Blog Archives

July 19, 2011

The quest for two wins in a row continues

Team123456789RHE
Reds (47-50)000000000061
Pirates (51-44)10000000-140
W: McDonald (6-4) L: Leake (8-5) S: Hanrahan (28)

Boxscore

In fact, one win in a row would be pretty good at this point. I’m going ahead and predicting a shutout series. After two straight times of being shutout against the once lowly Pittsburgh Pirates, I’m feeling confident.

Last night, the Pirates overtook first place in the division. A series in July between first and fourth place in the NLC, the Pirates and Reds: you might have predicted that at the beginning of the season, though you might have been thinking about it a little differently.

Tonight, both the expected standings and the expected outcome were flipped, as the Pirates beat the Cincinnati Reds 1-0.

Mike Leake started for the Reds and allowed 1 run over 6 innings, clearly a terrible outing that deserves the loss he received.

Maybe the Reds won’t be swept tomorrow. But given their lifeless offense–even the might Zack Cozart had his hitting streak snapped at 6–nobody except the Pirates’ pitchers should feel optimistic.

July 15, 2011

Game 93: Cardinals 5, Reds 6

Team123456789RHE
Cardinals (49-44)000000320571
Reds (46-47)1000102026112
W: Ondrusek (4-3) L: Salas (5-3)

Boxscore

I think Phillips was screaming in unison with every Reds fanThat was an awesome way to end a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals.

The Cincinnati Reds first baseball game after the All Star break started well. Johnny Cueto was cruising and mowing down the Cardinals. Even with some shaky defense behind him, he emerged with 7 innings of 3-run ball, 2 of them earned. He left with the lead, but the bullpen failed again.

This is where the game took a turn for the ugly. Aroldis Chapman entered the game and was unable to record an out. Two runs ended up scoring in the 8th before Nick Massett was able to finish the inning.

The Reds had lots of scoring opportunities, but were never able to break the game open. They continued to fail to achieve that 2-out hit.

Until the 9th. Down by 1 run, Zach Cozart got a one-out single. It was his third hit of the game and set the stage for Joey Votto to do something great. Sadly, his best pitch was a line drive straight into the right fielder’s glove.

But that was okay. The next batter was Brandon Phillips, who took a big swing and sent a ball into the seats in left field. The Reds had won their first game in what felt like an age. I mean, the Harry Potter movie series finished since the last time the Reds won.

The win moves the Reds to 3 games back of first and 1 game under .500. The Cardinals losing drops them into a tie for first with the Pittsburgh Pirates. (That was a weird thing to type. The Pirates in first place after the All Star break? What a strange season this is shaping up to be.)

July 2, 2011

Will the Reds Beat the Indians in 2011?

Baker's bobbling toothpick holder.So far, it’s not looking good.

The Cleveland Indians swept the Cincinnati Reds in Cleveland earlier this season. The best the Reds could hope for was a share of the Ohio Cup. Alas, that was not to be, as even the Reds TweetUp wasn’t enough to overcome the appearance of Bronson Bad-rroyo.

The TweetUp itself made for a great time, and I’ll have some pictures up later. The game, not so much.

The Reds lost 8-2, dooming them to a losing record against Cleveland in 2011. The Reds’ next chance to win their first game of the year against the Indians is this afternoon. Homer Bailey takes the mound at 4:10pm. This time, the Reds will be looking to the totem that is Dusty Baker’s toothpick holding bobble head to provide them with the power to vanquish the Indians. We’ll see if that’s enough.

June 28, 2011

Losing Another One-Run Game

Team123456789RHE
Reds (41-40)000000021380
Devil Rays (45-35)000100021460
W: Farnsworth (3-1) L: Ondrusek (3-3)

Boxscore

Okay, this is getting old. The Cincinnati Reds lost to the Tampa Bay Devil Rays tonight, dropping their record to 41-40.

That’s 81 games total: the halfway point. Feeling good about the prospects of this team for the rest of the season? Because Walt Jocketty has shown his complete lack of ideas on what to do to improve the .500 team. And manager Dusty Baker’s calm, toothpick-chewing ways aren’t exactly lighting a fire under the under-performing team’s ass.

Tonight, the Reds wasted another brilliant start by Johnny Cueto. Cueto went 7 2/3 innings, allowing 3 runs–two of which were allowed to score thanks to a rare bad appearance from Bill Bray. And then Logan Ondrusek allowed a walk-off home run to lose it in the 9th.

The Reds continue to be a tough team to watch, and the lack of apparent caring by anyone in charge of the team doesn’t make it any easier. I’m not one to panic, but 81 games into the season is no longer early. That’s a long enough time to get a good idea about the team’s problem areas. And the 2011 Reds are weak on starting pitching and have gotten no offense and not good enough defense from shortstop. Waiting and seeing isn’t going to make things any better.

June 27, 2011

Reds 5, Devil Rays 0

Team123456789RHE
Reds (41-39)2002001005110
Devil Rays (44-35)000000000062
W: Leave (7-4) L: Hellickson (7-7)

Boxscore

Wait, what?

I know what you’re thinking, looking at the title of this post, but it’s true. The Cincinnati Reds actually won an interleague game! And this was the first game of the series against the Tampa Bay Devil Rays.

Mike Leake started for the Reds and did very well, going 6 shutout innings, allowing 4 hits, walking 2, and striking out 3. He picked up his 7th win. The bullpen closed out the shutout and the game, thanks to Sam LeCure and Nick Masset.

The offense still left 8 players on base, but they did drive in 5. Brandon Phillips was the hero, going 4-5, driving in 2 and scoring 2. Jonny Gomes returned to his former ballpark and did well, too, hitting a home run in the 4th.

All that added up to a shutout win. And it gives the Reds two chances to win their first series in about a million years.