Difference between revisions of "Perfect game"
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| [[Season 19]], Day 112 || [[Coolname Galvanic]] || [[Tokyo Lift]] || 4-1 || [[Boston Flowers]] || 10 | | [[Season 19]], Day 112 || [[Coolname Galvanic]] || [[Tokyo Lift]] || 4-1 || [[Boston Flowers]] || 10 | ||
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+ | | [[Season 20]], Day 39 || [[Juice Collins]] || [[Hawai'i Fridays]] || 3-0 || [[San Francisco Lovers]] || 10 | ||
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Revision as of 03:05, 18 June 2021
A perfect game occurs when every batter a pitcher faces in an entire game is put out without reaching base; in short, "27 up, 27 down" for a nine-inning game.
Perfect games are necessarily also no-hitters, but due to the particular cosmic circumstances of Blaseball are not necessarily shutouts or even wins.
Patty Fox found the 9-Blood Blagonball after their perfect game was the first confirmed by statisticians; according to official league statsheets, Jaylen Hotdogfingers pitched the first perfect game in Season 1.
Yummy Elliott pitched the first non-shutout perfect game on Season 19, Day 95; the Flowers scored 1 run with Home Field Advantage. Winnie Hess pitched the first extra-innings perfect game on Season 18, Day 15, with 8 strikeouts in 30 outs.
Vito Kravitz's perfect game on Season 16, Day 28, is notable due to a runner on base while Kravitz was pitching; Attractor Chorby Short exited the Secret Base three times without scoring.