Word: no-hit
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...Louis to win the pennant by winning a total of 49 games. In St. Louis last summer, Jerome Dean was such a celebrity that when he was pitching the team's advertisements said: "Dizzy Dean in person." Brother Paul Dean three weeks ago pitched the National League's first no-hit game in five years. A third brother Elmer ("Goober") Dean sold peanuts in St. Louis Sportsman's Park until Mrs. Jerome Dean made him stop because she felt that it lessened the dignity of her husband...
...Ticket team of the East Cambridge Police force opened its 299th annual series with the Perfidious Parkers to the tune of a no-hit, no-run, and no-error shutout...
...took the field last week for two baseball games in Brooklyn Pitcher Jerome Herman ("Dizzy") Dean of the St. Louis Cardinals remarked: "They will be playing against one-hit Dean and no-hit Dean." In the first game (St. Louis, 13-to-0) Dizzy Dean missed his prophecy. Brooklyn got three hits. In the second (St. Louis, 3-to-0), his younger brother Paul Dean pitched the first no-hit game in the National League since 1929. Only one Brooklyn batter reached first base, on balls in the first inning...
...with five minor league teams be fore they decided that he was not worth keeping. Two years later, a Giant scout saw him pitching in Beaumont, Tex. and persuaded Manager John McGraw to hire him. In May 1929, in his ninth complete major league game, Carl Hubbell pitched a no-hit game against Pittsburgh. Lazy and solemn in action, particularly fond of a "screw-ball" which breaks sharply down and away from batters, Pitcher Hubbell thinks he has improved since then. Says he: "I have learned a lot ... and I feel stronger. It takes quite a while to learn...
...Billy Bayne, left-handed pitcher for the Memphis Chicks of the Southern Association: a no-hit game, in which no batter got a base on balls; 8-to-o against the Birmingham Barons; at Memphis. ¶ The Navy crew, using the shell with which the 1910 varsity won the Olympic Championship: the Adams Cup race, with Pennsylvania second by 1/5 sec. (about 3 ft.), Harvard third; on the Charles River, at Cambridge, Mass...