I don't agree with Sabathia throwing this many CG (except for today) but why is this just assumed that Sabathia got lit up from being overused? He did face the 2 of the best teams in the AL last year in the postseason. Okay, I guess he just can't beat good teams then. Anyway a point I saw brought up on BTF is that a big part of a no hitter is holding on to it as you start counting down outs late. CC didn't have that pressure because of the hit. He didn't have to worry about making his perfect pitches because he had nothing to pitch for. (And a logical manager wouldn't have had him pitching to begin with. Isn't this just another wrinkle in the "existence of clutch" argument? How someone performs under extreme pressure? I know it has been rehashed ad nauseum from a hitters perspective, but I wonder how h/9 splits vary for pitchers who have taken no hitters into the 7th inning (arbitrary cut off). More relevantly, if you were to to look at career h/9 for pitchers relative to how they performed in no-hitter type situations, I wonder how much variation there would be. I know sample size would be an issue here. But, if historically league wide h/9 was 9 - and I'm pulling that number out of my a** - then the odds of pitching 9 more outs without a hit would be 2/3*2/3*2/3 (no hit inning *3), or just under 30%. So we should see about 30% of no hitters taken into the 7th result in no-hitters. this obviously doesn't account for fatigue, so you would need to account for h/9 over the last three innings for the pitchers in question to compare apples to apples. In any case, I'd guess the h/9 is higher than the baseline for those innings. This really only speaks to anti-clutch, but does anyone know if there has been and study put out there about this?