When Dodgers rookie Corey Seager blooped a single to right to break up Giants lefthander Matt Moore's no-hit bid with two outs in the ninth on Thursday, it ruined the spotlight not only for Moore but also for San Francisco center fielder Denard Span.
Moore was brilliant until his 133rd pitch, which was lobbed to the outfield grass by Seager. Moore was removed for Santiago Casilla, who needed only one pitch to finish off San Francisco's 4-0 victory at Los Angeles.
Span singlehandedly got Moore to that moment with the two biggest defensive plays of the game.
When Span ran down Adrian Gonzalez's dangerous line drive in the second inning, Span thought nothing of it. The Twins' 2002 first-round draft pick has done it plenty of times over his career.
But when Kike Hernandez led off the ninth with a sinking fly to Span's right, there was a lot more on the line as Moore was looking to get in the record books. The Giants were looking to extend a streak of throwing a no-hitter for five consecutive years, and their last no-hitter of the Dodgers came in 1915.
"That catch was big-time," Span said in a telephone interview Friday.
Since the Dodgers had beaten the Giants in the first two games of the series at Dodger Stadium, the victory was significant for a San Francisco team that had baseball's best record at the All-Star break but has the worst record since.
"I was looking forward to having a moment on their field," Span said. "The crowd was definitely nervous and was getting into it. Came up one out short."