A game in which a team doesn't gain first base by a hit as ruled on by the official scorekeeper, has been no-hit. Any # of pitchers can be a part of the no-hitter.
Any number of people can reach base.
A.J. Burnett pitched a no-hitter in which he walked 9 batters a few years back.
Andy Hawkins pitched a no-hitter for the Yankees in 1990 but lost 4-0.
2007-06-28 15:54:10
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answer #1
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answered by campfieldd 2
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a no hitter is a ball game thrown by one pitcher in which no hits are allowed, excludes walks and errors, and the starting pitcher retires all 27. so in summary one pitcher and no hits but walks, runs, and errors r still plausable. in fact back in the day a pitcher once lost despite throwing a no hitter due to walks.
2007-06-28 15:46:03
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Nobody from a team reaches base via a "scored" hit. The term "no hitter" says it all.
2007-06-28 15:46:23
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answer #3
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answered by dob367 3
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What part of "no hitter" do you not understand? The "no" or the "hit"?
2007-06-28 15:51:15
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answer #4
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answered by ? 7
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The pitcher has gone the entire game, and has allowed no hits. If no one reaches first base (by hit, walk, error, or hit-by-pitch) then you have a "perfect game."
2007-06-28 15:47:12
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answer #5
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answered by Stephen L 6
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It's when a pitcher is doing very well, and nobody can hit off of any of his pitches.
2007-06-29 13:02:13
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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a ball a pitcher throws that no one hits...also a shut out inning means no runs. like ex. moose had 4 shut out innings. or the rocket threw a no hitter.
go yankees
27 in 07!
2007-06-28 15:46:08
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answer #7
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answered by Danielle Marie<3 4
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when a team fails to get a hit.
2007-06-28 17:10:51
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answer #8
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answered by Tim B 2
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the pitcher gave up no hits
2007-06-28 16:12:03
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answer #9
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answered by matt s. 3
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See above
2007-06-28 16:09:06
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answer #10
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answered by dwmatty19 5
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