Game 15: Marlins 8, Reds 9
The Reds were slightly less ineffective than the Marlins in their 8-9 win yesterday afternoon in Cincinnati.
Aaron Harang, he of the opening day start and 1-0 defeat of Chris Carpenter, faced off against Dontrelle Willis and got the shaky play going right from the start. Harang allowed five runs (earned) on nine hits through four innings. He handed over three home runs: one for Miguel Cabrera in the first, one for Miguel Olivo in the second, and a three-run job for the much-despised Dan Uggla in the fourth.
Michael Gosling, called up for just long enough to pitch an inning and a third of relief, gave up two more runs (earned) on a hit. That hit was yet another home run, this one to Reggie Abercrombie in the sixth. He went on to walk the pitcher, who would later score on Rick White's shift.
White allowed a run on four hits over the course of two outs (plus the one of Gosling's). The runs that scored while White was at the helm were the only ones that didn't come on home runs, so that says something. Primarily, that there is more than one way to suck on the mound.
David Weathers held them scoreless on a hit for two. Finally, the one-eyed man in the bullpen of the blind, Todd Coffey, didn't allow a hit in his inning to get the win.
Woo, that's a lot of pitchers! And still, not really enough.
The Reds' offense didn't feel the need to make an appearance until they were already down 5-0 in the fourth. This was about the time I had to go to a meeting at work, and the GameDay is missing what happened in this inning, but from the game wrap I understand that with the bases loaded and two outs, Ryan Freel knocked in a run with a single, and Dontrelle Willis wild-pitched in a run. Then Brandon Phillips hit a 2-RBI single to make it a game at 5-4.
The bats got quiet again, though, until the seventh when, down 8-4, Adam Dunn sacrificed in Freel. In the bottom of the eighth with the bases, again, loaded an infield single by Felipe Lopez together with a throwing error by Uggla brought in two more for the Reds. Phillips later knocked in Lopez to tie the score at eights.
Tied in the bottom of the ninth, Adam Dunn was coming up to bat. Todd Wellemeyer demonstrated some intelligence and walked him. I'd like to have Mr. Wellemeyer chat with Weathers about facing sluggers in walk-off situations. Two batters later, Scott Hatteberg singled, and Edwin Encarnación doubled in Dunn to win the game.
That winning debacle brings the Reds' record to 9-6. Tonight the Reds visit Milwaukee at 8:05 p.m. David Williams takes the mound against Tomo Ohka for the Brewers.
You pretty much nailed it, RHM. Just for the record, the Reds’ four-run fourth inning went like this:
With the Reds trailing 5-0 on the three Marlins homers, Hatteberg got things started with a one-out single, only to be erased on Encarnacion’s fielder’s choice grounder. Back-to-back walks to LaRue and Ross, the latter pinch-hitting for Harang, loaded the bases for Freel, who beat out an infield single on a ball hit back to the mound while Encarnacion scored. Phillips then stepped to the plate, first dutifully watching as Willis uncorked a wild pitch to score LaRue and move everybody else up a bag, and then drilling a two-run single to right to pull the Reds within one before Aurilia ended the inning by grounding out to Willis.
HMZ