For the second time in three weeks, Blue Jays pitcher Bowden Francis has fallen painfully short of a no-hitter.
Francis threw eight no-hit innings against the New York Mets on Wednesday and returned to the mound in the ninth having thrown 108 pitches with a shot at history. Francisco Lindor spoiled it.
With Toronto holding a 1-0 lead, Lindor launched an 0-2 fastball into the right-field stands at Rogers Centre to lead off the inning and tie the game.
Francisco Lindor breaks up Bowden Francis’ no-hitter AND ties the game 😳
It’s the second time he’s lost a no-hitter in the 9th inning in his last four starts.
(via @MLB) pic.twitter.com/eP2uSZhMlQ
— Yahoo Sports (@YahooSports) September 11, 2024
The solo shot ended Francis’s no-hit bid. It also cost him a chance at the win. Francis’ day was done, and he left the game after 111 pitches ineligible to factor into the decision.
The Mets piled on after breaking up the no-hit bid. New York added five more runs off relievers Chad Green and Génesis Cabrera to take a 6-1 lead into the bottom of the ninth. The inning concluded on a Lindor flyout on his second at-bat of the ninth.
The Blue Jays added a run in the bottom of the ninth, but the Mets held on for a 6-2 win after being no-hit through eight innings.
This looks familiar
The scene was painfully reminiscent of one that played out less than three weeks ago. Francis returned to the mound on Aug. 24 having thrown 112 pitches in eight no-hit innings against the Los Angeles Angels. On that day, Taylor Ward hit a leadoff home run to break up Francis’ no-hit bid in the ninth inning.
The Blue Jays are still in search of the franchise’s second ever no-hitter. Dave Stieb threw the first in 1990. Francis has now come close twice, but the Blue Jays remain stuck on one. They’ve had six no-hit bids broken up in the ninth inning since Stieb’s no-hitter.
For Francis, it’s his no-hitter lost in the ninth inning in four starts. He finished his day having allowed one run on Lindor’s solo home run that stood as the only hit against him. He walked one and struck out one while lowering his season long ERA to 3.50 and his WHIP to 0.93 in 92 2/3 innings pitched.