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This No-Hitter Is a Combo Plate

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From Associated Press

Francisco Cordova pitched nine hitless innings but still didn’t win the second best-pitched game in Pittsburgh Pirates’ 110-year history. Unlike Harvey Haddix 38 years ago, he didn’t lose, either.

Cordova, the son of a former Mexican League pitching star but a starter himself for less than a year, and Rincon combined on a 10-inning no-hitter before Mark Smith won it with a dramatic three-run homer as the Pirates beat the Houston Astros 3-0 Saturday night.

The only better performance in Pirates history was by Haddix, who pitched 12 perfect innings against Milwaukee on May 26, 1959 before losing on Joe Adcock’s homer in the 13th--not an official no-hitter, but still the greatest game ever pitched in the majors.

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“We don’t know anything about [Haddix],” said Cordova, who, like Rincon, speaks no English and was interviewed through interpreter Esteban Loaiza, the Pirates’ other Mexican-born starter. “We’re happy with what we’ve done, but it was more important for us to win. Winning was even greater than throwing a no-hitter.”

But the Pirates didn’t win it until Smith, a spring training pickup, homered off Astro closer John Hudek--Pittsburgh’s first run after being shut out for the first 27 2/3 innings of the series. Houston won the first two games by a combined score of 17-0.

“It’s funny, but I got all fired up sitting on the bench in the ninth inning, thinking how great it would be to win the game with a homer,” said Smith, acquired from San Diego in a four-player trade during the final week of March. “It’s the greatest feeling you could ever have.”

Cordova and Rincon, close friends and former Mexican League teammates, couldn’t have picked a more opportune night to pitch only the third no-hitter in Pittsburgh by a Pirate pitcher. The crowd of 44,119, lured by a Jackie Robinson tribute and fireworks show, was the Pirates’ first non-opening day sellout since June 5, 1977.

The victory also put the Pirates into a first-place tie with Houston in the NL Central.

The crowd nearly lifted 27-year-old Three Rivers Stadium off its foundation after Smith’s tape-measure drive, stomping and cheering throughout the 15-minute break between the end of the game and the fireworks show. As the scoreboard showed replay after replay, Smith was bear-hugged off the field by his back-pounding, high-fiving teammates.

“How can you describe that?” Smith said. “Impossible. What a feeling. What a memory.”

Cordova will not receive individual credit for his nine no-hit innings, but will be recognized along with Rincon (3-4) for the eighth combined no-hitter in history--and the first in extra innings.

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“What a night!” said the usually understated Gene Lamont, the Pirate manager. “You couldn’t get a game more exciting.”

The big crowd nursed Cordova through his nine no-hit innings, exploding after each of his 10 strikeouts and tensing up any time the Astros put the ball in play, which was only infrequently.

Houston has managed only two hits in 18 innings against Cordova this season--he beat them 6-0 on a two-hitter June 23 in the Astrodome--and only three in 23 innings in his three career starts against them.

“I really don’t feel like talking” said Astros Manager Larry Dierker, who threw a no-hitter for Houston in 1976. “What can you say? He threw a no-hitter, what can I say? We only hit two balls hard all night, one fair and one foul. But that would have been one tremendous game for us to win.”

(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)

Extra Inning No-Hitters

* Sam Kimber (10 innings), Brooklyn (American Assn.), vs. Toledo, Oct. 4, 1884, 0-0 tie.

* George Wiltse (10), New York Giants, at Philadelphia, July 4, 1908 (1st game), 1-0.

* Fred Toney (10), Cincinnati, at Chicago, May 2, 1917, 1-0.

* Jim Maloney (10), Cincinnati, at Chicago, Aug. 19, 1965 (1st game), 1-0.

* Francisco Cordova (9) and Ricardo Rincon (1), Pittsburgh, vs. Houston, July 12, 1997, 3-0.

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