MLB

San Diego Padres at Arizona Diamondbacks

· Major League Baseball
San Diego Padres
67-53, 27-29 Away
Final
0 - 7
Arizona Diamondbacks
38-80, 24-35 Home

D-backs' Gilbert throws no-hitter in first career start

An aspiring electrician, the Diamondbacks left-hander delivered a shocker for the history books Saturday night.

Gilbert became the fourth pitcher — and first in 68 years — to throw a no-hitter in his initial big league start, leading Arizona over the San Diego Padres 7-0 with the record-tying eighth no-hitter in the majors this season.

The last to accomplish the feat in his first start was Bobo Holloman of the St. Louis Browns on May 6, 1953. Bumpus Jones also did it in his major league debut with the Cincinnati Reds on Oct. 15, 1892, and Theodore Breitenstein threw one in his first start for the Browns on Oct. 4, 1891.

The eight no-hitters matched the mark set in 1884, the first year overhand pitching was allowed.

Gilbert struck out Trent Grisham and Ha-Seong Kim in the ninth inning before Tommy Pham lined out to center fielder Ketel Marte. Joyous Diamondbacks players threw their gloves in the air and rushed the mound, mobbing the surprising hero who spent six seasons in the minors and was selected in the Triple-A portion of the Rule 5 draft last winter.

He had pitched three times in relief for a total of 3 2/3 innings since making his major league debut this month.

“Crazy,” Gilbert said. “It's not going to hit me for probably another day. I don't know what just happened.”

The 27-year-old Gilbert threw 102 pitches, including 64 strikes, against a San Diego lineup missing injured star Fernando Tatis Jr. Gilbert rarely delivered his fastball above 90 mph, but he effectively peppered the Padres with breaking pitches and leaned on his defense, which bailed him out on several hard-hit balls.

Pavin Smith caught a liner from Adam Frazier and then stepped on first to double off Pham in the fourth. There was a line drive snagged by Gilbert off Eric Hosmer to end the fifth. Third baseman Drew Ellis made a diving catch in the seventh. David Peralta made a leaping grab at the wall on Austin Nola’s long fly ball in the eighth.

Gilbert needed just three pitches to get through the eighth, setting up a dramatic ninth. Marte caught a line drive for the final out while charging from center field.

“I tried to tune out as much as I could,” Gilbert said. “But that last inning, I heard everything.”

Among those celebrating the first Diamondbacks no-hitter at home was Gilbert's family. They were also on hand for his debut in relief on Aug. 3.

Gilbert didn't play baseball in 2020 after the minor league season was wiped out by the pandemic. He spent the summer learning to be an electrician from his dad, making some extra money while occasionally crawling around attics and in between walls.

“I’d rather be doing this than pulling wires," Gilbert said with a grin. “No offense, Dad.”

It was a stunning performance for the Diamondbacks, who have the worst record in the big leagues this season. It’s the third no-hitter in franchise history and first since Edwin Jackson on June 25, 2010.

Second-year catcher Daulton Varsho caught Gilbert one night after hitting a game-winning homer.

“That was so fun to do that tonight,” Varsho said.

Gilbert (1-1) struck out five and walked two. The sixth-round pick out of Southern California in 2015 had spent his entire career in the minor leagues until being called up a few weeks ago. He was making his fourth appearance.

“It was weird, I wasn't nervous at all,” Gilbert said. “I felt like I should have been. I don't know why. I just kept going out there and doing my thing. I was really nervous before the game, leading up to the game. But after the three-pitch eighth inning, I was like, ‘This is possibly going to happen.’”

The Chicago Cubs threw the majors’ most recent no-hitter with a combined effort June 24. The other no-hitters this year were thrown by San Diego’s Joe Musgrove (April 9), Carlos Rodón of the Chicago White Sox (April 14), Baltimore’s John Means (May 5), Cincinnati’s Wade Miley (May 7), Detroit’s Spencer Turnbull (May 18) and the New York Yankees’ Corey Kluber (May 19).

In addition, Arizona’s Madison Bumgarner pitched a seven-inning hitless game in a doubleheader on April 25 that is not recognized as a no-hitter by Major League Baseball.

Most of those gems were thrown before MLB cracked down on the use of sticky foreign substances by pitchers in late June.

It’s been a brutal series for the Padres, who are struggling to keep up in the playoff race. San Diego still occupies the second NL wild-card spot but has fallen 10 games behind the NL West-leading San Francisco Giants.

“You’ve got to tip the cap to Gilbert. It was obviously a special night for him,” Padres manager Jayce Tingler said. “We’ve been a part of two of them this year, and it’s a lot funner being on the other side, that’s for sure. Frustrating night. The balls we did hit hard were right at guys or they made really good plays or fly balls were on the track.”

The Diamondbacks jumped out to a 5-0 lead in the first inning off Musgrove (8-8), who needed 39 pitches to slog through nine batters. Josh VanMeter doubled to lead off the game and Marte brought him home with another double.

David Peralta had an RBI single and then the 25-year-old Ellis had the big blow when he smacked Musgrove’s hanging breaking ball into the left field seats.

REVOLVING DOOR

Gilbert was the 15th different Diamondbacks starting pitcher this season, which extends a club record. The previous high was 12, which has happened four times. The last occurrence was 2019.

UP NEXT

The Padres and Diamondbacks wrap up the four-game series Sunday. Arizona sends RHP Zac Gallen (1-6, 4.87 ERA) to the mound to face RHP Craig Stammen (5-3, 3.31).

How can I watch San Diego Padres vs. Arizona Diamondbacks?
  • TV Channel: Padres at Diamondbacks 2022 MLB Baseball, is broadcasted on MLB.tv.
  • Online streaming: Sign up for Fubo.

Scoring Summary

9th Inning Pham lined out to center.
9th Inning Kim struck out looking.
9th Inning Kim hit for Díaz
9th Inning Grisham struck out looking.
8th Inning P. Smith flied out to left.
8th Inning Marte lined out to left.

Statistics

https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/mlb/500/sd.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originSD https://a.espncdn.com/combiner/i?img=/i/teamlogos/mlb/500/ari.png&h=100&scale=crop&w=100&location=originARI
1 Games Played 1
1 Team Games Played 1
0 Hit By Pitch 0
0 Ground Balls 0
5 Strikeouts 6
0 Runs Batted In 7
0 Sacrifice Hit 2
0 Hits 15
0 Stolen Bases 0
3 Walks 2
0 Catcher Interference 0
0 Runs 7
1 Ground Into Double Play 2
0 Sacrifice Flies 0
25 At Bats 35
0 Home Runs 1
0 Grand Slam Home Runs 0
5 Runners Left On Base 21
0 Triples 1
0 Game Winning RBIs 0
0 Intentional Walks 0
0 Doubles 5
0 Fly Balls 0
0 Caught Stealing 0
102 Pitches 146
0 Games Started 0
0 Pinch At Bats 0
0 Pinch Hits 0
0.0 Player Rating 0.0
1 Is Qualified 1
0 Is Qualified In Steals 0
0 Total Bases 25
28 Plate Appearances 39
0.0 Projected Home Runs 162.0
0 Extra Base Hits 7
-2.0 Runs Created 9.3
.000 Batting Average .429
.000 Pinch Hit Average .000
.000 Slugging Percentage .714
.120 Secondary Average .343
.107 On Base Percentage .459
.107 OBP Pct + SLG Pct 1.174
0.0 Ground To Fly Ball Ratio 0.0
-2.0 Runs Created Per 27 Outs 10.4
0.0 Batter Rating 58.5
0.0 At Bats Per Home Run 35.0
0.00 Stolen Base Percentage 0.00
3.64 Pitches Per Plate Appearance 3.74
.000 Isolated Power .286
0.60 Walk To Strikeout Ratio 0.33
.107 Walks Per Plate Appearance .051
.120 Secondary Average Minus Batting Average -.086
0.0 Runs Produced 14.0
0.0 Runs Ratio 1.0
0.1 Patience Ratio 0.7
0.0 Balls In Play Average 0.5
52.3 MLB Rating 107.5
0.0 Offensive Wins Above Replacement 0.0
0.0 Wins Above Replacement 0.0

Game Information

Chase Field

Location: Phoenix, Arizona
Attendance: 16,716 | Capacity:
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