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White Sox's Phil Humber throws perfect game

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Humber fell to his knees when it was over, and his teammates rushed toward the mound to congratulate him.

"I saw it get away from A.J. and saw the umpire ring him up and at that point, a ton of emotions and a lot of joy and excitement," he said. "Most of all, just gratitude. Just thankful for where I'm at."

His wife, Kristan, is nine months' pregnant and due May 8. He called her after the game.

"Humber pitched a great ballgame and Pierzynski did a great job working with him out there," Mariners manager Eric Wedge said. "We really never got anything going."

Ryan didn't want to talk about the check-swing call.

"I will say it was a pretty outstanding game he threw," he said. "Had his slider working, obviously in and out of the zone, kept his pitch count down. ...  Pretty outstanding stuff from him today."

Humber struck out nine and threw just 96 pitches in his first career complete game. The right-hander went to a three-ball count only three times.

It was quite a contrast to his first start of the season, when he went 5 1-3 innings and threw 115 pitches in a no-decision against Baltimore on Monday.

But Humber has become quite the reclamation project for Chicago, who picked him up on waivers from Oakland in January 2011. He was 9-9 with a 3.75 ERA in 163 innings last season, his first full season in the majors as a starter.

It was the third no-hitter thrown against Seattle. Mark Langston and Mike Witt of the Angels combined on one on April 11, 1990, and Dwight Gooden of the Yankees threw one on May 14, 1996.

Humber struck out the side in the second while cruising through the first four innings in just 45 pitches. Chone Figgins' fly ball to left in the fourth was the first ball to reach the outfield. Dustin Ackley followed with a hard liner to right that Alex Rios reached up and stabbed.

The White Sox moved farther and farther away from Humber as he approached history, leaving him alone as he sat on the bench in the Safeco Field visitors' dugout.


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