DENVER — Frankie Montas took a no-hitter into the seventh inning, Elly De La Cruz hit a 448-foot homer and the Cincinnati Reds beat the Colorado Rockies 4-1 on Tuesday night.
Elias Diaz broke up Montas' no-hit bid with a double to center field to open the seventh, but Montas (3-4) retired the next three batters to conclude his outing and win for the first time since April 3.
''If I said no, I'd lie,'' Montas said when asked if he was aware of the no-hit bid. ''If I would have thrown a no-hitter, that would be dope. My arm is feeling really good. Definitely back to healthy Frankie."
Montas became the first visiting pitcher in the history of hitter-friendly Coors Field to throw at least seven innings with nine or more strikeouts while allowing no more than one hit, according to OptaSTATS.
Hideo Nomo of the Los Angeles Dodgers threw the only no-hitter at Coors Field on Sept. 17, 1996, the first of his two career no-nos. The ballpark with the spacious outfield and mile-high elevation opened the prior season.
''I knew since the first inning," Montas said. "I haven't really been striking out people, and after I struck out those two guys in the first inning I was, ‘OK, my stuff is really playing tonight.' I was just focusing on attacking the guys and letting my stuff play.''
Montas struck out nine, including Ezequiel Tovar and Ryan McMahon to end the first, while relying on a fastball that consistently reached 97 mph. He struck out six on heaters and threw 96 pitches, 63 for strikes. Fernando Cruz replaced him in the eighth.
''He did a really good job mixing it,'' McMahon said. ''He stayed out of the heart of the plate. When a guy is throwing 97 with a good mix of pitches, it is a tough one to cover. He was changing the shape on his sliders, and they were all coming out pretty similar.''