

The New Hampshire Fisher Cats scored eight runs in the second inning without a hit, a feat unmatched in the expansion era of Major League Baseball. This unusual event occurred during a game against the Portland Sea Dogs, where the Fisher Cats capitalized on walks and wild pitches.
The New Hampshire Fisher Cats, the Double-A affiliate of the Toronto Blue Jays, accomplished something Tuesday night that no major league team has done in the expansion era.
And infamously, so did the Portland Sea Dogs, the Eastern League affiliate of the Boston Red Sox.
Trailing 2-0, New Hampshire scored its first eight runs of the second inning without giving up a hit in Tuesday's game in Portland, Maine. In all, the Fisher Cats posted 10 runs in the inning -- nine with two outs -- on just one hit and without the benefit of any errors.
How? Portland pitchers issued eight walks, hit two batters, threw four wild pitches and gave up a sacrifice fly and a single.
"I don't ever remember seeing that, here or any other game I've ever seen," Sea Dogs president Geoff Iacuessa told WGME Ch. 13 in Portland. "It was crazy. I thought maybe something was going on with the scoreboard and then I checked the game changer and it was correct."
The inning started innocently enough with two walks, a wild pitch and a strikeout by Portland starter Hayden Mullins, who struck out the side in the first inning. New Hampshire then plated their first run on a sacrifice fly.
With two outs, Mullins then proceeded to walk the next three batters to tie the score at 2 before he was lifted in favor of reliever Jorge Juan, who hit the first batter he faced with the bases loaded.
A wild pitch allowed the fourth run to cross the plate and a walk loaded them up again for the Fisher Cats. Juan then hit another batter (5-2) and threw another wild pitch (6-2) before walking two more batters (7-2) and exiting the game with the bases again loaded.
Enter Cade Feeney, who eventually got out of the inning but not before throwing a wild pitch (8-2) and giving up a two-run single to Ismael Munguia -- the only hit of the inning -- to make it 10-2.
New Hampshire held on for a 12-7 victory.
No major league team has scored more than four runs without getting its first hit in an inning, according to the Elias Sports Bureau. There only has been 16 times in AL/NL history that a pitcher has allowing five runs without giving up a hit in 1 2/3 or fewer innings, according to MLB.com, and Portland pitchers did it twice in the same inning.
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The Fisher Cats scored eight runs due to eight walks, two hit batters, and four wild pitches from Portland pitchers, along with a sacrifice fly and a single.
This event is significant as it marks the first time in the expansion era that a major league team or its affiliate scored multiple runs in an inning without a hit.
Geoff Iacuessa, the president of the Sea Dogs, expressed disbelief, stating he had never seen anything like it and initially thought there was an issue with the scoreboard.


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