The current crop of major league ballparks have been the site of a combined 90 no-hitters (10 of which were perfect games). Listed below, in alphabetical order, is each of the 30 MLB ballparks; 27 of them (90%) have been the site of at least one no-hitter and the oldest, Fenway Park, leads the way with 14. For each park, the year it opened is listed and a tabular summary of the no-hitters thrown in it is given, along with a link to a box score from each individual game.





Angel Stadium of Anaheim

Opened: 1966

7 no-hitters; 5 thrown by the Angels and 2 by the visiting team 7/3/1970 Friday Clyde Wright California Angels 4, Oakland A's 0 12,131 1:51 [box] 9/28/1974 Saturday Nolan Ryan California Angels 4, Minnesota Twins 0 10,872 2:22 [box] 6/1/1975 Sunday Nolan Ryan California Angels 1, Baltimore Orioles 0 18,492 2:01 [box] 9/22/1977 Thursday Bert Blyleven Texas Rangers 6, California Angels 0 8,031 2:07 [box] 9/19/1986 Friday Joe Cowley Chicago White Sox 7, California Angels 1 28,647 2:42 [box] 4/11/1990 Wednesday Mark Langston

Mike Witt California Angels 1, Seattle Mariners 0 25,632 2:37 [box] 5/2/2012 Wednesday Jered Weaver Los Angeles Angels 9, Minnesota Twins 0 27,288 2:28 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Angel Stadium :

The first six no-hitters thrown occurred when it was simply named Anaheim Stadium and the home team was known as the California Angels.

AT&T Park

Opened: 2000

3 no-hitters; all thrown by the Giants 7/10/2009 Friday Jonathan Sanchez San Francisco Giants 8, San Diego Padres 0 30,298 2:22 [box] 6/13/2012 Wednesday Matt Cain San Francisco Giants 10, Houston Astros 0 42,298 2:36 [box] 6/25/2014 Wednesday Tim Lincecum San Francisco Giants 4, San Diego Padres 0 41,500 2:37 [box]

No-Hit Notes for AT&T Park :

The first no-hitter thrown here was the first in San Francisco by a Giant since 1975, when Ed Halicki no-hit the Mets at Candlestick Park. Matt Cain's no-hitter was a perfect game.

Busch Stadium

Opened: 2006

0 no-hitters

Chase Field

Opened: 1998

1 no-hitter; thrown by the visiting team 6/25/1999 Friday Jose Jimenez St. Louis Cardinals 1, Arizona Diamondbacks 0 45,540 2:10 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Chase Field :

Was called Bank One Ballpark when the only no-hitter was thrown there.

Citi Field

Opened: 2009

3 no-hitters; 1 thrown by the Mets and 2 by the visiting team 6/1/2012 Friday Johan Santana New York Mets 8, St. Louis Cardinals 0 27,069 2:35 [box] 6/9/2015 Tuesday Chris Heston San Francisco Giants 5, New York Mets 0 23,155 2:32 [box] 10/3/2015 Saturday Max Scherzer Washington Nationals 2, New York Mets 0 41,480 2:14 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Citi Field :

Johan Santana's no-hitter was the first ever thrown by a Mets pitcher and occurred in the team's 51st season and 8,020th game, which was the longest drought any franchise had endured before recording its first no-hitter. Scherzer's no-hitter was his second of the 2015 season, making him just the 6th pitcher in major league history to throw two no-hitters in a season. And just like the other five pitchers (Roy Halladay, Allie Reynolds, Nolan Ryan, Virgil Trucks and Johnny Vander Meer), Scherzer threw his no-hitters in different ballparks, with Citi Field joining Nationals Park as his sites.

Citizens Bank Park

Opened: 2004

2 no-hitters; 1 thrown by the Phillies and 1 by the visiting team 10/6/2010 Wednesday Roy Halladay Philadelphia Phillies 4, Cincinnati Reds 0 46,411 2:34 [box] 5/25/2014 Sunday Josh Beckett Los Angeles Dodgers 6, Philadelphia Phillies 0 36,141 2:37 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Citizens Bank Park :

Roy Halladay's no-hitter happened in the Division Series playoffs and was just the second in baseball post-season history following Don Larsen's perfect game at the old Yankee Stadium in 1956.

Comerica Park

Opened: 2000

1 no-hitter; thrown by the Tigers 6/12/2007 Tuesday Justin Verlander Detroit Tigers 4, Milwaukee Brewers 0 33,555 2:11 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Comerica Park :

Site of the second interleague no-hitter.

Coors Field

Opened: 1995

1 no-hitter; thrown by the visiting team 9/17/1996 Tuesday Hideo Nomo Los Angeles Dodgers 9, Colorado Rockies 0 50,066 2:51 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Coors Field :

Of all no-hitters thrown in currently used ballparks, Coors Field hosted the best attended one and the only one with a paid attendance of over 50,000.

Dodger Stadium

Opened: 1962

12 no-hitters; 8 thrown by the Dodgers and 4 by the other team 5/5/1962 Saturday Bo Belinsky Los Angeles Angels 2, Baltimore Orioles 0 15,886 2:00 [box] 6/30/1962 Saturday Sandy Koufax Los Angeles Dodgers 5, New York Mets 0 29,797 2:46 [box] 5/11/1963 Saturday Sandy Koufax Los Angeles Dodgers 8, San Francisco Giants 0 49,807 2:13 [box] 9/9/1965 Thursday Sandy Koufax Los Angeles Dodgers 1, Chicago Cubs 0 29,139 1:43 [box] 7/20/1970 Monday Bill Singer Los Angeles Dodgers 5, Philadelphia Phillies 0 12,454 2:02 [box] 6/29/1990 Friday Fernando Valenzuela Los Angeles Dodgers 6, St. Louis Cardinals 0 38,583 2:41 [box] 7/28/1991 Sunday Dennis Martinez Montreal Expos 2, Los Angeles Dodgers 0 45,560 2:14 [box] 8/17/1992 Monday Kevin Gross Los Angeles Dodgers 2, San Francisco Giants 0 25,561 2:23 [box] 4/8/1994 Friday Kent Mercker Atlanta Braves 6, Los Angeles Dodgers 0 36,546 2:28 [box] 7/14/1995 Friday Ramon Martinez Los Angeles Dodgers 7, Florida Marlins 0 30,988 2:21 [box] 6/18/2014 Wednesday Clayton Kershaw Los Angeles Dodgers 8, Colorado Rockies 0 46,069 2:58 [box] 8/30/2015 Sunday Jake Arrieta Chicago Cubs 2, Los Angeles Dodgers 0 46,679 2:42 [box] No-Hit Notes for Dodger Stadium:

The no-hitters thrown by Sandy Koufax (#3) and Dennis Martinez were also perfect games. Is one of only 3 current ballparks in which multiple perfect games have been thrown. Is the only current ballpark in which one pitcher (Sandy Koufax) has thrown 3 no-hitters. The first no-hitter thrown here was by the American League's Los Angeles Angels, who before they moved to Anaheim spent four seasons (1962-65) as a tenant at what they called Chávez Ravine Stadium. So not only did the first no-hitter not involve the Dodgers, it wasn't even technically thrown at Dodger Stadium.

Fenway Park

Opened: 1912

14 no-hitters; 9 thrown by the Red Sox and 5 by the other team 9/9/1914 Wednesday George Davis Boston Braves 7, Philadelphia Phillies 0 ? 2:00 [box] 6/21/1916 Wednesday Rube Foster Boston Red Sox 2, New York Yankees 0 ? 1:31 [box] 8/30/1916 Wednesday Dutch Leonard Boston Red Sox 4, St. Louis Browns 0 ? 1:35 [box] 4/24/1917 Tuesday George Mogridge New York Yankees 2, Boston Red Sox 1 3,219 2:01 [box] 6/23/1917 Saturday Babe Ruth

Ernie Shore Boston Red Sox 4, Washington Senators 0 16,158 1:45 [box] 7/1/1920 Thursday Walter Johnson Washington Senators 1, Boston Red Sox 0 3,000 1:46 [box] 8/21/1926 Saturday Ted Lyons Chicago White Sox 6, Boston Red Sox 0 ? 1:45 [box] 7/14/1956 Saturday Mel Parnell Boston Red Sox 4, Chicago White Sox 0 14,542 1:42 [box] 7/20/1958 Sunday Jim Bunning Detroit Tigers 3, Boston Red Sox 0 29,529 2:02 [box] 6/26/1962 Tuesday Earl Wilson Boston Red Sox 2, Los Angeles Angels 0 14,002 2:24 [box] 9/16/1965 Thursday Dave Morehead Boston Red Sox 2, Cleveland Indians 0 1,247 2:00 [box] 4/27/2002 Saturday Derek Lowe Boston Red Sox 10, Tampa Bay Devil Rays 0 32,837 2:28 [box] 9/1/2007 Saturday Clay Buchholz Boston Red Sox 10, Baltimore Orioles 0 36,819 3:02 [box] 5/19/2008 Monday Jon Lester Boston Red Sox 7, Kansas City Royals 0 37,746 2:30 [box] No-Hit Notes for Fenway Park:

Among active ballparks, Fenway has hosted the shortest (1:31) recorded no-hitter plus the worst attended one (1,247). Boston's National League team, the Braves, periodically used the bigger Fenway Park prior to opening their new ballpark, Braves Field, in 1915. One such instance was a doubleheader they played against the Phillies near the end of the "Miracle" Braves' pennant-winning 1914 season, when little used George A. Davis Jr, who was making his first start of the year, no-hit Philadelphia in the 2nd game of the DH. At the time of his unlikely no-hitter, Davis was a Harvard law student, and lawyer would become his primary Buffalo-based occupation after a short big league career, which ended in 1915 after having pitched in just 36 games. So the first no-hitter thrown at Fenway Park was done so by a 24-year old law school student pitching for a National League team. Although a perfect game has never been thrown here, Ernie Shore was originally credited with one after he relieved Babe Ruth in their combined no-hitter on 6/23/1917, which was the first combined no-hitter in major league history. In that game, Ruth walked the leadoff batter then was ejected. Shore came in and, after the leadoff man was caught stealing, he retired the next 26 batters. Shore was credited with a perfect game for 74 years -- until 1991, when MLB redefined what constituted a perfect game.

Globe Life Park in Arlington

Opened: 1994

1 no-hitter; thrown by the Rangers 7/28/1994 Thursday Kenny Rogers Texas Rangers 4, California Angels 0 46,581 2:08 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Globe Life Park :

Kenny Rogers' no-hitter was a perfect game. It was thrown during the ballpark's original name: The Ballpark in Arlington

Great American Ball Park

Opened: 2003

2 no-hitters; 1 thrown by the Reds and 1 by the visiting team 7/2/2013 Tuesday Homer Bailey Cincinnati Reds 3, San Francisco Giants 0 27,509 2:43 [box] 4/21/2016 Thursday Jake Arrieta Chicago Cubs 16, Cincinnati Reds 0 16,497 2:56 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Great American Ball Park :

Bailey's no-hitter was his second in 19 starts. His first also had the distinction of being the first no-hitter thrown at Pittsburgh's PNC Park.

Kauffman Stadium

Opened: 1973

3 no-hitters; 2 thrown by the Royals and 1 by the visiting team 5/15/1973 Tuesday Nolan Ryan California Angels 3, Kansas City Royals 0 12,205 2:20 [box] 5/14/1977 Saturday Jim Colborn Kansas City Royals 6, Texas Rangers 0 29,978 2:10 [box] 8/26/1991 Monday Bret Saberhagen Kansas City Royals 7, Chicago White Sox 0 25,164 2:30 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Kauffman Stadium :

All no-hitters occurred during the time the ballpark was named Royals Stadium. Since being renamed Kauffman Stadium in 1993 no no-hitters have been thrown in Kansas City.



Marlins Park

Opened: 2012

1 no-hitter; thrown by the Marlins 9/29/2013 Sunday Henderson Alvarez Miami Marlins 1, Detroit Tigers 0 28,315 2:06 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Marlins Park :

Thrown on the final day of the regular season, which was the fourth time in baseball history that has happened, Alvarez's no-hitter was an almost as rare walk-off no-hitter, as the Marlins scored the winning run, on a wild pitch, in the bottom of the 9th -- with Alvarez standing on deck. It was just the sixth walk-off no-hitter in major league history, and the first complete game one since 1952, and became the first no-hitter to ever end on a wild pitch.

Miller Park

Opened: 2001

1 no-hitter; thrown by the visiting team 9/14/2008 Sunday Carlos Zambrano Chicago Cubs 5, Houston Astros 0 23,441 2:17 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Miller Park :

Has the unusual and unlikely distinction of being the only ballpark that hosted a no-hitter as a neutral site. The Astros were actually the home team in Milwaukee, where two games were relocated to from Houston due to Hurricane Ike.

Minute Maid Park

Opened: 2000

1 no-hitter; thrown by the Astros 8/21/2015 Friday Mike Fiers Houston Astros 3, Los Angeles Dodgers 0 33,833 2:31 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Minute Maid Park :

Fiers' no-hitter was the first thrown in a Houston ballpark in 22 years, with the previous one coming on September 8, 1993 at the Astrodome, where six no-hitters were thrown (all by Astros pitchers) in its 35 seasons.

Nationals Park

Opened: 2008

2 no-hitters; both thrown by the Nationals 9/28/2014 Sunday Jordan Zimmermann Washington Nationals 1, Miami Marlins 0 35,085 2:01 [box] 6/20/2015 Saturday Max Scherzer Washington Nationals 6, Pittsburgh Pirates 0 41,104 2:21 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Nationals Park :

Zimmermann's no-hitter in 2014 was the fifth no-hitter to be thrown on the final day of the regular season, yet it was the second consecutive season in which a no-hitter was thrown for the first time at a ballpark on the season's final day. Ironically, the opposing and losing pitcher for the first no-hitter at Nationals Park, Miami's Henderson Alvarez, had pitched a 1-0 no-hitter in his team's favor in game #162 the previous year at Marlins Park. Zimmermann's no-hitter was the first in Nationals franchise history and was the first hitless game pitched in Washington since 1931, when the Washington Senators no-hit the Red Sox at Griffith Stadium.

Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum

Opened: 1966

9 no-hitters; 5 thrown by the A's and 4 by the other team 5/8/1968 Wednesday Catfish Hunter Oakland A's 4, Minnesota Twins 0 6,298 2:28 [box] 9/21/1970 Monday Vida Blue Oakland A's 6, Minnesota Twins 0 4,284 2:21 [box] 7/30/1973 Monday Jim Bibby Texas Rangers 6, Oakland A's 0 21,606 2:10 [box] 9/28/1975 Sunday Vida Blue

Glenn Abbott

Paul Lindblad

Rollie Fingers Oakland A's 5, California Angels 0 22,131 1:59 [box] 7/28/1976 Wednesday Blue Moon Odom

Francisco Barrios Chicago White Sox 2, Oakland A's 1 3,367 2:31 [box] 9/29/1983 Thursday Mike Warren Oakland A's 3, Chicago White Sox 0 9,058 2:20 [box] 6/11/1990 Monday Nolan Ryan Texas Rangers 5, Oakland A's 0 33,436 2:49 [box] 7/13/1991 Saturday Bob Milacki

Mike Flanagan

Mark Williamson

Gregg Olson Baltimore Orioles 2, Oakland A's 0 40,047 2:38 [box] 5/9/2010 Sunday Dallas Braden Oakland A's 4, Tampa Bay Rays 0 12,228 2:07 [box]

No-Hit Notes for the Coliseum :

The no-hitters thrown by Catfish Hunter and Dallas Braden were also perfect games. Is one of only 3 current ballparks in which multiple perfect games have been thrown. Although the Coliseum has had multiple names (Network Associates, McAfee, Overstock.com and O.co Coliseum) all no-hitters thrown there have occurred during its original name of Oakland-Alameda County Coliseum.

Oriole Park at Camden Yards

Opened: 1992

1 no-hitter; thrown by the visiting team 4/4/2001 Wednesday Hideo Nomo Boston Red Sox 3, Baltimore Orioles 0 35,602 2:29 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Camden Yards :

The April 4th date is the earliest in the year for any no-hitter to be thrown in a currently used ballpark.

Petco Park

Opened: 2004

1 no-hitter; thrown by the visiting team 7/13/2013 Saturday Tim Lincecum San Francisco Giants 9, San Diego Padres 0 40,342 2:51 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Petco Park :

Just 11 days before throwing the first no-hitter at Petco Park, Tim Lincecum was the losing pitcher in the first no-hitter ever thrown at Cincinnati's Great American Ball Park. So, in a span of three starts, Lincecum was a pitcher of record for the first no-hitters to be thrown in two current ballparks, and they happened in consecutive decisions for the Giants pitcher, who did not factor in the decision in his start on 7/8/13.

PNC Park

Opened: 2001

1 no-hitter; thrown by the visiting team 9/28/2012 Friday Homer Bailey Cincinnati Reds 1, Pittsburgh Pirates 0 34,796 2:28 [box]

No-Hit Notes for PNC Park :

Bailey's no-hitter was doubly historic, for not only was it the first one at PNC Park but it also ensured that the Pirates would have a losing record for the 20th straight season, a mark of futility never reached before by any major North American professional sports team.

Progressive Field

Opened: 1994

1 no-hitter; thrown by the visiting team 7/27/2011 Wednesday Ervin Santana Los Angeles Angels 3, Cleveland Indians 1 21,546 2:22 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Progressive Field :

Was the oldest current ballpark (17 years) in the majors to have never hosted a no-hitter prior to its first.

Rogers Centre

Opened: 1989

2 no-hitters; both thrown by the visiting team 6/29/1990 Friday Dave Stewart Oakland A's 5, Toronto Blue Jays 0 49,817 2:27 [box] 5/7/2011 Saturday Justin Verlander Detroit Tigers 9, Toronto Blue Jays 0 23,453 2:35 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Rogers Centre :

The first no-hitter was thrown when the stadium was called the SkyDome.

Safeco Field

Opened: 1999

4 no-hitters; 3 thrown by the Mariners and 1 by the visiting team 4/21/2012 Saturday Philip Humber Chicago White Sox 4, Seattle Mariners 0 22,472 2:17 [box] 6/8/2012 Friday Kevin Millwood +5 Seattle Mariners 1, LA Dodgers 0 22,028 2:48 [box] 8/15/2012 Wednesday Felix Hernandez Seattle Mariners 1, Tampa Bay Rays 0 21,889 2:22 [box] 8/12/2015 Wednesday Hisashi Iwakuma Seattle Mariners 3, Baltimore Orioles 0 25,661 2:29 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Safeco Field :

The no-hitters thrown by Philip Humber and Felix Hernandez were also perfect games. Of the 23 perfect games thrown in major league history, Humber's occurred the earliest in the year and was only the second ever recorded in April. Ironically, the only other was also thrown by a White Sox pitcher on the road (Charlie Robertson in Detroit on April 30, 1922). Kevin Millwood and five relievers combined to throw the second no-hitter in Safeco Field history. The six pitchers used tied the record for the most needed to throw a no-hitter. With their innings pitched listed in parenthesis, the Mariners pitchers were: Millwood (6), Charlie Furbush (0.2), Stephen Pryor (0.1), Lucas Luetge (0.1), Brandon League (0.2) and Tom Wilhelmsen (1).

Target Field

Opened: 2010

0 no-hitters

Tropicana Field

Opened: 1990

2 no-hitters; 1 thrown by the Rays and 1 by the visiting team 6/25/2010 Friday Edwin Jackson Arizona Diamondbacks 1, Tampa Bay Rays 0 18,918 2:46 [box] 7/26/2010 Monday Matt Garza Tampa Bay Rays 5, Detroit Tigers 0 17,009 2:36 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Tropicana Field :

The two no-hitters were thrown within a span of 11 games. Prior to that stretch, the Rays had played 1,006 games without a no-hitter being thrown in their dome, which started hosting baseball with the team's inception in 1998.

Turner Field

Opened: 1997

3 no-hitters; all thrown by the visiting team 5/18/2004 Tuesday Randy Johnson Arizona Diamondbacks 2, Atlanta Braves 0 23,381 2:13 [box] 4/17/2010 Saturday Ubaldo Jimenez Colorado Rockies 4, Atlanta Braves 0 32,602 2:31 [box] 9/1/2014 Monday Cole Hamels

Jake Diekman

Ken Giles

Jonathan Papelbon Philadelphia Phillies 7, Atlanta Braves 0 34,178 3:10 [box]

No-Hit Notes for Turner Field :

Randy Johnson's no-hitter was a perfect game. Is one of only 4 current ballparks in which the first no-hitter thrown there was also a perfect game. The combined no-hitter by Hamels and company occurred on Labor Day and is the longest one thrown by time (3:10) in a current ballpark.

U.S. Cellular Field

Opened: 1991

3 no-hitters; 2 thrown by the White Sox and 1 by the visiting team 4/18/2007 Wednesday Mark Buehrle Chicago White Sox 6, Texas Rangers 0 25,390 2:03 [box] 7/23/2009 Thursday Mark Buehrle Chicago White Sox 5, Tampa Bay Rays 0 28,036 2:03 [box] 5/3/2011 Tuesday Francisco Liriano Minnesota Twins 1, Chicago White Sox 0 20,901 2:09 [box]

No-Hit Notes for U.S. Cellular Field :

Mark Buehrle's second no-hitter was a perfect game.

Wrigley Field

Opened: 1914

8 no-hitters; 5 thrown by the Cubs and 3 by the visiting team 5/2/1917 Wednesday Fred Toney Cincinnati Reds 1, Chicago Cubs 0 (10) 3,500 1:50 [box] 5/12/1955 Thursday Sam Jones Chicago Cubs 4, Pittsburgh Pirates 0 2,918 2:38 [box] 5/15/1960 Sunday Don Cardwell Chicago Cubs 4, St. Louis Cardinals 0 33,543 1:46 [box] 8/19/1965 Thursday Jim Maloney Cincinnati Reds 1, Chicago Cubs 0 (10) 11,342 2:51 [box] 8/19/1969 Tuesday Ken Holtzman Chicago Cubs 3, Atlanta Braves 0 37,514 2:00 [box] 4/16/1972 Sunday Burt Hooton Chicago Cubs 4, Philadelphia Phillies 0 9,583 2:33 [box] 9/2/1972 Saturday Milt Pappas Chicago Cubs 8, San Diego Padres 0 11,144 2:03 [box] 7/25/2015 Saturday Cole Hamels Philadelphia Phillies 5, Chicago Cubs 0 41,683 2:38 [box] No-Hit Notes for Wrigley Field:

Was called Weeghman Park when the first no-hitter was thrown. No-hitters have been thrown twice on August 19 (1965 and 1969). No other current ballpark has had more than one no-hitter thrown on the same date. In its first 100 years, the Reds were the only visiting team to throw a no-hitter at Wrigley and they did it twice. In a twist of irony both of those games went 10 innings and finished with the same score (1-0). In the first of those games both team's pitchers -- Fred Toney for the Reds and Jim "Hippo" Vaughn for the Cubs -- had a no-hitter through 9 innings. Was the site of the first major league no-hitter thrown by an African-American pitcher (Sam "Toothpick" Jones). A no-hitter has never been thrown in a game here that started at night. Wrigley Field famously lacked lights until the 1988 season and for the sole no-hitter thrown within the Friendly Confines since then the game's starting time was 4:05.

Yankee Stadium

Opened: 2009

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