{"id":46034,"date":"2022-08-15T14:47:51","date_gmt":"2022-08-15T14:47:51","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/tampa-bay-pitcher-loses-perfect-game-in-agonizing-fashion\/"},"modified":"2022-08-15T14:47:51","modified_gmt":"2022-08-15T14:47:51","slug":"tampa-bay-pitcher-loses-perfect-game-in-agonizing-fashion","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/harchi90.com\/tampa-bay-pitcher-loses-perfect-game-in-agonizing-fashion\/","title":{"rendered":"Tampa Bay pitcher loses perfect game in agonizing fashion"},"content":{"rendered":"
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On a quiet August Sunday afternoon, in front of a more-than-half-empty stadium, throwing for one unremarkable team against another, Drew Rasmussen nearly achieved history.<\/p>\n

Unless you’re a Tampa Bay Rays fan, or a really devoted Milwaukee Brewers fan, you probably have no idea who Drew Rasmussen is. Drafted in 2018, he made his major-league debut in 2020 for Milwaukee and got dealt to Tampa Bay early last season. He threw well enough to earn a spot in the Rays rotation, but never even reaching the eighth inning of a start prior to yesterday. And then he nearly pulled off something that no MLB pitcher \u2014 not Max Scherzer, not Justin Verlander, not Shohei Ohtani or Clayton Kershaw, nobody<\/em> \u2014 has done in 10 years.<\/p>\n

Rasmussen took a perfect game into the ninth inning. In a game of positioning with the final AL Wild Card spot at stake, Rasmussen faced 24 Orioles through eight innings, and set down all 24 of them, one after the other. He was dealing; he’d thrown just 79 pitches, and only reached ball three on two batters, both in the second inning.<\/p>\n

And then, in one of those wrenching moments that make sports so glorious and so heartbreaking, he served up his first pitch of the ninth inning, an 86-mph cutter, only to watch Baltimore’s Jorge Mateo rip it down the left-field line. Just like that, the perfect game was gone. Rasmussen would go on to get the win, and the Rays now have a crucial series win against Baltimore in the wild card battle, but the chance for immortality vanished.<\/p>\n

\u201cI mean, I’ll take it,\u201d Rasmussen said after the game, per the Tampa Bay Times. \u201cEight perfect (innings). It helps our team’s chance of winning. I wouldn’t say it was disappointing. I came that close. Very few can say they’ve done that.”<\/p>\n

He’s right. There have been nearly 235,000 baseball games played at the major-league level since 1876 … and only 23 perfect games. They arrive out of nowhere, and rarely from the pitchers you’d expect. Greg Maddux never threw one. Nor did Roger Clemens, or Tom Seaver, or Nolan Ryan. You know who has he? Guys like Philip Humber and Tom Browning and Len Barker, pitchers who had everything working in perfect harmony for nine magical innings for one single day of their careers.<\/p>\n