ANAHEIM, Calif. -- Given a big lead, Freddy Garcia could afford to simply throw strikes.\nUn-hittable strikes, mostly.\nGarcia pitched perfect ball until Adam Kennedy singled with two outs in the eighth inning, and the Chicago White Sox beat the Los Angeles Angels 9-0 Wednesday.\n"I knew I had a no-hitter going, but I was trying not to think about it and keep making my pitches," Garcia said.\n"I've been facing those guys for a long time, so I know they're aggressive and they like to swing the bat. Kennedy hit a good pitch, so there was nothing I could do about it. But who doesn't want to throw a no-hitter?"\nGarcia (14-9) retired the first 23 batters before Kennedy cleanly lined the 100th pitch to center field on a 3-2 count. The only other time Garcia went to a three-ball count before that was in the seventh, when Vladimir Guerrero hit an inning-ending grounder on a 3-1 pitch.\n"I was expecting anything at that point," Kennedy said. "I didn't think he would groove a fastball. He didn't this time, and I just tried not to do too much with it. Once the game got a little out of hand and they got a good grip on it, it wasn't that big of a deal. You just start to think about trying to get some momentum for tomorrow."\nGarcia came close to the first perfect game in the majors since Randy Johnson did it for the Arizona Diamondbacks at Atlanta on May 18, 2004. There have been only 14 regular-season perfect games in the majors since 1900.\n"I thought he was going to get it. I thought it was going to happen," Chicago first baseman Paul Konerko said. "When he got through the seventh, I really felt he was going to do it. I think everybody was a little heartbroken. I've never been a part of one, so you were just hoping to see it. And he had a perfect game going, so that's a little different from a no-hitter. So everybody's dialed in."\nAhead 7-0 by the fourth and in control the whole way, Garcia struck out three and walked none in eight innings. Neal Cotts pitched a perfect ninth to complete the one-hitter.\n"He stayed out of the hitting zone," said the Angels' Chone Figgins, who broke up a no-hit bid by Giants rookie Matt Cain on June 19 with a two-out single in the eighth inning. "When you're keeping the ball down like that, it's tough to hit."\nPitching just seven days after Florida Marlins rookie Anibal Sanchez ended a major league record drought of 2 1/2 years between no-hitters, Garcia was staked to an 8-0 lead before he gave up his first hit.\n"One thing about Freddy, he's as relaxed as they come," Konerko said. "I mean, knowing Freddy, with the score the way it was, he was probably like, 'Ah, the heck with it. Let me just throw some balls over the middle of the plate.'\n"He has kind of the attitude that: 'Hey, I'm out here to get the win, and I don't care about my personal numbers,' which is a great attitude to have for a pitcher. But we wanted him to go for it, and he did go for it," he said.\nThe White Sox moved within 1 1/2 games of the Minnesota Twins in the AL wild-card race. The Angels began the day on the fringe of the AL West and wild-card chases.\nGarcia improved to 14-3 with a 2.25 ERA in 24 regular-season career starts against the Angels. He also had a complete-game victory against them in Game 4 of last year's AL Championship Series. The Angels have scored just one run in 24 innings this year against the two-time All-Star.\n"He's had a history of doing well against us," Kennedy said. "He mixes his pitches up well, and he's been fortunate enough to pitch a lot of times with a decent-sized lead, which makes a good pitcher even better."\nGarcia was attempting to become the first White Sox pitcher to throw a no-hitter since Wilson Alvarez beat Baltimore 7-0 on Aug. 11, 1991. Garcia, Alvarez and Sanchez all were born in Venezuela.\nKonerko was 4-for-4 with two RBIs. Jim Thome and Jermaine Dye also drove in two runs each for the White Sox, who won the season series 6-3 against the team they beat in the AL championship series last year.\nDye chased rookie Joe Saunders (5-3) with a bases-loaded, two-run double that increased Chicago's lead to 5-0. J.C. Romero faced one batter and gave up a sacrifice fly to Thome, which put him within one RBI of his ninth season with 100 or more. Konerko capped the four-run inning.
Garica almost notches perfect game
White Sox pitcher flirts with historic outing
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