55 + 2 ⁄ 3, [7] with two relief appearances, [15] which gave him a fractional total. In 1968, Drysdale, also of the Dodgers, surpassed Johnson by pitching 58 + 2 ⁄ 3 innings in six consecutive nine-inning shutouts between May 14 ...
The most innings pitched in a live-ball season (since 1920) was Wilbur Wood's 376 2 ⁄ 3 innings in 1972. [41] No pitcher has even thrown half of White's record total for innings in a season since Phil Niekro in 1979, with 342. The most recent 300-inning season was by Steve Carlton the following year, with 304.
In total, Blanco went 14 consecutive innings and 44 outs without allowing a hit. That’s the best start to a season by a pitcher since at least 1961. Historic beginning to the season for Ronel ...
Flaherty combined on a three-hitter and Los Angeles Dodgers pitchers tied the postseason record of 33 consecutive scoreless innings by routing the New York Mets 9-0 Sunday night in the NL ...
The same can be said for the 59 consecutive scoreless innings Orel Hershiser tossed from August 1988 to April 1989, and Ichiro Suzuki's 262 hits in 2004. ... there are at least 27 MLB records that ...
Nolan Ryan threw seven no-hitters in MLB, the most of any pitcher. Below is a list of Major League Baseball no-hitters, enumerating every no-hitter pitched in Major League Baseball history. The list also includes no-hit games that were broken up in extra innings or were in shortened games, although they have not been considered official no ...
The longest winning streak consisting only of playoff games stands at 12 consecutive wins, by the 1927, 1928 and 1932 New York Yankees (who swept the World Series all three seasons) and tied by the 1998–99 Yankees. According to Major League Baseball's policy on winning streaks, tie games do not end a team's winning streak. [1]