
Athletics’ J.T. Ginn loses no-hitter in 9th inning, then loses 2-1 to Angels – Image for illustrative purposes only (Image credits: Unsplash)
The Athletics entered the ninth inning with a chance at history. Right-hander J.T. Ginn had retired the first 24 Angels batters without allowing a hit. One more inning stood between him and the first no-hitter in franchise history since the move to Las Vegas.
That chance vanished quickly. A leadoff single broke up the bid, and moments later Zach Neto delivered a two-run walk-off home run that gave the Angels a 2-1 victory. What began as a dominant performance ended in the kind of sudden reversal that defines baseball’s most memorable nights.
Control Through Eight Innings
Ginn’s command kept the Angels off balance from the opening pitch. He mixed fastballs with sharp breaking pitches, working efficiently and avoiding hard contact. Through eight innings the opposing lineup managed only a handful of fly balls and weak grounders.
The Athletics supported him with solid defense behind the plate and in the infield. No errors or misplays threatened the no-hit bid during that stretch. The game remained scoreless, heightening the tension with every out recorded.
The Ninth-Inning Collapse
The first batter of the ninth reached base on a clean single to left field. The hit ended Ginn’s no-hit bid and shifted momentum in an instant. The Angels, now with a runner on first and no outs, sensed an opening.
Neto stepped to the plate and drove the next pitch over the wall. The two-run blast gave the Angels the lead and the win. Ginn’s night concluded with the loss despite having held the opposition hitless for so long.
Why the Moment Matters
Games like this linger for pitchers and fans alike. A near no-hitter that slips away in the final frame carries extra weight, especially for a young starter still establishing himself in the rotation. The Athletics, now playing home games in Las Vegas, saw one of their most promising arms come close to a signature achievement.
The outcome also underscores how thin the margin can be between dominance and defeat. One hit and one swing turned an eight-inning masterpiece into a 2-1 loss. Such swings keep teams and supporters focused on the next start rather than dwelling on what almost happened.
What matters now: Ginn will carry the memory of eight hitless innings into his next outing. The Athletics continue to build around young arms like his as they settle into their new market.