Braves down Brewers after Matt Garza, Aaron Harang flirt with no-hitters

Matt Garza gave up just one run over eight innings in his Brewers debut. (Jeffrey Phelps/AP) On Wednesday afternoon, in their first respective starts for their
Braves down Brewers after Matt Garza, Aaron Harang flirt with no-hitters
Braves down Brewers after Matt Garza, Aaron Harang flirt with no-hitters /

Matt Garza gave up just one run over eight innings in his Brewers debut. (Jeffrey Phelps/AP)

Matt Garza gave up just one run over seven innings in his Brewers debut. (Jeffrey Phelps/AP)

On Wednesday afternoon, in their first respective starts for their new teams, the Brewers' Matt Garza and the Braves' Aaron Harang took dueling no-hitters into the seventh inning. Moments after he served up a sharp lineout to Freddie Freeman, Garza was the first to blink, yielding a solo homer to Chris Johnson with two outs in the top of the seventh. Harang's bid ended moments later, when Logan Schafer led off the bottom of the frame with a single to centerfield. In the end, it was Harang who took home the win, as the Braves blanked the Brewers, 1-0.

In his first start since signing a four-year, $50 million deal with the Brewers in February, Garza made a run at his second career no-hitter; his first came on July 6, 2010 when he blanked the Tigers for the first no-hitter in Rays franchise history. Relying primarily on a four-seam fastball that averaged 94.7 mph and topped out at 96.7 (both figures according to BrooksBaseball.net), he needed just 72 pitches to get through his first six frames, netting 13 swings and misses, striking out seven and going to a three-ball count only against Freddie Freeman in the fourth inning. He wound up walking Freeman, the first blemish on his line, and he appeared to dodge a bullet when the Braves' first baseman smoked a line drive to Ryan Braun in rightfield in the seventh. After falling behind Johnson with a first-pitch ball, he left a 94 mph four-seam fastball out over the plate, and Johnson didn't miss it:

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Unfortunately for Garza, Johnson's homer proved decisive, but if the 30-year-old righty is anywhere near as good as he was on Wednesday afternoon, the Brewers will be quite pleased. Garza wound up lasting eight innings and yielding just two hits over the course of his 90 pitches, of which 60 were four-seamers; he threw just 16 sliders and three curves, with the balance two-seam fastballs. He was efficient, only going past 14 pitches in an inning in the fourth, when he needed 16. For all of the concerns about the shoulder and elbow problems that limited him to just 42 starts in 2012-2013, he has pitched eight innings five times over his past 20 starts, keeping his pitch counts below 100 in three of those five turns.

Harang, who didn't sign with Atlanta until March 24, has bought himself some time in the injury-wracked Braves rotation. Rocked for a 5.40 ERA with the Mariners and Mets last year, he signed with the Indians via a minor league with just $1 million in salary if he made the majors, but he was released in mid-March, then caught on with the Braves when they dropped Freddy Garcia. Relying primarily on a combination of two- and four-seam fastballs that averaged just a hair under 92 mph, he needed 85 pitches to get through the first six innings, of which seven were swings and misses. He struck out three and went to a three-ball count only twice through the first five frames, in the third inning against Lyle Overbay (whom he walked) and in the fourth against Aramis Ramirez (whom he induced to ground out).

Carlos Gomez

Luis Avilan

David Carpenter

Craig Kimbrel

a sliding catch

Jason Heyward


Published
Jay Jaffe
JAY JAFFE

Jay Jaffe is a contributing baseball writer for SI.com and the author of the upcoming book The Cooperstown Casebook on the Baseball Hall of Fame.