McAvoy almost unhittable for Sea Dogs
Kevin McAvoy knew he was six outs away from a no-hitter as he took the mound in the bottom of the eighth inning. But after his bid for history ended two pitches into the frame, he quickly switched his focus to what mattered most -- winning the game.The right-handed Boston
The right-handed Boston prospect still matched the longest outing of his career, allowing two hits over eight innings as Double-A Portland blanked Richmond, 5-0, on Tuesday night at The Diamond. McAvoy tied his season high with seven strikeouts, allowing one earned run or fewer for the fifth time in six Double-A starts.
"Going into the eighth, I knew that I was getting close," he said. "I put a little something extra on those first two pitches to [
McAvoy (5-6) issued a walk to
"It was a lot of fun tonight. I was just out there trying to make pitches," McAvoy said. "I was on a good page with [catcher
Gameday box score
The Bryant University product's scoreless effort was put in jeopardy in the eighth. After whiffing Hobson for the first out,
"The results were nice to see, but so was the way I was attacking pitch to pitch," said the native of Syracuse, N.Y. "I'm trying to break down every at-bat instead of looking too far ahead. Early on, your goal is to get yourself into the sixth or seventh inning, but I'm trying to take a step back and think about every pitch. Each one has value and that's helped me a lot lately."
McAvoy has won four of his last five decisions while posting a 1.66 ERA with the Sea Dogs. The 2014 fourth-round Draft pick allowed one hit over five scoreless innings in a rehab assignment for Class A Short Season Lowell on July 28. He was placed on the disabled list on July 15 with back soreness.
Boston's No. 26 prospect
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Richmond starter
Michael Avallone is a contributor to MiLB.com. Follow him on Twitter @MavalloneMiLB1-