tool name

close
tool goes here

Lucky me: I got to see perfect game at Home Plate

So where were you when Felix Hernandez threw the first perfect game in the 35-year history of the Seattle Mariners?

Published: Aug. 16, 2012 at 6:41 a.m. PDTUpdated: Aug. 16, 2012 at 6:44 a.m. PDT
0 comments

So where were you when Felix Hernandez threw the first perfect game in the 35-year history of the Seattle Mariners?

I was inside Home Plate. Uh, no, not that one. Of course not that one.

The Home Plate I was inside is a tavern on Main Street in Auburn, where I had gone for the Longacres Mile post position drawing at Emerald Downs. With a few minutes to kill before catching my Sounder train bound for Tacoma, I walked into Home Plate and was surprised to see baseball on every television set.

A replay of Tuesday night’s Mariners telecast? No, the field was splashed in the midafternoon sun. An East Coast game, perhaps? No, because I recognized the guy on the mound to be Felix Hernandez.

After five or six seconds, it occurred to me: The Mariners had been scheduled to play a Wednesday matinee against the Tampa Bay Rays. This was King Felix and this was live, and then broadcaster Dave Sims, bless his jinx-defying heart, caught me up on the story.

“Twenty straight outs for Felix Hernandez!” Sims shouted after there were two down in the Rays’ half of the seventh.

The baseball gods are diabolical in more than the obvious ways. You follow game upon game, for month after month, and then, during that part of the summer when the prevailing theme of the games is an absence of gravity – when you take your eye off the ball, as it were – the gods decide Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2012, is as good a date as any for the history book.

And make no mistake, Wednesday was historic at Safeco Field, where the Rays became the third team to be held without a hit in 2012. Last time three no-hitters were thrown in the same ballpark during a season? That would be 1917, in St. Louis.

As Hernandez was enhancing Safeco Field’s reputation as Masterpiece Theatre, he put on a show, striking out 12 with a fastball-slider-changeup repertoire that got more wicked as tensions built. The King worked fast, with a steely purposefulness he betrayed only once, after Sean Rodriguez – representing the Rays’ 27th and final out – worked the count to 2-0 by taking a slider that just missed the outside corner.

Hernandez grimaced, but catcher John Jaso didn’t flinch. He put down a sign for another slider. Rodriguez swung and missed. Two called strikes later, the Mariners were celebrating the most dominant performance by a Seattle pitcher since, well, Aug. 5, when Hernandez held the Yankees to a pair of hits during a 1-0, complete-game effort in New York.

At the age of 26, Hernandez is so talented, it’s a wonder that he made 229 previous starts for the Mariners without pitching a no-hitter. But fate can be fickle about these things. Steve Carlton, Whitey Ford, Greg Maddux and Roger Clemens never threw a no- hitter, and yet, in 1953, Bobo Holloman threw a no-hitter in his first big-league start. He retired with a career record of 3-7.

As Holloman proved, a no-hitter can be a fluke. A perfect game can be a fluke, too, but it’s a team-effort fluke. If Mariners right fielder Eric Thames doesn’t track down Sam Fuld’s first-inning line drive launched toward the gap – a tough play, because the ball’s flight began in the sun and ended in the shade – all bets are off. The perfect game is gone, and the no-hitter is gone.

But Thames made the catch, and his teammates converted 14 other chances into outs, and the legend of Felix Abraham Hernandez entered another dimension.

“I’m lucky to be wearing a Mariners uniform,” shortstop Brendan Ryan told post-game interviewer Jen Mueller. “It was magical.”

It was magical for the 21,889 fans at Safeco Field, and magical for the audience of 10 or so at the Home Plate Tavern. A few patrons were watching in the seventh inning. In the eighth, a Bob Dylan song on the juke box rendered Sims’ voice indistinguishable. But in the ninth, as King Felix was dealing with a vengeance, the suspense was compelling. And when he struck out Rodriguez, the roar was riveting.

Felix Hernandez retired 27 batters in a row Wednesday. A ho-hum afternoon game I’d forgotten about turned into a day I’ll never forget.

john.mcgrath@thenewstribune.com

PERFECT FACTS

On Thursday at Safeco Field, Mariners pitcher Felix Hernandez threw the 23rd perfect game in baseball history – and first in Mariners history. Of note:

 • The perfect game was the third in baseball this season and the second at Safeco Field. Philip Humber of the Chicago White Sox threw a perfect game against Seattle on April 21.

 • The Mariners are the first team to be on both sides of a perfect game in the same season.

 • Safeco Field becomes the first stadium to host two perfect games in the same season.

 • The Tampa Bay Rays have had three perfect games thrown against them in the last four seasons (Dallas Braden of the Oakland A’s in 2010, Mark Buehrle of the Chicago White Sox in 2009).

 • More than half of all the perfect games – 12 – have been thrown in the last 25 years.

JOIN THE DISCUSSION | Register here

We welcome comments. Please keep them civil, short and to the point. ALL CAPS, spam, obscene, profane, abusive and off topic comments will be deleted. Repeat offenders will be blocked. Thanks for taking part — and abiding by these simple rules. A thorough explanation of rules of conduct can be found in our Terms of Service. If you have any questions, including why your comment may not be showing immediately after you submit it, be sure to visit the commenting FAQ.

Seattle Mariners pitcher Felix Hernandez rejoices after throwing a perfect game Wednesday afternoon. (TED S. WARREN/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS)
CONTESTS

Similar stories