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Glenwood grad Reid Detmers throws no-hitter for L.A. Angels in 11th MLB start

Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Reid Detmers (48) celebrates with teammates after throwing a no hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in Anaheim, Calif., Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Detmers graduated from Glenwood High School in Chatham in 2017. The Angels won 12-0.
Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Reid Detmers (48) celebrates with teammates after throwing a no hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in Anaheim, Calif., Tuesday, May 10, 2022. Detmers graduated from Glenwood High School in Chatham in 2017. The Angels won 12-0.

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Los Angeles Angels rookie Reid Detmers, a 2017 Chatham Glenwood High School graduate, pitched the second no-hitter this season in the major leagues, cruising after he benefitted from a borderline error call in the seventh inning as L.A. beat the Tampa Bay Rays 12-0 on Tuesday night.

The 22-year-old left hander threw a career-high 108 pitches in his 11th big league start, striking out two and walking one. He completed the 12th no-hitter in franchise history when Yandy Diaz grounded out shortstop Andrew Velazquez to end the game.

"I just blacked out," Detmers said. "I don't know."

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Detmers, The State Journal-Register's Metro Baseball Player of the Year in 2017, moved from Nokomis to Chatham to enroll at Glenwood for his senior season. That season, Detmers went 9-1 with a 0.84 ERA with 153 strikeouts in 67 innings pitched — a school record — against 15 walks and 24 hits allowed.

Detmers was taken No. 10 overall by the Angels in the 2020 MLB draft. He is the youngest pitcher to throw a no-hitter since Anibal Sanchez in 2006.

Detmer’s dad, Kris Detmers, was drafted by the St. Louis Cardinals in 1993 and pitched for the organization’s Triple-A Memphis team when Reid was born in 1999.

In the seventh inning, Detmers got a crucial assist from the official scorer.

Brett Phillips reached with one out when first baseman Jared Walsh ranged to his right and bobbled Phillips' grounder. The crowd of 39,313 at Angel Stadium cheered and Walsh clapped moments later when the videoboard showed the play was ruled an error.

"That was an error," Angels manager Joe Maddon said. "No one would have felt worse than Jared."

Otherwise, Detmers (2-1) hardly had any close calls. He retired his first 15 hitters before Taylor Walls drew a lead-off walk in the sixth. Third baseman Anthony Rendon then made a nice leap to snag Vidal Bruján's line drive, and Kevin Kiermaier ground into a double play to end the inning.

Reid Detmers, a 2017 Chatham Glenwood High School graduate, leaves the field after throwing a no-hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in Anaheim, Calif., Tuesday, May 10, 2022. The Angels won 12-0.
Reid Detmers, a 2017 Chatham Glenwood High School graduate, leaves the field after throwing a no-hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in Anaheim, Calif., Tuesday, May 10, 2022. The Angels won 12-0.

Detmers made a nice defensive play in the fifth when he quickly snagged a grounder up the middle by Randy Arozarena.

"I don't know if it has really sank in yet," Detmers said. "It is something I have always dreamed of. I can't even process it right now."

Detmers, out of the University of Louisville, made his big-league debut last year.

“I was just trying to get ahead. I couldn’t tell you much more. I was just trying to get outs,” Detmers said. “When I got two strikes on the last hitter, I was shaking a little bit. But other than that, I tried to keep myself pretty calm.”

He came into the game with a 2-4 career mark and a 6.33 ERA — the third-highest ERA entering a no-hitter since earned runs became an official stat in 1913, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. He was 1-1 with a 5.32 ERA in his first five starts this season.

Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Reid Detmers, a 2017 Glenwood High School graduate, celebrates with Mike Trout (27) after throwing a no-hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in a baseball game in Anaheim, Calif., Tuesday, May 10, 2022. The Angels won 12-0.
Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Reid Detmers, a 2017 Glenwood High School graduate, celebrates with Mike Trout (27) after throwing a no-hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in a baseball game in Anaheim, Calif., Tuesday, May 10, 2022. The Angels won 12-0.

The Rays simply couldn't barrel up Detmers, who mixed a fastball averaging 92 mph with a looping curveball, a changeup and a slider.

It was the first time Detmers had gotten an out in the seventh inning or later since June 7, 2019, for Louisville against East Carolina at an NCAA Super Regional. His previous career high in the majors was six innings last season against Houston. He'd never thrown more than 97 pitches in a big league game, either.

The last Angels' no-hitter was on July 12, 2019, when Taylor Cole and Félix Peña combined for one against the Seattle Mariners in the team's first home game following the death of starting pitcher Tyler Skaggs. Detmers is the youngest Angel to throw a no-hitter and the first lefty since Clyde Wright on July 3, 1970 against Oakland.

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Five New York Mets' pitchers combined for this year's first no-hitter against the Philadelphia Phillies on April 29. There were a record nine no-hitters across the majors last season. The previous by a rookie was Arizona's Tyler Gilbert against San Diego last Aug. 14 in his first start.

Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Reid Detmers (48) celebrates with Brandon Marsh (16) after throwing a no-hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in Anaheim, Calif., Tuesday, May 10, 2022. The Angels won 12-0.
Los Angeles Angels starting pitcher Reid Detmers (48) celebrates with Brandon Marsh (16) after throwing a no-hitter against the Tampa Bay Rays in Anaheim, Calif., Tuesday, May 10, 2022. The Angels won 12-0.

Mike Trout had his second multi-homer game of the season and drove in three for the Angels, who have won six of their last seven.

Trout had a two-run shot off Corey Kluber (1-2) in the second to extend Los Angeles' lead to 5-0 and then added another two-run homer in the eighth for the 22nd multi-homer game. Trout has nine homers this season, which is tied for second in the American League.

Chad Wallach and Rendon also went deep. Rendon homered in his first major league at-bat as a left-handed hitter in the eighth when Phillips, usually an outfielder, took the mound in the blowout.

Wallach, a journeyman catcher in his 80th career game, was behind the plate for Detmers with regular catchers Max Stassi and Kurt Suzuki on the COVID-19 injured list. He and his dad, Tim Wallach, are the first father-son combo to each homer for the Angels.

Velazquez added three hits as the Angels had a season-high 18.

Kluber had a rough outing for the Rays. The right-hander went three innings and allowed eight runs on 11 hits with two strikeouts.

This article originally appeared on State Journal-Register: No-no: Glenwood grad throws no-hitter in 11th MLB start