View allAll Photos Tagged shutout

The East girls played North at the James W. Cownie Soccer Park on April 4. The Lady Scarlets won with a shutout. Later that night the North boys hosted East at Grubb Stadium. After a close game, the Polar Bears snuck away with a 1-0 win.

Newark, DE, 9/4/2009 -- The Blue Hens, who posted their first shutout since a 42-0 win over Northeastern back on Sept. 30, 2000, allowed just 10 first downs total for the game and held the Rams to just 92 yards on the ground and 84 yards through the air.

 

However the real test come when the National Champs the Richmond Spiders roll into town September 12 to take on The Blue Hens at Delaware Staduim

 

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INDIANAPOLIS- The UIndy baseball team made it five in a row Friday with a doubleheader sweep of Kentucky Wesleyan at Greyhound Park. The Hounds endured a seven-run ninth by the visiting Panthers before earning a 12-11 win in game one, before capping the day with a 9-0 shutout behind a complete-game effort from pitcher Donovan Drake

Winn pitched six innings of shutout baseball to pick up his third win of the season. He retired the last 10 batters he faced in a 6-3 victory over the Lexington Legends.

A highlight in a 4-0 shutout loss to the Braves.

Scott Lyman (UC Davis) tossed eight shutout innings for the Aggies in a 16-0 blanking of Cal State Northridge, garnering Big West Baseball Pitcher of the Week accolades.

 

The sophomore allowed just three hits and struck out a season-high six batters in the outing, throwing 105 pitches.

 

Lyman’s performance came on the heels of two potent offensive showings by the Matador offense. UC Davis pitching allowed CSUN to score 20 runs combined in the first two games of the series.

 

In addition to his mound command, Lyman flourished at the plate, going 7-for-18 (.389) with three doubles, a home run and six runs scored.

 

Photo by Wayne Tilcock & courtesy UC Davis Athletics.

Bill "Irish" Irwin in 1979 with the Washington Diplomats.

 

1978 stats: 2361 minutes played, 178 saves, 39 goals against, 5 shutouts, and a 1.49 goals against average.

New Jersey Devils' mascot NJ Devil wearing #00 in between periods when the Washington Capitals visited the New Jersey Devils on March 18, 2011 at the Prudential Center in Newark, NJ. The Capitals shutout the Devils 3-0.

(Inside Hockey/Bob Fina)

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poor little guy looks wiped out. It is no wonder - he played a hard game which we won 28-0

Another great performance with no hitting support: 8 shutout innings, 6 hits, 4 K's and no walks.

Lewis and Clark Community College's Brooke Coakley (15 ), a sophomore from Granite City, Illinois, attempts a goal during the first half against St. Louis Community College on Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2014. The Trailblazers celebrated another shutout with a 9-0 win against the Archers. Photo by S. Paige Allen, Lewis and Clark Community College photographer.

Charlotte Stone Crabs' Brent Honeywell delivers during his four-hit shutout against Tampa on July 18, 2015.

Hamburg Freezers vs. Augsburger Panther (21.10.14)

 

Endstand: 5-0

 

Shutout für Torhüter Sebastien Caron (#35, Hamburg Freezers)

 

Weitere Fotos zum DEL-Spiel Hamburg Freezers vs. Augsburger Panther

The habs have done something awful that they haven't done since 1948, they got shutout 3 games in a row this week. The Buffalo Sabres, Boston Bruins, and Washington Capitals all had their way with the habs, who have been out scored 11-0 over those 3 games. They have back to back games this Tuesday and Wednesday as well, their record for back to back games is not great either, it's a rough time to be a habs fan.

 

Luckily I have had some great distractions from the habbies this weekend. A few friends and I were down at The Ship tonight while Joanna Barker and Dead Language were followed by the Hunter Gatherers. It was another great night for music and a great night to distract me from the habs' woes.

Adam Mair #11 of the New Jersey Devils crashes the net while Dennis Wideman #6 of the Washington Capitals defends and Michal Neuvirth #30 makes the save on March 18, 2011 at the Prudential Center in Newark, NJ. The Capitals shutout the Devils 3-0.

(Inside Hockey/Bob Fina)

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Camile Gaito throws another shutout to go 5-0 for the season

Tim threw 6.2 shutout innings to record his 2nd win of the season on April 20 against the Padres

Yu Darvish pitches 7 shutout innings

Texas Rangers defeat Kansas City Royals 3-1

Rangers Ballpark

Arlington, TX

The GFA Girls Varsity Squash team went on the road and posted a 7-0 shutout over St. Luke's on Monday, Jan. 24, 2022.

Assistant Coach Mike Yeo, forward Colby Armstrong, defenseman Ryan Whitney, announcer Paul Steigerwald and former Penguin Phil Bourque answer questions on Friday.

  

UMass Amherst's Josh Couturier and Jake McLaughlin battle for control of the puck over Lowell's John Edwardh, Saturday, Feb. 10, 2018 at the Mullins Center. Photo by Caroline O'Connor.

He started his career in 1981, winning his first eight games, including five by shutout. In 1986, he tied a record by striking out five straight batters in the All-Star game

Newark, DE, 9/4/2009 -- The Blue Hens, who posted their first shutout since a 42-0 win over Northeastern back on Sept. 30, 2000, allowed just 10 first downs total for the game and held the Rams to just 92 yards on the ground and 84 yards through the air.

 

However the real test come when the National Champs the Richmond Spiders roll into town September 12 to take on The Blue Hens at Delaware Staduim

  

BUY PRINTS HERE:

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Visit: www.monsterphotoiso.com

Lewis and Clark Community College's Team Captain Miriam Taylor (2), a sophomore from Osage Beach, Missouri, scores during the first half against St. Louis Community College on Wednesday, Oct. 14, 2014. The Trailblazers celebrated another shutout with a 9-0 win against the Archers. Photo by S. Paige Allen, Lewis and Clark Community College photographer.

Ravens safety Dawan Landry intercepted a pass and returned it 48 yards for a defensive touchdown on Nov. 16. (AFRO Photo/John Moore)

 

Ravens Shutout Cleveland, 16-0

 

By Perry Green

AFRO Sports Editor

 

(November 18, 2009) - The Baltimore Ravens regained a little ground in the AFC North Division after shutting out the Cleveland Browns, 16-0, on Nov. 16 on Ohio. It was the second time this season Baltimore has beaten the struggling Browns. The road win advanced the Ravens’ record to 5-4 overall (2-2 division wise) and placed them two games behind the AFC North leading Cincinnati Bengals. Here’s how the game played out:

 

The Ravens secured the victory when…

Baltimore safety Dawan Landry intercepted a Brady Quinn pass and returned it 48 yards for a defensive touchdown, pushing the Ravens ahead, 13-0, with the majority of the third quarter remaining. There was plenty of time left in the game, but it didn’t matter because Cleveland’s offense was completely bottled up by the Ravens’ defense.

 

Outstanding player(s) of the game:

Ravens tailback Ray Rice rushed for a game-high 89 yards and a touchdown on 20 carries, and also caught three passes for 15 yards. Rice has recorded at least 100 yards from scrimmage in six straight games and in seven of nine games played this season.

 

Ravens star linebacker Ray Lewis finished the game with a team-high seven tackles, while teammate Dawan Landry added four tackles and a momentum-shifting interception.

 

More game notes:

The Ravens may have reversed their Monday Night Football curse on Nov. 16 as they won a game aired on Monday night for the first time in six tries. Baltimore is now 5-7 all-time on Monday nights.

 

The Browns and Ravens were tied at zero at halftime, marking the first time this season a game has been scoreless at the half break.

 

Ravens reserve safety Haruki Nakamura broke his right ankle on the game-opening kickoff and will miss the remainder of the season. His teammate, Terrell Suggs, was also banged up later in the game and didn’t return; he will be out in next week’s game. Browns return specialist Josh Cribbs was injured on the final play of the game and was taken to the hospital.

 

The Ravens released kicker Steve Hauschka on Nov. 17. Hauschka has missed three critical field goals this season, so the team decided to replace him with newly acquired veteran kicker Billy Cundiff.

 

The Ravens will learn whether they’re capable of reaching the playoffs when they take on Peyton manning and the undefeated Indianapolis Colts (9-0) at M&T Bank Stadium on Nov. 22.

  

Cleveland, OH - November 16: Baltimore Ravens vs Cleveland Browns at Cleveland Browns Stadium - regular season Final score: BAL - 16, CLE - 0

A shutout thus far! (Actually, Mount Calvary spanked Linden Hall in a clean sweep with a solid 3-0 victory this day)

The California Angels meet the Baltimore Orioles in a game @ Camden Yards on August 25, 1996. This was Dennis Springer's first Major League shutout. The batter is Cal Ripkin, Jr. as Eddie Murray waits on deck. Both Ripkin and Murray are Hall-Of-Famers. Check out the box score @ www.retrosheet.org/boxesetc/1996/B08170BOS1996.htm.

 

I posted an earlier version of this picture. This image was processed using Adobe Photoshop CC 2017 with the help of onOne Photo RAW 2017.

Matthew Murray (born May 25, 1994) is a Canadian professional ice hockey goaltender. He currently plays with the Pittsburgh Penguins in the National Hockey League (NHL). Murray was selected by the Penguins in the third round (83rd overall) of the 2012 NHL Entry Draft.

 

Murray played major junior hockey in the Ontario Hockey League with the Sault Ste. Marie Greyhounds. On September 4, 2013, Murray was signed to a three-year entry-level contract with the Pittsburgh Penguins.

 

During his first full professional season in 2014–15, on March 8, 2015, Murray set an AHL record for the longest shutout streak by not allowing any goals for 304 minutes and 11 seconds. On March 22, Murray recorded his tenth shutout of the season, breaking a record for rookie AHL goaltenders set by Gordie Bell in 1942–43. He would finish the regular season with 12 shutouts. Murray capped his standout rookie season by sweeping the AHL awards, he was selected to the AHL First All-Star Team and Rookie Team, while winning the Baz Bastien Memorial Award as the League's best goaltender and the Dudley "Red" Garrett Memorial Award as best rookie.

 

In the 2015–16 season, Murray was recalled from the AHL for the first time to the Pittsburgh Penguins on December 15, 2015 and made his NHL debut on December 19, 2015 in a 2–1 loss against the Carolina Hurricanes. Murray was recalled again by the Pittsburgh Penguins on February 21, 2016 and started nine games to finish the season. On April 19, 2016 the 21-year old Murray made his NHL playoff debut, allowing just 1 goal as the Penguins defeated the New York Rangers 3-1. Two days later, on April 21, Murray recorded his first NHL playoffs shutout in a 5-0 win over the Rangers.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matt_Murray_(ice_hockey)

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Text_of_Creative_Commons_...

The GFA Girls Varsity Squash team went on the road and posted a 7-0 shutout over St. Luke's on Monday, Jan. 24, 2022.

Starting pitcher Macey Smith pitched a shutout for the win as The Cajun take on Rutgers at Lamson Park. Feb 27, 2016

An arcane hockey club celebrates imminent Hallowe’en by playing the entire game in seasonal drag. A shutout continued for much of the game as the so-called “GoalDozer” manned one of the nets, the ‘Dozer being fronted by a full sheet of heavy plywood.

 

Anton Volchenkov #28 accidentally lifts off the helmet of his teammate Martin Brodeur #30 of the New Jersey Devils while playing against the Washington Capitals on March 18, 2011 at the Prudential Center in Newark, NJ. The Capitals shutout the Devils 3-0. Also pictured is Brooks Laich #21 of the Washington Capitals and Colin White #5 of the New Jersey Devils

(Inside Hockey/Bob Fina)

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The last two games ever won by the Chicago Cubs in World Series play, were both started by Claude Passeau. The Cubs lost the series to the Tigers, 3 games to 4. Here's a biography of Claude Passeau, who passed away in 2003...

 

-----------------------------

 

When you see or hear the name "Claude Passeau", what comes to your mind? Some obscure French politician, perhaps. Or maybe an old hockey player back from the Original Six days. What you probably don't think of is the man who pitched a one-hit shutout for the Cubs in Game 3 of the 1945 World Series and won 124 games in a Cub uniform. This is the story of that man.

 

Claude Passeau was a right-handed pitcher who stood six feet, three inches tall and weighed 198 pounds. He was born on April 9, 1909 in Waynesboro, Mississippi. Waynesboro, in southeast Mississippi near the Alabama border was not a prosperous place in the early 20th century, and by all accounts Passeau grew up with very little. He did possess one thing, though: genuine athletic ability, athleticism that was much greater than that of his friends. Passeau grew up dreaming of escaping his situation through sports, and as he neared his high school graduation he was in the unique position of being recruited by two colleges (unique because two colleges going after the same student was uncommon in the 1920s): Louisiana State, in Baton Rouge, and Millsaps College, in Jackson, Mississippi. Passeau had decided to attend LSU when he received a last-minute visit from a Millsaps official, who gave him a twenty-dollar bill and told him to use half of it to take the train to Jackson and give Millsaps a try; if Passeau didn't like it, he could use the other half to continue on to Baton Rouge. Passeau never made it to LSU, earning 12 letters at Millsaps in baseball, basketball, football, and track between 1928 and 1932. He was one of the first class of inductees into Millsaps' Hall of Fame in 1968.

 

Passeau was a feared pitcher while he was in college, but college was also the first time he had played organized baseball, a fact that turned off some professional scouts who thought he needed more experience. While still in college, Passeau got that experience by playing professional baseball during his summers under an assumed name. He played for teams all over North America, from Canada to Mexico, usually staying for two or three weeks at a time and then moving on. With more experience under his belt, Passeau was signed by the Detroit Tigers and sent to their minor league team in Des Moines, Iowa, where he won 20 games in 1935. Incidentally, while in Des Moines, Passeau met and became friends with a local radio announcer by the name of Ronald Reagan. The Tigers released him at the end of the minor league season, however, and he was quickly picked up by the Pittsburgh Pirates, who gave him his major league debut through one start late in September.

 

The Pirates traded Passeau to the Philadelphia Phillies before the 1936 season. As a Phillie, he compiled an unspectacular 38-55 record in just over three seasons before he was traded to the Cubs on May 29, 1939 in exchange for Joe Marty (a light-hitting outfielder), Ray Harrell (a young pitcher who had appeared in a grand total of four games for the Cubs), and Kirby Higbe (another young pitcher who won 22 games for the Dodgers in 1941). At age 30, Passeau paid dividends for the Cubs immediately, going 13-9 with a 3.05 ERA for the remainder of the 1939 season. His first full season in Chicago, 1940, was one of his best: a record of 20-13 with a sparkling 2.50 ERA and four shutouts. He finished second in the NL in wins, strikeouts (124) and ERA, third in shutouts, and fourth in hits allowed (259).

 

Passeau's 1940 season was a tough act to follow, and his 1941 campaign did not quite measure up. He finished with a 14-14 record and a 3.35 ERA. Though his season was somewhat sub par, his 14 wins was good for ninth in the league, he was second in hits allowed for the second consecutive year, and he was selected for his first All Star team. He rebounded in 1942 to go 19-14 with a 2.68 ERA; his 19 wins were good for third in the league, he finished second with 24 complete games, and he earned his second All Star selection. His 1943 season was another solid one: 15-12 with a 2.91 ERA. His 93 strikeouts were sixth in the league, and he was an All Star for the third straight year.

 

Passeau turned 35 years old as he entered the 1944 season, but his numbers belied his age, as he went 15-9 with a 2.89 ERA, which was eighth in the league. His last great year was yet to come, however. At age 36 in 1945, Passeau went 17-9 with a 2.46 ERA, leading the Cubs to 98 wins and their most recent NL pennant. He might not even have been the best pitcher on that staff, either. Hank Wyse went 22-10 with a 2.68 ERA, and Hank Borowy went 11-2 with a 2.13 ERA after being acquired from the New York Yankees on July 27 for the sum of $97,000. For comparison's sake, $97,000 in 1945 would be about $1,019,000 today, so it can be safely concluded that Borowy was no minor acquisition. Passeau earned his fourth All Star selection on the strength of finishing fifth in the NL in wins, second in ERA, and sixth in strikeouts (98).

 

Passeau also pitched quite well in his one career postseason series, going 1-0 with a 2.70 ERA in two World Series starts, appearing in three games total. The one win came in one of the greatest postseason games pitched up to that point; it remains so to this day. In Game 3 he threw a complete game shutout against the Detroit Tigers, giving up only one hit and facing 28 batters total, just one over the minimum. He walked one, struck out one, and drove in one run with a sacrifice fly. Passeau said that he took great pleasure in doing it against the Tigers, who released him in 1935 after saying that he would never pitch in the majors. He also started Game 6, giving up three runs on five hits in 6 2/3 innings in a game the Cubs eventually won 8-7 on a Stan Hack double in the bottom of the 12th inning, and then pitched in relief in Game 7, giving up two runs on one hit in the eighth inning as the Tigers extended their five run lead to 9-2 in a game they won 9-3, taking the Series at Wrigley Field. (The controversy behind the latter game was the decision of manager Charlie Grimm to have Borowy start Game 7 on what was effectively one day's rest; he had started Game 5 three days before and had pitched in relief in Game 6 two days before. Borowy didn't retire a batter as the Tigers scored five in the first inning and cruised to the victory behind two-time AL MVP Hal Newhouser.)

 

In 1946 Passeau earned his fifth and final All Star selection as he finished with a record of 9-8 with a 3.13 ERA; with many players having returned from military service, the Cubs were unable to match their success of the previous year, and they finished third with a record of 82-71. His career came to a somewhat inglorious end in 1947 at the age of 38, as he went 2-6 with a 6.25 ERA in mostly relief work.

 

All told, Passeau went 124-94 in a Cub uniform and 162-150 in his career. His career ERA was 3.32, and he completed an impressive 188 of the 331 games that he started. He wasn't a slouch at the plate either, hitting 15 career home runs, including three in 1946 when he was 37 years old (let's see Carlos Zambrano do that!). (By the way, his 15 homers are two more than Fergie Jenkins hit in his career in a similar number of at bats [982 for Passeau vs. 896 for Jenkins]).

 

Passeau retired back to his home state of Mississippi and was inducted into the Mississippi Sports Hall of Fame in 1964. He lived to be 94 years old, dying just a little over three years ago on August 30, 2003, in Lucedale, Mississippi. He should be remembered as a strong and consistent pitcher for seven not-so-good Cubs teams (with the exception of 1945), and, if nothing else, as the author of what remains one of the greatest postseason pitching performances ever written.

 

Profile by Bleed-Cubbie-Blue reader gauchodirk.

Referee Kelly Sutherland #11 calls a penalty on Cody McCormick #8 of the Buffalo Sabres who interferred with Andreas Nodl #15 of the Philadelphia Flyers on April 14, 2011 at the Wells Fargo Center in Philadelphia, PA. The Sabres shutout the Flyers 1-0. The Sabres also lead the series 1-0.

(Inside Hockey/Bob Fina)

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Alex Ovechkin #8 of the Washington Capitals celebrates his team's goal while playing against the New Jersey Devils on March 18, 2011 at the Prudential Center in Newark, NJ. The Capitals shutout the Devils 3-0. Also pictured is Anton Volchenkov #28, Martin Brodeur #30, Patrik Elias #26 and Colin White #5 of the New Jersey Devils.

(Inside Hockey/Bob Fina)

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