Towson pitcher Henry Lohr and No. 12 Generals found a special way to wrap up Baltimore County’s Division I regular-season baseball title Thursday at Hereford.

The junior right-hander pitched his first varsity no-hitter, retiring the last 19 batters as the Generals scratched across an unearned run in the third inning to claim a 1-0 win over the Bulls.

Towson (9-1) completes the league slate with an 8-0 mark, handing Hereford (7-2, 5-1) its first league loss.

Leaning on his fastball, changeup and flawless defensive support, Lohr kept throwing strikes against a Bulls lineup that came into play averaging 10 runs per game.

“It feels pretty — I don’t know what more to say,” he said. “I got a blister later on, so my slider started to give. But my changeup was working really well and they couldn’t hit my fastball, so I just stuck with it.”

The Bulls got a solid six-inning performance from starter Aidan Ciurca, who allowed four hits while striking out six before giving way to reliever Alex Smith, who pitched a 1-2-3 seventh.

On a cold day that impacted the batters, the Generals manufactured the game’s only run in the top of the third inning with a two-error play turning out to be the difference. Colin Secrist led off with a walk and went to second base on Dylan Galli’s well-executed sacrifice bunt.

With Secrist getting a big lead at second, Ciurca’s pickoff try sailed high and then got past Bulls centerfielder Willie DeSantis to allow Secrist to score.

With the Generals unable to add to the lead — they loaded the bases with one out in the fourth, but Ciurca worked out of the jam — Lohr faced pressure innings that he proved up for with shortstop Marquise Harris leading the strong defense behind him.

In the seventh, the Bulls had their 3-4-5 hitters at the plate. Gavin Jacker grounded out to second baseman Gavin Dickens, Kreis Metz grounded sharply to Harris on a 3-2 count and Lohr struck out DeSantis to close out his outing.

“For Henry, that was a special performance. On the road against a really, really good team, he just threw strikes,” Towson coach Shawn Tormey said. “The kid is a good pitcher.”

Hereford coach Brad Duvall credited Lohr and the Generals while praising Ciurca’s performance to keep his team close.

The Bulls started the game allowing an average of 0.9 earned runs per game, and it will remain low. As for where the offense went, that was surprisingly missing.

“I don’t know,” Duvall said. “We’ve hit a lot of home runs recently and I wonder if we were overswinging a bit trying to match it. I think our swings were a little big and we could not square the ball up. Four or five comebackers to the mound, they made every play they had to make and I don’t think we hit the ball hard.”

Both teams return to the diamond Saturday with nonconference games. Towson travels to St. Paul’s with a noon start and Hereford hosts Century with the first pitch set for 2 p.m.

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