WASHINGTON — Hoping for a chance to stay in the game and pitch the second no-hitter in San Diego Padres history, Dylan Cease received some help from the man who threw the first.
Cease was at 94 pitches through seven innings when Padres manager Mike Shildt glanced at Joe Musgrove.
''Joe is like, `His stuff is pretty good,''' Shildt recalled. "Well, he's thrown one. He knows what this looks like. We let him ride.''
Cease needed only nine pitches in the eighth and 11 in the ninth in a 3-0 victory over the Washington Nationals on Thursday that completed a three-game sweep.
After falling one out short of a no-hitter two years ago when he gave up a single to current teammate Luis Arráez, Cease retired Ildemaro Vargas and Jacob Young on a groundouts for the first two outs of the ninth, then got CJ Abrams to hit a flyout to right on a 1-0 slider.
''My thought was I'm going to throw a slider and I'm going to get it down, and if it's down he's either hopefully going to beat it into the ground or he can't put in play,'' Cease said. ''I didn't like it off the bat. It looked very hitterish, but fortunately fate's on my side today.''
Cease (10-8) struck out nine and walked three in the 28-year-old right-hander's third complete game in 145 big league starts. He threw a career-high 114 pitches in a game that included a 1-hour, 16-minute rain delay in the first.
''The first inning, he comes in and says ‘I'm not quite there,''' Shildt recalled. ''The second inning, ‘Getting there.' Then the third inning, he just hit his stride.''