Baltimore Orioles pitcher John Means had himself a performance to remember on Wednesday afternoon.
Means threw the first complete-game, no-hitter for the Orioles since Jim Palmer in 1969, shutting down the Mariners with a 113-pitch, 12-strikeout effort.
But Means truly did deserve better from the ole’ MLB rulebook because that performance was calling for perfection.
The lone baserunner that Means allowed was a wild-pitch strikeout in the third inning of Sam Haggerty, and moments later, Haggerty was caught stealing. The very definition of a perfect game is allowing zero baserunners, so Means didn’t earn the perfect game. But the fact that hitters can reach first base AFTER striking out is a rule that has never made sense.
This is the play that stood between John Means and a perfect game pic.twitter.com/3aq9oouma1
— Connor Newcomb (@ConnorNewcomb_) May 5, 2021
MLB rules state that a batter becomes a runner whenever the third strike is uncaught (and first base is unoccupied or occupied with two outs), but there’s never been an acceptable explanation for why this is a thing. If an out needs to be caught, then why have an infield fly rule? Why is a baserunner out if a batted ball strikes him? Those outs aren’t caught.
There’s no reason why a batter should be rewarded with a chance to reach first base after a pitcher completely owned him by drawing a swing at an uncatchable pitch.
It’s just a dumb rule that we all have seemingly accepted and learned to live with. But because of that, Means had to settle for a no-hitter when his performance called for so much more.
John Means. No hitter! 🍾🍾 pic.twitter.com/dRHSUo9ZaL
— Rob Friedman (@PitchingNinja) May 5, 2021
If MLB really wants to bring in more fans, that’s a rule that needs to go.
https://youtu.be/Rf1ugultSr8