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Hippo Vaughn (Cubs) and Fred Toney (Reds) in 1917. Both went into the tenth inning (game was scoreless).

Toney nailed his 10-inning no-hitter. Vaughn's finally failed with one out in the top of the ninth. Cincinnati beat Chicago, 1-0, 02-May-1917.

2007-06-12 15:36:54 · answer #1 · answered by Chipmaker Authentic 7 · 1 0

sportsfan, you're wrong. In order to be credited with a no-hitter or a perfect game, the pitcher must COMPLETE the game (extra innings or not) with the no-hitter or perfect game intact.


On May 2, 1917, Hippo Vaughn surrendered a single with one out in 10th, while the opposing pitcher, fred Toney threw a 10-inning no-hitter.
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2007-06-12 22:38:31 · answer #2 · answered by Kris 6 · 1 0

2 pitchers both pitched perfect games once. Because the score was 0-0, extra innings were played. One pitcher was taken out of the game, and the other ended up getting the loss. However, most records like this are based on 9-inning games, so they both got credit for perfect games.

2007-06-12 22:33:20 · answer #3 · answered by sportsfan89b 5 · 0 4

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