Despite his success with his curve, his inability to consistently place his fastball is why his results through Tuesday night had been middling. But he was firing on all cylinders against the Rays. He said he began to feel something special in the air in the sixth inning and indicated he nearly went numb.
“I just blacked out, I don’t know,” he said, adding of the Angels lineup: “Our guys did a great job. They hit the ball all over the place. They just did what they do. They made tons of plays for me.”
It has been a momentous week in Angel Stadium. On Monday, Ohtani smashed a grand slam — the first he had hit as a professional in the United States or Japan. Then came the Detmers. His fastball topped out at 94 m.p.h. and his curve dipped as low as 73 m.p.h., with the large differential keeping Tampa Bay off balance all night.
It was the longest outing of Detmers’s career, as he came into the night with career highs of six innings pitched and 97 pitches.
The only heart-stopping moment came in the seventh inning when, with one out, first baseman Jared Walsh failed to handle a Phillips ground ball. It was ruled an error, and history marched on.