Yearly Archives: 2012

July 5, 2012

Game 81: Reds 1, Dodgers 4

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W: Harang (6-5) L: Leake (3-6) S: Jansen (14)

Boxscore

The Reds got down early yesterday, and though the Dodgers’ lead wasn’t that big, they never could get back up against the pitching of former Reds’ ace, Aaron Harang.

Mike Leake started for the Reds and actually pitched very well after the first inning. Unfortunately for Leake, you don’t get a do-over, and his line ended up being 3 runs (2 earned) on 6 hits through 7.0 innings. Bill Bray came in in the eighth and walked two guys before being pulled for Jose Arredondo. Arredondo was on the mound when the Dodgers’ other run scored, but it was Bray’s earned run.

There’s similarly little to talk about on the offensive side of the box. Harang and his successors held the Reds to 3 measly hits: 1 for Zack Cozart, 1 for Joey Votto, and 1 solo shot for Devin Mesoraco that kept it from being a shut-out.

The loss brings the Reds’ record to 44-37 and knocks them a game behind the Pirates. After facing the NLW’s best two teams in the Giants and Dodgers, today they hope to recover against a much worse NLW team, the San Diego Padres. The “Who won the trade?” question will play out tonight when Mat Latos (7-2, 4.42 ERA) takes on Edinson Volquez (5-7, 3.68 ERA). First pitch at 10:05 p.m.

July 5, 2012

Daily Brief: Reds fall to second place

Last Game
Aaron Harang, once ace of the Reds rotation, pretty much took the Reds to school last night with his new team. The good guys managed only 3 hits and 1 run all evening, but Mike Leake had allowed 3 runs in the bottom of the first alone. He settled down after that, but it wasn’t enough. Final score: Reds 1, Dodgers 4.

Next Game
Speaking of former Reds’ aces: the Reds make their way to San Diego tonight where they will face one Edinson Volquez (5-7, 3.68 ERA). Mat Latos (7-2, 4.42 ERA), who was traded for Volquez before the season, will toe the rubber for the Reds. Such drama!

Latos is coming off 2 excellent complete-game outings, and the Padres are rocking a 33-50 record. On the other hand, the starters are sure to be putting pressure on themselves, and neither has proven great under pressure (see game 1 of the 2010 play-off for Volquez and the whole month of April for Latos). There’s no telling how this one might turn out.

Second place is the first loser
After the Pirates strung together their third win in a row over the Houston Astros and the Reds lost the rubber game to the Dodgers, the Reds found themselves in sole possession of second place in the central division.

The Reds have held on to first place since May 22. With the All-Star break just around the corner, maybe the Pirates will cool off while the Reds (*cough*Drew Stubbs*cough*) will get their heads together. Only, the Pirates aren’t on a terrifically hot streak: they’re only 7-3 in their last 10, and aided by a 4-game series against the Astros. The offense has got to figure things out because waiting for the Pirates to fall back to earth may not be enough.

What to Say to Sound Smart at the Water Cooler
The Reds have finally broken the record of longest amount of time into the season before using a sixth starting pitcher. With 81 games and still going strong, the Reds broke the record held by the 1992 team who waited until the 80th game to start Keith Brown (before Brown, it had been just Jose Rijo, Tom Browning, Tim Belcher, Greg Swindell and Chris Hammond).

The next longest streak isn’t one the modern-era Reds will break: it’s held by the 1898 team, who didn’t start a sixth guy until the 148th game.

July 4, 2012

Daily Brief: Independence from a tie with the Pirates

Last Game
Despite getting Joey Votto back from his knee inflammation and Zack Cozart back the day after taking a fastball to the noggin, the Reds lost last night. Reds 1, Dodgers 3.

Johnny Cueto has been the loser in his last two starts, preventing him from getting that 10th win of the season. I’m sure it’s Tony LaRussa’s fault, somehow.

Next Game
At 9:10 p.m., just as people are assembling for fireworks tonight (assuming the drought conditions haven’t cancelled them in your town), the Reds will be starting the rubber match against the Dodgers. Mike Leake (3-5, 4.12 ERA) takes on an old friend, Aaron Harang (5-5, 3.68 ERA). Harang is coming off a rough outing where he didn’t last through the sixth inning, so hopefully he’s not out of the game before I get back home.

Tipping Your Hat
Every year on the fourth of July, the topic invariable turns to the most important thing about this day: the hats that Major League Baseball has the teams wearing. The last few years they’ve been all white caps with American flag logos, but this year, they’re going with the camo logos instead.




The digital style camo in such small quantities looks a little like we’re celebrating Low Bandwidth Day. With the US ranked 12th in the world in internet speeds, that might not be too far off.

What to Say to Sound Smart at the Water Cooler
As of last night’s loss, the Reds are now tied for first in the NLC with the Pirates.

July 3, 2012

Game 79: Reds 8, Dodgers 2

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W: Bailey (6-6) L: Billingsley (4-8)

Boxscore

The Reds waited until the wee hours to make their presence known in this one, but then the did it in a big way. Fans who went, grumbling, to bed with the team down 0-2 in the fifth awoke to the happy news that the Reds tacked on 8 runs before the game was over.

Homer Bailey was the starter for this one, and he pitched a gem. In 8.0 innings he gave up the 2 runs (earned) on 5 hits and a walk. With 115 pitches already pitched and a 6-run lead going into the bottom of the ninth, the team called on Aroldis Chapman to close it out. Chapman’s velocity was up and he struck out 2 in his hitless inning. He did not, that I heard of, perform any sort of acrobatics after the fact.

Joey Votto was still out with that knee inflammation and Scott Rolen is still out with back spasms, but the Reds aren’t willing to put either on the DL, hoping that they’ll be back in the coming days, so the Reds were playing with a 23-man roster. That number dropped to 22 in the sixth inning when Zack Cozart took a pitch directly to the head.

Even with the helmet taking the brunt of the hit, he still left the game and was under observation for the rest of the night. He was smiling before he even left the field, though, and it sounds like he was doing OK after the game. Still, I wouldn’t be totally surprised to see him out of the line-up tomorrow. There may still be cartoon birds flying around his head.

Fortunately, the remaining members of the diminishing roster are apparently ready to step up and prove their grit. Todd Frazier put the Reds on the board in the sixth with a single to bring in Brandon Phillips, and Devin Mesoraco sent a beauty right down the line in left to bring in Frazier and Miguel Cairo. Those 3 runs were really all the Reds needed.

But they weren’t done yet. Frazier hit a triple in the eighth to bring in Jay Bruce (who’d been HBP) and Mesoraco again brought in Frazier. Chris Heisey and Cairo finally got in on the RBI party in the ninth, but not before Frazier knocked in yet another one. What a show.

The win brings the Reds record to 44-35. They continue their series against the Dodgers tonight at 10:10 p.m. ET. Johnny Cueto (9-4, 2.26 ERA) goes against a familiar foe in former Brewer Chris Capuano (9-3, 2.69 ERA).

July 3, 2012

Daily Brief: Reds playing ironman baseball

Last Game
After trailing the Dodgers for most of the game, the Reds put together a rally starting in the sixth inning. They didn’t even score until about midnight ET, so lot of people are probably surprised to wake up to find the Reds even won, let alone with a score of 8-2.

Devin Mesoraco and Todd Frazier were the stars of the game, though Homer Baily probably deserves to be in that list too, with his 8 innings of 2-run ball. Zack Cozart took a pitch to the helmet that had him on the ground for a while, but ultimately he doesn’t seem to have sustained serious damage.

Next Game
The Reds take on the Dodgers again tonight at 10:10 p.m. ET. Johnny Cueto (9-4, 2.26 ERA) tries his hand against Chris Capuano (9-3, 2.69 ERA). With Joey Votto day-to-day with knee inflammation, Scott Rolen day-to-day with back spasms, and Cozart having just sustained a mild concussion, the Reds may be down to a 22-man roster. So far the other guys are stepping up. I just hope they can keep it up as long as they’ll have to.

Latos is your Player of the Week
There are probably other titles Reds fans would have given Latos from time-to-time this season, but after his two complete games in his last two starts, he is called Player of the Week. He had 20 strikeouts and allowed just 1 earned run per game, bringing his ERA down from 5.20 to 4.42.

What to Say to Sound Smart at the Water Cooler
Latos’s back-to-back complete games were the first since September 2006 when Aaron Harang did it. The Reds are slated to face Harang as a Dodger tomorrow.