Blog Archives

April 17, 2012

Live blog: Reds @ Cards – game 11

Game time at 8:15 p.m. tonight. I should have realized that, of course, since the Reds are visiting the central time zone, but I didn’t and was surprised not to find the game already started when I turned it on at 7:20. And to think I kicked out those nice Mormon missionaries an hour earlier than I needed to.

Cueto takes on Lohse. Go Reds!

April 17, 2012

Frazier to join Reds in St. Louis (hopefully on the field)

Word around the blogsphere is that Todd Frazier hopped a plane to St. Louis this morning where the Cincinnati Reds are about to take on the Cardinals for the second time already this short season.

Yes, let's see this jersey againAs you may recall, Frazier tore it up in spring training but was a last-minute drop from the roster. His spot was taken shortly thereafter by Alfredo Simon, whom the Reds picked up off waivers from the Orioles. Though Simon took the roster spot, it’s sort of hard to really compare the two, since Frazier is an infielder and Simon is a pitcher (or so he claims: early results have not yet confirmed that this theory).

Miguel Cairo has been hurting for a few days, so Frazier might be coming to town to fill in while Cairo does his thing on the DL. Less likely but also possible that Brandon Phillips is the one going on the DL, still being obviously gimpy in the hamstring region after suffering a leg cramp while rounding the bases a few days ago. Least likely of all, Frazier’s just in town to enjoy a lovely bottle of Vignoles. I know it’s a favorite of mine whenever I’m in the area.

Assuming Frazier does take the field during this series, he’ll need to re-discover his spring training fire. He was hitting .291 in spring training but only .231 since opening the season in AAA, probably due largely to being seriously ticked off about what the Reds did to him. The good news is that he already has as many home runs this season as anyone else on the team who isn’t named Jay Bruce, so maybe Cincinnati can finally overcome a little of its power outage.

April 15, 2012

Game 9: Reds 1, Nationals 4

Team123456789RHE
Reds (3-6)010000000120
Nationals (7-2)01200010-4100
W: Jackson (1-0) L: Bailey (0-2)

Boxscore

Well, that was frustrating, as evidenced by my phone-post after a few beers yesterday.

Homer Bailey had a good start, allowing 3 runs over 7 innings. He allowed 7 hits and 4 walks, but minimized the damage. Of course, in a series where the Cincinnati Reds lost a game where the pitching allowed 1 run over the course of 9 innings, everyone knew there was no chance of the Reds retaking the lead.

The positives? As mentioned, Homer Bailey. This is an important year for him with this club. He’s young, but it feels like he’s not because he’s been around forever. He’s improved every year in the majors, but at a slow pace. After watching him in his two starts this year, I’m encouraged. Aside from one bad inning in each start, he’s been more calm. If he can remove that one bad inning and stay healthy, this could be his break-out year.

That’s the main positive. There is one other one: the Reds took an early lead. I’m not sure, but I believe that’s the first time this year they’ve been the first team to score. Of course, it took Miguel Cairo injuring his hamstring to achieve and trading players for runs probably isn’t the wisest way to spend your players. But it was an early lead.

The negatives? The offense. The team is in an offensive slump like none other to start this season. And I’m concerned that manager Dusty Baker isn’t being the help he could be. Not with quotes like this.

“We’re going to hit our way out of this slump, not walk out of it.”

Ugh. Why limit any of your weapons at this point. The offense is horrible. Let’s not hamstring them any further by emphasizing hitting over walking.

The Reds will try not to be swept by the Nationals today when they send out Mike Leake. The Nationals will send out…you know, what? It probably doesn’t matter.

April 14, 2012

The continuing ineptitude of the Reds offense

Note: These are my thoughts as I sit several beers in at a bar in Las Vegas.

The Cincinnati Reds entered the 7th inning of the third of a four game serious against the Washington Nationals having scored just one run in the game and 4 in the series.

Again, the starting pitching was solid. Homer Bailey allowed 3 runs over 6 innings to qualify for that quality start. But the offense has so far managed the one run.

I know it’s too early for shake up of the roster, but does the free swinging of the Reds remind anyone of the Chicago Cubs under Dusty Baker’s last couple years?

I was against the Baker hire from the beginning, but backed off after the division win in 2010. Well, I’m going on record as being against him again. The 2012 squad is showing many of the same symptoms as the frustrating 2011 club.

When a team manages to perform at a sum of less than the trial of their parts for two years in a row, I blame the manager. This team needs to start performing better fast, or their will be no place for Baker on the all-in Reds.

April 13, 2012

On the Reds’ hitting approach

Redleg Nation posted an entry that touched on some of the offensive frustrations I mentioned during yesterday’s game wrap. In short, they don’t think it’s anything to worry about this early in the season.

It hasn’t been pretty, but I’m not too concerned yet. Even though they’ve looked bad at the plate, Ryan Ludwick and Willie Harris historically walk significantly more than Chris Heisey and Brandon Phillips. Drew Stubbs and Jay Bruce, meanwhile, have shown willingness to lay off the low stuff – even if Stubbs in particular has not be rewarded for it by the umpiring crew.

Obviously, some of the players have started off cold and won’t hit that poorly over the course of the entire season. Ryan Hanigan will get his on-base percentage above .300. And Zack Cozart is likely to return to earth.

But on a night that sees the Reds playing in the 13th inning as I write this in a 1-1 game, knowing the sample size is small and likely to change with time doesn’t ease the annoyance that Reds’ games are becoming. Especially when that one run was driving in by Bronson Arroyo’s sacrifice fly.