A perfect game is one of the rarest achievments in baseball. There have been over 180,000 games in MLB since the National League was founded in 1876, and only 21 of them have been perfect. So doesn’t it seem odd that there have been four of them in the past three years? They are:
[ul]
[li]Mark Buehle, White Sox vs. Rays, July 23, 2009[/li][li]Dallas Braden, A’s vs. Rays, May 9, 2010[/li][li]Roy Halladay, Phillies vs. Marlins, May 29, 2010[/li][li]Philip Humber, White Sox vs. Mariners, April 21, 2012[/li][/ul]
There was also Armando Gallaraga’s near-perfect game for the Tigers against the Indians on June 2, 2010. What should have been the 27th out was ruled a base hit on a blown call by the first base umpire. That would have been five perfect games in three years, and three in a month.
I found a reference on-line that said 172975 games were played in the NL and AL from 1876 through 2008. With 17 perfect games in that time period, there were 10175 games per perfect game. Since then, there have been about 2449 games per season (including playoff games). Assuming that there will be the same number of games this season, and that there won’t be any more perfect games in 2012, that comes to 2449 games per perfect game. So, perfect games from 2009 through 2012 will have been more than four times as frequent as in all of preceding major league history.
Could this just be random clustering? Or has something changed in Major League Baseball that has resulted in more perfect games?