
Dateline: Cincinnati
Andrew Abbott turned in his all-star like performance for the third game in a row and procured a winning series over the Houston Astros, 5-0.
He allowed three harmless singles in six innings, walked just one and struck out five.
"He looked Abbottesque. He spun it pretty good. He located way more fastballs," Francona said. "He got comfortable and we got him a couple runs and he made it stand."
Yordan Alvarez was a strikeout victim three times.
You're not going to see hat very often," Francona said. "That kid is some kind of hitter. You kind of marvel. He doesn't strike out very much. He got him with the same pitch. You're not going to see that very much."
Abbott has allowed two runs in his last 17 2/3 innings.
"I feel like I'm getting there. You never want to be complacent. I have a few things to iron out," Abbott said. "Today was a good step. When I struggled, I couldn't land my off speed stuff which made me a one dimensional pitcher. Today was one of the first days I could get stuff in the zone and then go out of the zone with it. He (Alvarez) is a great hitter and I don't want to make a mistake to him but I'm going to play to my strengths. For me it was getting ahead and then make him chase my pitch."
The Reds took advantage of Houston starter, Kai-Wei Teng. The Astros hurler longest outing was three innings. He shut the Reds down for three innings but they broke through in the fourth.
Elly De La Cruz opened the inning with one of his three hits a line single to left center. Sal Stewart doubled with De La Cruz stopping at third. JJ Bleday crashed a line drive past Christian Walker at first base and down the right field line. By the time Cam Smith was able to dig it out of the corner, Bleday was on his way to third. Tyler Stephenson singled to score Bleday. Matt McLain walked and Ke'Bryan Hayes singled to load the bases. Will Benson forced Stephenson at the plate. Spencer Steer hit a long fly ball to the base of the center field wall but Brice Matthews caught it for the final out.
"Bleday went to Triple A, and did very well, got hot and picked up where he left off. Which doesn't always happen, as we've seen," Francona said. "He's a really good fastball hitter. He got a 3-0 breaking ball and stayed through it enough to keep it fair. He's very dangerous and can handle some lefties. He's given us a big lift. We've kind of had him all over the lineup."
De La Cruz led off the fifth inning with a single against AJ Blabaugh. Bleday, who reached base three times, walked. With Blake Dunn batting. De La Cruz and Bleday stole a base on successive pitches, Dunn walked to load the bases and McLain walked to force in the Reds' fourth run.
"It was awesome. Yesterday, I feel like I had good at bats but couldn't make anything happen with the bases loaded," Bleday said. "Today I wanted to be aggressive and put some runs on the board for those guys. I think you have to keep your foot on the gas pedal in those situations (3-0 count). You're thinking you're going to be getting something in the zone. You might as well take advantage of it if you're feeling it. If it's not in window, don't swing."
Steer homered for the seventh time this season off Cody Bolton.
"The one to center was such a good swing. It would have really stretched the game out," Francona said. "Because he stayed on that ball, they throw one in and he keeps it fair."
TeJay Antone, Sam Moll and Graham Ashcraft pitched clean innings to seal the shutout.
