Welcome to NoNoHitters.com

Major-league professional baseball has recorded 305 no-hitters in major professional baseball history (283 in the N.L. and A.L.) over its history since 1876. Less than 10 percent of those 305 no-hitters were perfect games.

There used to be more than 50 additional no-hitters on the record books until the establishment of an official definition in September of 1991, which booted rain- and darkness-shortened no-nos, no-nos lost in extras and the super-rare 8½-inning road loss no-hitters.

The San Diego Padres are the only current franchise yet to accomplish the feat, and their woes are chronicled here. The New York Mets held that dubious mark until June 1, 2012, and we still keep our old Mets site content here.

Use the menu to browse the many other no-hitter lists hosted on this site.

Why the name NoNoHitters.com?

Although NoNoHitters.com over the past decade has blossomed into baseball’s online home for all things no-hitter, its origins are rooted in a 50-plus-year drought of no-hitters by the New York Mets.

NoNoHitters.com was created by veteran journalist and author Dirk Lammers in 2008.

For four-and-a-half seasons (2008-2012), NoNoHitters.com site dutifully logged the climbing count of Mets games without a no-hitter, which finally ended at 8,019 on June 1, 2012, when Johan Santana made history. During our tenure chronicling what was then baseball’s longest no-no drought from inception, we watched two of baseball’s newer franchises – the Colorado Rockies and the Tampa Bay Rays pass us on the baselines and exit the no-no club out of turn. But one team, the circa-1969 San Diego Padres, surpassed the Mets’ mark in 2019 and continues to serve as the no no-no club’s sole member.