Hammel one-hits Braves; Orioles win 5-0

photo Baltimore Orioles' Steve Pearce (51) is welcomed into the dugout after scoring against the Atlanta Braves during the fifth inning of a baseball game on Saturday, June 16, 2012, in Atlanta. Baltimore won 5-0.

ATLANTA -- Jason Hammel just wanted go deep into the game and give Baltimore's bullpen some rest.

He nearly got his first no-hitter in the process.

Hammel pitched a one-hitter for his first career shutout, allowing only Jason Heyward's two-out single in the seventh inning, and the Orioles beat the Atlanta Braves 5-0 on Saturday night.

"A no-hitter would've been nice, but it gave the bullpen the night off," Hammel said. "I heard from them. Not one bullpen pitch thrown. That's huge because we've been taxing them pretty good."

There have already been five no-hitters in the majors this season, including three this month, and Hammel made a strong bid to add to the list. He struck out eight and walked two, throwing 65 of 102 pitches for strikes.

Brian Roberts drove in three runs for the Orioles, who have won six of seven.

Atlanta pitcher Brandon Beachy (5-5) left in the fourth inning with right elbow soreness. The major leagues' ERA leader allowed no hits and one run, struck out five and walked one.

The Braves have lost five of six games.

Hammel (7-2) had been struggling on the road, entering with a 1-1 record and a 4.76 ERA in his previous three starts away from Camden Yards. But he settled down after walking Dan Uggla on four pitches to begin the second.

Hammel retired the next 17 batters he faced before walking Uggla again with two out in the seventh. Heyward followed with a clean single to left field, but Eric Hinske flied out to end the inning.

Hammel got through the ninth in six pitches, retiring Michael Bourn on a flyout and Martin Prado and Brian McCann on groundouts before receiving congratulations from his teammates.

The Baltimore dugout started buzzing as Hammel ended the fifth with a no-hitter intact.

"A lot of guys get in a different mental frame, but you could tell that he didn't," Orioles manager Buck Showalter said. "I think everybody kind of knew what was going on. Guys were starting to scatter in the dugout, and I noticed guys standing in the same place, including me."

Acquired in the February trade that sent Jeremy Guthrie to Colorado, Hammel had pitched poorly against Atlanta before Saturday, going 0-3 with 9.00 ERA in five career starts overall and 0-2 with a 11.74 ERA in two starts at Turner Field.

"I had a terrible track record against the Braves," Hammel said. "These guys have given me nightmares, especially here at Turner Field. I'm very excited to get out of here with a win. They put a good team on the field every year."

After walking Chris Davis on six pitches with two outs in the fourth, Beachy stopped in front of the mound and signaled to catcher Brian McCann that he was injured. He walked off the field during a mound visit from manager Fredi Gonzalez.

Beachy, who made 40 of his 57 pitches for strikes, retired his first 11 batters. He now has a 2.00 ERA.

"We're going to get the MRI and hope for the best on the results," Beachy said. "It's really frustrating. I've had a lot of success when I've felt good this year. I feel like I'm in a position where I know more. I know what I'm trying to do and I'm doing it, when I physically can."

Anthony Varvaro came in and walked Adam Jones and Matt Wieters to load the bases. Mark Reynolds then hit a two-run single to give the Orioles a 2-0 lead.

Baltimore went ahead 3-0 in the fifth when Roberts' single off Varvaro scored Steve Pearce from second.

Cristhian Martinez, the third Atlanta pitcher, worked a scoreless sixth before Roberts lined a two-run single to right.

Hammel, who took a no-hitter into the eighth inning April 8 before beating the Minnesota Twins 3-1, said his bullpen session gave him no idea he would one-hit the Braves.

"I actually had a terrible bullpen, believe it or not," he said. "I was kind of feeling my way through the first two innings and then obviously just carried it on and found a pretty good groove."

Bourn went 0-for-4 to snap a career-high 14-game hitting streak.

Gonzalez said before the game that Chipper Jones, who was held out with a swollen left knee, will be in the lineup at third base today. Gonzalez likely will use Jones as a designated hitter when Atlanta visits the New York Yankees and Boston Red Sox this week.

Atlanta first baseman Freddie Freeman was out of the lineup with a swollen knuckle on his left index finger.

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