Once in a while in baseball, an ordinary game comes along and proves indicative in some form or fashion of its era. Imagine attending a 1–0 game in 1911 or so, for instance, or a 14–11 game somewhere around 2000.
On Friday at Wrigley Field, fans of the Chicago Cubs were treated to just such a contest involving the home team and the Cincinnati Reds.
The Cubs defeated the Reds 1–0 in one hour and 48 minutes Friday, the shortest nine-inning MLB game since the Detroit Tigers beat the now-Cleveland Guardians in Armando Galarraga's near-perfect game in 2010. Per MLB's Sarah Langs, that game took just 1:44.
Cubs-Reds took an hour and 48 minutes. That is the fastest 9-inning game since Armando Galarraga’s near-perfect game on June 2, 2010 (1 hour, 44 minutes)
— Sarah Langs (@SlangsOnSports) September 27, 2024
It’s the Cubs’ fastest 9-inning game since May 24, 2001, also at Wrigley, also against the Reds, also an hour and 48 minutes
Chicago recorded five hits in the game, while Cincinnati tallied four; the teams combined to use just four pitches. As Langs noted, it was the Cubs' fastest nine-inning game since 2001.
A big part of Wrigley Field's charm is that it purports to take fans back in time to a supposedly simpler era of baseball. On Friday, thanks to MLB's two-year-old pitch clock, it did.
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This article was originally published on www.si.com as Cubs Down Reds 1–0 in Fastest Nine-Inning Major League Baseball Game Since 2010.