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He opened the season with 10 straight homerless starts, the longest stretch for an Atlanta pitcher since Zane Smith in 1986, who opened the year with 13 straight homerless starts. with enough innings.His 24 wins over the past two seasons are most in the majors by a left-hander, one more than Seattle’s Marco Gonzalez.Only one pitcher, the Yankees Gerrit Cole, has more wins than Fried since the start of last year.Cole has 27 wins.Fried did not allow a home run in any of his first 10 starts of the season and retired the first two batters he faced in his final appearance before allowing back-to-back home runs to Miami’s Jesús Aguilar and Brian Anderson.The homers snapped a 68.1-inning homerless run.His 68.1-inning homerless streak entering play was the longest in the majors at the time, 19.1 innings longer than any other pitcher…Fried was vying to become just the third qualifying pitcher in the live ball era to complete a season without allowing a home run, and the first since Slim Harris in 1926. Ranks: Wins (7, T2nd).Played his second full major league season and went 7-0 with a 2.25 ERA (14 ER/56.0 IP) in 11 games, all starts.Finished the season with 56.0 innings, 4.0 innings short of qualifying for the ERA title.His 2.25 ERA would have ranked fourth lowest in the N.L. Committed to UCLA before signing with San Diego.Īwards: Gold Glove (P), All-MLB First Team (SP).N.L. for three years before the school cut all athletics. for his senior year, where he was teammates with Lucas Giolito (White Sox)… Attended Montclair College Preparatory School in Van Nuys, Calif. Attended Harvard-Westlake High School in Studio City, Calif.
