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CINCINNATI — Jake Arrieta’s first no-hitter set him apart. Pitching another one in the span of only 11 regular-season starts has put the Chicago Cubs’ ace in elite company.

And his catcher suspects that the reigning NL Cy Young winner has a few more of those no-hit moments left in him.

Arrieta overcame early sloppiness and bore down at the end, shutting down the Cincinnati Reds in a 16-0 rout on Thursday night that left everyone amazed except him.

After all, he’d done it before.

“It feels different the second time,” said Arrieta, who did his best pitching in the last few innings with the gem in reach. “I was a little more relaxed as the game progressed.”

Arrieta (4-0) struck out six, walked four and allowed only six balls hit out of the infield during the first no-hitter in Major League Baseball this season.

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No spectacular plays were needed by Cubs fielders to preserve Arrieta’s performance. He threw 119 pitches, retiring Eugenio Suarez on a routine flyball to right field to end it.

Arrieta threw his first career no-hitter last Aug. 30 at Dodger Stadium, beating Los Angeles 2-0. That game came as Arrieta put together one of the best pitching stretches in club history – he’s 15-0 in his last 16 regular-season starts.

“What can I say?” Manager Joe Maddon said. “Man, it was spectacular.”

The Reds hadn’t been held hitless in a regular-season game since 1971, when Rick Wise did it for Philadelphia at Riverfront Stadium. In the 2010 NL playoffs, Roy Halladay of the Phillies pitched a no-hitter against Cincinnati.

“We got dominated,” Reds outfielder Jay Bruce said. “That’s the most dominating game I’ve ever been a part of. He was great; we weren’t.

“Every time he goes out there, he’s got no-hit stuff. He’s arguably the best pitcher in the game today.”

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Arrieta is among several pitchers in the last decade to pitch two no-hitters. The 30-year-old righty is on the list with Max Scherzer, Justin Verlander, Tim Lincecum and Homer Bailey, who threw the only other no-hitter at Great American Ball Park on July 2, 2013, against the Giants.

“I feel like I didn’t do a whole lot,” said David Ross, who caught his first no-hitter. “That animal was in control the whole time. He locked it in when he needed to.

“He’s got the capability of doing that every night out.”

At 39, Ross has already announced this will be his final season. Arrieta said it was exciting to let Ross have this thrill.

Arrieta is the first Cubs pitcher to win his first four starts in a season since Greg Maddux went 5-0 in 2006. Ken Holtzman is the only other Cubs pitcher to throw more than one no-hitter in the modern era, doing it in 1969 and 1971.

Kris Bryant homered twice, including a grand slam, and drove in six runs. Arrieta contributed a pair of singles and a walk as the Cubs pulled away.

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The 16-run margin approached the most-lopsided victory in major league history. In 1884, Pud Galvin and Buffalo beat the Detroit Wolverines 18-0 in the National League, STATS said.

By Arrieta’s standards, it was a bit of a struggle. He walked three batters – he’d allowed only two walks in his first three starts combined – and needed 85 pitches to get through six innings. After that, he dug in and made quick work of the Reds’ lineup.

“In the sixth, I knew it was going to be a possibility for me,” Arrieta said.

The thousands of Cubs fans in the crowd of 16,497 were on their feet cheering as Arrieta walked Scott Schebler to open the ninth, got pinch-hitter Tucker Barnhart on a popup, Zack Cozart on a fly to center and Suarez on an easy fly.

Arrieta and Ross embraced halfway between home plate and the mound as the rest of the Cubs circled around him.

In September 2014, Arrieta lost a no-hit bid against the Reds on Brandon Phillips’ one-out double in the eighth at Wrigley Field.

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This time, the offense made the outcome a moot point while extending the Cubs’ best start since 1970 at 12-4.

Bryant hit a two-run shot in the first off Brandon Finnegan (1-1), and his third career grand slam in the seventh off Drew Hayes made it 13-0. Ben Zobrist and Ross added solo shots, and Anthony Rizzo had a three-run homer.

As the Cubs made it a romp, there was only one question left: How far could Arrieta go? He gave himself a chance by getting through the seventh and eighth innings on only 18 pitches, bearing down against an overmatched lineup.

Finnegan started at Wrigley Field on April 11 and didn’t allow a hit until Ross singled with two outs in the seventh. They were ready for the left-hander this time. Dexter Fowler doubled off the wall in center on Finnegan’s first pitch of the game, and Bryant’s homer made it 2-0.

Arrieta added to his club-record of 24 consecutive quality starts since June 21, going 20-1. He’s 15-0 in 16 starts since August 1 of last season, allowing a total of seven earned runs.

DIAMONDBACKS 6, GIANTS 2: Yasmani Tomas hit a go-ahead home run in the fourth inning, Paul Goldschmidt drove in two runs and Arizona won at San Francisco for a four-game sweep.

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Tyler Wagner (1-0) allowed two hits in five relief innings of Shelby Miller as Arizona wrapped up a 7-3 trip with a fifth straight win and first four-game sweep ever in the Giants’ 17th-year ballpark. The benches cleared and both teams were warned in the eighth after Josh Osich hit Arizona’s David Peralta with a pitch for the second straight day. Peralta walked toward the mound, but there were no ejections. Johnny Cueto (3-1) was tagged for his first loss since joining the Giants on a $130 million, six-year contract.

DODGERS 2, BRAVES 1: Enrique Hernandez singled with one out against Alexi Ogando (1-1) and came around to score on Yasmani Grandal’s shot off the center-field wall in the 10th inning at Atlanta.

Chris Hatcher (2-1) worked a scoreless ninth before Kenley Jansen earned his seventh save for the Dodgers.

MARLINS 5, NATIONALS 1: Ichiro Suzuki had two hits, scored twice and made two sliding catches in right field for host Miami, which used a makeshift lineup to beat Max Scherzer and Washington.

Bryce Harper hit his eighth home run for Washington, boosting his majors-leading RBI total to 22.

AMERICAN LEAGUE

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ROYALS 4, TIGERS 0: Edinson Volquez tossed seven sharp innings, Mike Moustakas went deep and host Kansas City defeated Detroit.

Volquez (3-0) retired the first eight batters and only had to wiggle out of one jam, when Alcides Escobar let a grounder go through his legs in the fourth inning. The Tigers went on to load the bases before Volquez struck out Jarrod Saltalamacchia to end it.

ORIOLES 3, BLUE JAYS 2: Manny Machado doubled in the tie-breaking run in the eighth inning, and Baltimore rallied to win at home.

Rookie Joey Rickard had three hits and scored the decisive run for the Orioles, who won despite leaving 13 on base and going 3 for 14 with runners in scoring position.

ATHLETICS 7, YANKEES 3: Khris Davis and Coco Crisp homered on consecutive pitches, backing Rich Hill’s strong innings, and Oakland completed a three-game sweep at New York.

ANGELS 3, WHITE SOX 2: Mike Trout hit a two-run homer and reached base four times, helping back Jered Weaver as Los Angeles won at Chicago to close a 10-game trip.

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Melky Cabrera’s solo homer in the seventh was the lone run off Weaver (1-1).

MARINERS 10, INDIANS 7: Robinson Cano hit a three-run homer in the 10th inning off Cody Allen, lifting Seattle at Cleveland.

Cano had an early single and then an RBI double in the sixth before connecting with two outs for his sixth home run this season.

RANGERS 7, ASTROS 4: Ian Desmond’s first homer of the season was good for three runs and A.J. Griffin outpitched 2015 American League Cy Young winner Dallas Keuchel as Texas completed a three-game sweep at home.

INTERLEAGUE

TWINS 8, BREWERS 1: Ricky Nolasco struck out seven and allowed five hits over six-plus innings, and Minnesota snapped a seven-game road losing streak.

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