About Me

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I am a freelance writer. I've covered the Cincinnati Reds, Bengals and others since 1992. I have a background in sales as well. I've sold consumer electronics, advertising and consumer package goods for companies ranging from the now defunct Circuit City to Procter&Gamble. I have worked as a stats operator for Xavier University, the University of Cincinnati, the College of Mount St. Joe and Colerain High School.

Monday, June 30, 2025

The Reds Honored the 1975 With 50 Year Celebration Then Return To Boston

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

On Saturday June 28, the Reds celebrated the 50 year anniversary of the team that defeated the Boston Red Sox in the World Series, thought by many to be the most exciting World Series in history.

The resurgent Reds, ironically visit the sight of the victory at historic Fenway Park on Monday June 30. The Reds are 44-40. The Red Sox are 41-44.

The Reds were 49-28 on this date in 1975 when Clay Kirby pitched and won over Joe Niekro and the Houston Astros in a walk off, 9-6 win. Bill Plummer tied the game in the ninth inning with a sacrifice fly that scored Dan Driessen to tie the game at 6-6. With two outs in the bottom of the 12th inning. Ken Griffey doubled. The Astros walked Joe Morgan intentionally in front of Johnny Bench, who hit a three-run home run off Niekro to win it.

The Red Sox defeated the Baltimore Orioles on this date, 5-2 to improve its American League East leading record to 41-31. With Dick Pole, who was the Reds' pitching coach from 2007 through 2009, the winning pitcher. Hall of Famer Carl Yastrzemski was 3-for-4 with two RBI and Fred Lynn was 2-for-3 with an RBI.

Fifty years ago people were watching Frank Burns, a character on MASH. On June 30th, they could watch Chase Burns, take the mound against the Red Sox. Burns debuted against the New York Yankees a week before.

He pitched five innings against the Yankees, allowing three runs on six hits in five innings. He struck out eight, including the first five batters and seven of the first nine batters.



Sunday, June 29, 2025

Reds Take The Series From The Padres With A Ninth Inning Rally

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

Will Benson's third hit of the game sent home Gavin Lux with the winning run in a walk off, 3-2 win over Wild Card rival, the San Diego Padres.

The Reds win the series 2-1 won and were 4-2 on the home stand. The Reds are once again at their high water mark four games over .500 at 44-40.

"Benson got us the win today. The plane ride (to Boston) will be a lot more fun," Terry Francona said. "Elly took such a nice swing. The ball down the line (foul) hooked but it was a great at bat. They've got some weapons."

Benson has played through struggles before and was grateful for the opportunity.

"I know he (Robert Suarez) throws hard. I was a little upset that I didn't take a pass at that first change up," Benson admitted . That might have been the best pitch (to hit) in the at bat. I just shook it off and maintained my aggression. I took some good fastballs that he threw and then another change up. I was able to capitalize on that one."

Francona's philosophy is to move forward whether the past results were good or bad. "You guys are probably tired of hearing me say that."

Benson insists that thought process is starting to sink in with the players.

"I believe so, that every one is buying in to that," Benson said. "That messaging for us is huge coming from him. I think we've been able to embody that as a team. I'm happy with how we respond."

Today Benson took that messaging to the pitch-to-pitch level. 

"That is something, I'm trying to get better at," Benson said. "Especially when it gets to two strikes. Just being able to take a deep breath and go one pitch at a time. That's what we yell a lot in the dugout. Just win the next one. All it takes is one pitch. All you need is to win one and something can happen."

The Padres struck first in the fourth inning. Xander Bogaerts led off with his fifth home run of the season. Gavin Sheets singled to right and went to second on Will Benson's throwing error. Jose Iglesias bunted right back Nick Lodolo who threw Sheets out at third. Lodolo struck out Jake Cronenworth and Elias Diaz to escape the inning.

Stephen Kolek, the San Diego starter allowed a single and a walk to Spencer Steer in the first five innings.

Sheets and Iglesias started the sixth inning with singles. Cronenworth bunted them along one base. Reds' manager Terry Francona replaced Lodolo with Scott Barlow to face Elias Diaz with runners at second and third with one out. Diaz popped out to short right. Luis Arraez walked to load the bases with two outs. Manny Machado, who hit 12 grand slams in his career, popped out foul to the catcher Jose Trevino.

Lodolo pitched 5 1/3 innings, allowing seven hits and two walks. He allowed one run, which dropped his season ERA to 3.52, and struck out five.

The Reds tied the game in the bottom of the sixth. Benson singled to start the inning. Matt McLain beat out an infield hit. Elly De La Cruz off Adrian Morejon and hit a ground ball past third baseman, Iglesias, for a run scoring single. 

Lyon Richardson relieved Barlow to start the seventh inning. Jackson Merrill popped out to third. Fernando Tatis Jr. walked. Bogaerts hit a hard ground ball past CES at third base for his third extra base hit of the game, a double. Francona ordered Sheets intentionally, then brought in Tony Santillan. Iglesias forced Sheets at second as Tatis scored. Cronenworth flied out to center field to end the inning.

Benson greeted Jason Adam with a double to start the eighth. CES flied out to the warning track in center field, advancing Benson to third. Friedl grounded out to Arraez at first with the infield in. McLain struck out to end the inning. 

"That kid Adam is as good against lefties as you'll find in the league," Francona said. 

Emilio Pagan held the Padres to give the Reds a chance in the ninth. 

Robert Suarez who leads the league with 22 saves faced De La Cruz to start the ninth, reaching on an error by third baseman, Tyler Wade (The scorer changed it to a single after the game). It was the climax of  a 10-pitch at bat. Austin Hays flied out to left. Gavin Lux walked to put De La Cruz in scoring position. Steer, who extended his hitting streak to eight games, Steer drove in De La Cruz with a single to center to tie the game. Jose Trevino singled to right to load the bases with one out and Benson due up. Benson singled to give the Reds the win.

"There were a lot of good things that happened," Francona said. "We kind of bent a little bit but we didn't break and kept it where it was. So we had a chance. So often we think we just need to get the tying run to the plate to give ourselves a chance. It doesn't always work out but you have a chance."

Emilio Pagan, the winning pitcher, last pitched six  days ago against the New York Yankees. Tony Santillan last pitched on Tuesday.

"It was hard. We were trying to balance it Francona explained. "Pagan and Santillan needed to pitch today. It's hard to bring them in when you're losing but they really needed to pitch. Tony ended up pretty good he finished  an inning and got out of it. We really needed to pitch Pagan. We were fortunate this game didn't go a whole lot longer."

Saturday, June 28, 2025

Gavin Sheets Shrouds The Reds With Extra Base Hits To Even The Series

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The San Diego Padres hit three home runs to turn a three-run deficit into a 6-4 win to even the series at a game apiece. 

The Reds wasted another fine start by Andrew Abbott as the bullpen surrendered five run in the sixth and seventh. 

The Reds jumped on San Diego starter Randy Vasquez in the first inning. TJ Friedl walked but was picked off by Vasquez. Matt McLain singled up the middle. Elly De La Cruz popped out to third baseman Manny Machado. Spencer Steer singled McLain to third. Gavin Lux drove in the run with a single to left.

The Reds added two runs in the second inning. Rece Hinds and Santiago Espinal single to put runners on the corner with one out. Friedl and McLain hit back-to-back RBI singles. 

Reds new ace, Andrew Abbott, held the Padres scoreless through three innings on two hits and a walk. In the fourth Abbott pitched out of a jam.

With one out XanderBogaerts singled. Gavin Sheets hit a catchable line drive to right that Hinds, allowed over his head for a double with Bogaerts to third. Abbott walked former Red Jose Iglesias to load the bases. Jake Cronenworth hit a line drive right to Will Benson in left field. Benson made a quick hard throw to Espinal the cutoff man and Bogaerts held third. Martin Maldonado hit a ground ball to a diving McLain at second who easily threw out the slow running catcher to end the threat. 

Luis Arraez, who won his third straight batting title in 2024, hit his fourth home run of the season to lead off the fifth inning. Arraez' three tittles were with the Minnesota Twins in 2022, the Miami Marlins in 2023 and San Diego last season.

Jackson Merrill and Fernando Tatis Jr. singled with one out but Abbott struck out Bogaerts and Sheets grounded out weakly to Steer at first. 

The Reds got the run back in the bottom of the fifth. De La Cruz opened with a walk. Steer popped up to third base. Third baseman, Machado let it drop to force, De La Cruz at second base. Lux doubled Steer to third. Tyler Stephenson hit sacrifice fly to deep right center to score Steer with the fourth Reds' run. Hinds was robbed of an extra base hit when Sheets made a diving catch in left.

Abbott finished with five innings, allowing one run on seven hits and two walks. He struck out four.

"It was a grind. I could have executed better. I was having a hard time getting, strike one. DJ and I were aware of it," Abbott said. "I got better in the fourth and fifth inning. I knew the bullpen was rested and they have been good all year. They just had a bad day. They'll be back again tomorrow."

Scott Barlow relieved a gassed Abbott. Iglesias opened the inning with a single to right. Cronenworth launched his seventh hom run of the season into the right field stands. Barlow retired the last three batters of the inning to keep the slim lead at, 4-3.

Lyon Richardson started the seventh. Merrill led of the inning with a double. Tatis flied deep to right. Bogaerts walked and Sheets hit his 13th home run. It was Sheets third extra base hit to go with two doubles.

Padres closer Robert Suarez walked Friedl and De La Cruz in the ninth but he struck out Steer to end the game.


Dave Parker Dies At The Age Of 74

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

Dave Parker died on Saturday at the age of 74.

Parker a native of Cincinnati, who played baseball and football at Courter Tech High School in Northside.

Parker was drafted in the 14th round by the Pittsburgh Pirates.in 1970. He played 19 seasons in the Major Leagues, four with his hometown Reds under Pete Rose. Current Reds manager Terry Francona was his teammate in 1987.

Parker has suffered with Parkinson Disease for since 2012. He died just 19 days after his 74th birthday on June 9 and before he was to be inducted in the National Baseball Hall of Fame. 

As a youth Parker would hang around Crosley Field and collect balls that the likes of Frank Robinson and Gus Bell would hit out of the ballpark.


“We would fight for balls outside of the stadium until we got enough to pay for whatever’s going to cost us for the day.” Parker said in a press conference on Zoom for his selection to the Hall of Fame.


Parker lived in the neighborhood surrounding Crosley Field.  Frank Robinson and Vada Pinson gave him bats and gloves as a youth. He also admitted to charging fans to watch their cars in the parking lot.


“I was a five-tool player? I could do them all,” Parker said


Indeed, Parker was the quintessential five-tool player. He could hit for average, a career .290 average that included batting titles in 1977 (.338) and 1978 (.334). He could hit for power with 339 career home runs and 1,493 RBI. He led the National League in doubles twice with 44 for the Pirates in 1977 and 42 with the Reds in 1985. He led the NL with 125 RBI in 1985. No Reds’ player has led the league in RBI since then. He had speed with 154 career stolen bases, including 76 between 1976 and 1979. He was one of the best defensive outfielders that featured a strong accurate arm. Parker had 154 assists from mostly right field. He led the NL with 26 assists in 1977.


“I loved throwing out runners,” Parker said. “I had 21 one year and 25 another year. So I enjoyed throwing out players and if they kept running, I would hit them in the back of the head with the ball.”


Parker played 11 seasons with the Pirates, winning Most Valuable Player honors in 1978. He was an All-Star for Pittsburgh in four seasons. He came home to Cincinnati, signing as a free agent in December 1983.  


It was a wise investment by the Reds Parker was an All-Star for the Reds in 1985 and 1986. He was  second in the MVP voting behind Willie McGee in 1985. He was fifth in the MVP voting in 1986 behind Mike Schmidt, Glen Davis, Gary Carter and Keith Hernandez.


IParker led the Reds in 1984 and 1985 in runs scored (73,88), RBI (94,125) and added 116 RBI in 1986. He led the Reds four straight years 1984-1987 with, 173,198,174,139. Parker led the Reds  with 28 doubles in 1984, a league-leading 42 in 1985, and 31 in 1986. He led the Reds with 16 home runs in 1984, 34 in 1986 and 31 in 1987.


No Reds player has driven in over 118 runs since Parker. Only Greg Vaughn in 199 and Ken Griffey Jr. in 2000 have driven home more than Parker’s 1986 number of 116. Both had 118 RBI.




Friday, June 27, 2025

Nick Martinez Throws A No-Hitter For Eight innings Against His Former Team Backed By Spencer Steer's Three Home Runs

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

Nick Martinez had a no-hitter through eight innings and Spencer Steer hit three home runs as the Reds dominated the San Diego Padres, 8-1. 

Martinez walked Jackson Merrill with two outs in the first inning, then retired the next 21 batters until Trenton Brooks walked to lead off the ninth. Elias Diaz doubled off the left center field wall to break up the no-hitter.

"I catch myself like everybody else looking at the radar gun. He was crisp from the very beginning and in command of all his pitches," Francona said. "It was a nervous as I've been in a long, long time. They say good things happen to good people from what he did this week, he deserved it."

Martinez volunteered to pitch an inning out of the bullpen this week to allow Brady Singer start on his regular rest.

"I don't know how much it helped him to pitch out of the bullpen but if you try to make it help you, instead of well I've got to do this. He did it for a reason to help the ballclub. If you have your attitude in the right place, it helps."

The Padres held a 2 1/2 game lead over the Reds for the final Wild Card slot.

The Reds got off to a fast start against Dylan Cease. TJ Friedl opened the bottom of the first with a walk. Matt McLain shot a ground single through the hole into right field. McLain moved to second on a error by right fielder Fernando Tatis. Friedl scored on a ground out up the middle by Elly De La Cruz. McLain scored on a passed ball by Martin Maldonado.

Spencer Steer hit his seventh home run in the second inning. Steer led off the fourth with a home run. It is the second time in his career that he hit two home runs in a game.

Left hander Yuki Matsui took over for Cease in the fifth inning. De La Cruz greeted him with a line single to left. Austin Hays just activated from the injured list doubled down the left field line as De La Cruz scored. Gavin Lux singled to score Hays. Steer followed with his third home run of the game.

"How about that? He is so humble he wouldn't come out for a curtain call,' Francona said. "It's pretty cool he's so modest that he doesn't want t one in."

"It's not about me," Steer said. "It was the fifth inning at the time. I got the standing ovation after I struck out. That was pretty cool. I soaked that in. For the first time in my life, I didn't want to walk."

Taylor Rogers came on to pitch to Luis Arraez, the three-time batting champion.Arraez popped out to third and Tyler Wade struck out. Merrill walked. Bryce Johnson walked to break the shutout. Gavin Sheets struck out to end the game.

"It was pretty early. I looked up in the fourth inning and there was no hits. There was some good plays behind me. I talked to myself about one pitch at a time," Martinez said. "I was on adrenaline in the ninth inning. I was jacked up."





Austin Hays Returns Jake Fraley To Injured List Noelvi Marte Nearing The End Of Rehab

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

Austin Hays came off the injured list on Friday and was the DH to start the series against the San Diego Padres.

The Reds placed Jake Fraley on the 10-day injured list with a sprained right shoulder. 

Hays is returning from his third trip to the injured list with a left foot contusion. He fouled a pitch off  it in Kansas City on May 28. 

The Reds were 14-10 in the 24 games he missed. Altogether this season, Hays missed 66 games in which the Reds record was 34-32.

"I feel good about where I'm at. Running was holding us back. That was the hump we were trying to get over," Hays said. "It didn't go as quick as we wanted it to. We got to the point where we shut it down for a few days. It was the right decision at the time. I was trying to push it hard early on. I was hitting well and I tried to force the issue. I was supposed to come back in Cleveland (June 9)."

Hays was in the lineup batting cleanup against Dylan Cease.

"Brad and I talked to Fraley the other day," Terry Francona said. "He said it's hurting. We encourage you to send the pictures to a doctor that you have the most confidence in. It is not going to work if he's worried about it."

"We missed Hays," Francona said. "He will lengthen out our lineup. He saw the ball real good the first time he came back but it is kind of a coin flip. We got a leader back. We're not going to run him into the ground here."

Noelvi Marte is on rehab with Louisville. He will play nine innings on Friday and Saturday. He will DH on Sunday. As he nears the end of his rehab it is "manager's discretion." He may remain in Louisville for awhile.




Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Yankees Avoid Sweep With Stopper Max Fried's Gem And A Revived Offense

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The New York Yankees took advantage of the Reds' sloppy fielding to avoid a sweep with a 7-1 win.

Max Fried handled the Reds to win his 10th game against two losses. Fried entered the game with a 2.05 ERA second in the Major Leagues behind Hunter Brown's 1.88. He finished with seven innings, allowing one unearned run on four hits and a walk. He struck out seven. His ERA dropped to 1.92.

"He had all four pitches. He cut it with velocity," Francona said. "He is an elite pitcher who is feeling really good about himself."

The Reds defense let down starter Brady Singer in the first three innings.

"The miscues even if they don't score but he had to make a lot more pitches," Francona said. "CES didn't have a throwing lane. He probably should have eaten it and got the man at first."

Trent Grisham, who had four hits in the game, got a gift double leading off the game when the Reds outfielders, TJ Friedl and Spencer Steer couldn't find the ball in the sun. Singer struck out Aaron Judge, Ben Rice and Jazz Chisholm to cut off a Yankee rally.

The Yankees put the leadoff batter on in eight innings.

Jason Domiguez, who also had four hits, doubled off the base of the center field wall on a drive that Friedl couldn't see. Singer walked Anthony Volpe. Austin Wells hit a ground ball to Christian Encarnacion-Strand at first base. His throw to force Volpe pulled Elly De La Cruz off second base and loaded the bases. Grisham singled one run home. 

In the third inning Giancarlo Stanton lined to Friedl. The ball was clearly in Friedl's glove but fell out when the Reds' center fielder brace his slide. Chisholm followed with his 11th home run of the season to put the Yankees up, 3-0.

"I thought I made a pretty good pitch down and in," Singer said of Chisholm's home run.

"He struck him out on a curve ball in the first inning. It looked like he was sitting on it," Francona explained.

The Reds got on the scoreboard in the fourth inning. De La Cruz singled with one out and moved to second on Tyler Stephenson's ground out to third. Steer hit a high chop to Chisholm at third. The throw to first was wide and eluded Rice at first. De La Cruz scored.

The Yankees got the run back due to shoddy Reds' fielding in the fifth. Singer hit Rice with his first pitch. Stanton walked. Chisholm flied out to center. De La Cruz fumbled a potential double play grounder and threw late to first to load the bases. Volpe flied out to medium center. Rice left for home early and had to go back to tag. The throw was cut off by De La Cruz, who threw late to the plate as Rice scored.

Santiago Espinal hit a two-out double in the fifth but was picked off by Fried to end the inning after a Reds' challenge.

Ian Gibaut replaced Singer, who pitched five innings. Singer allowed four runs on six hits, three walks and a hit batter. Singer struck out a career-high nine batters.

DJ LaMahieu singled up the middle to open the sixth frame. Grisham's third hit was off the glove of the diving CES. Judge doubled to drive in LaMahieu. Grisham stopped at third and held when De La Cruz short hopped a low line drive and threw out Rice at first. Stanton drove in Grisham with a high chop ground out to De La Cruz.

Taylor Rogers entered the game to pitch to Chisholm, who struck out looking. 



Joe On IL Ryan Vilade Fills Roster Garrett Hampson And Jeimer Candelario Released By Reds

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


The Reds placed Connor Joe on the 10-day injured list retroactive to June 22 with hand, foot and mouth disease.

The Reds recalled Ryan Vilade, who the Reds claimed from the St. Louis Cardinals on June 14.

Vilade plays the corner outfield and first base. He was drafted by the Colorado Rockies in the second round in 2017 from Stillwater High School in Oklahoma. He broke in with the Rockies in 2021 but has only 27 games in the Big Leagues for Colorado, the Detroit Tigers last season and the Cardinals for five games this season.

Vilade had one hit in 13 at bats for St. Louis this season.

Garret Hampson was designated for assignment on Monday to make room for Chase Burns. The Cardinals claimed him and designated former Red, Jose Barrero for assignment.

The Reds designated Jeimer Candelario for assignment on Monday. Candelario is owed $22 million by the Reds.

"It was a tough decision. He's a great guy," President of baseball operations Nick Krall said. "We thought he was going to come in and be our everyday third baseman. It just didn't work out. He put up a stretch with good numbers last year. This year he struggled in spring training, struggled out of the gate and went to the IL. We felt it was the best chance to win by keeping the guys we have instead of activating him."


Tuesday, June 24, 2025

The Reds Beat The Yankees For The Fifth Time In A Row In An 11 Inning Thriller

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

Gavin Lux singled with the bases loaded in the bottom of the 11th inning to send the Reds to a come-from-behind 5-4 win over the New York Yankees. The Reds have won five straight against the Yankess, three straight in the win column and improved to 2-6 in extra-inning games.

The Reds matched their season-high four games over .500.

The Yankees are 1-6 in overtime.

"It was an emotional roller coaster," Terry Francona said. "We had one more turn than they did."

Chase Burns struck out the first five batters he faced in his Major League debut and seven of the first nine. 

"That was pretty cool," Francona said.

Burns was not intimidated by the Yankees. 

"The first two innings was fun," Burns said. "I'd be lying if I told you I wasn't amped up. When Judge popped up to end the fifth I thought 'Thank God'. The three runs are just part of baseball. I could have executed my pitches better."

Ben Rice off the fourth inning with his 14th home run. Aaron Judge singled. Burns induced pop ups from Cody Bellinger and Paul Goldschmidt. Jazz Chisholm singled for his second hit. Anthony Volpe hit a sinking line drive to center field. TJ Friedl attempt at a diving catch bounded past him for a triple and the Yankees led, 3-0.

The Reds put leadoff hitters on base in the second and third innings against Carlos Rodon. A pair of double plays stunted the Reds' offense. 

Burns pitched five innings, allowing three runs on six hits. He struck out eight and walked no one.

Rodon pitched six shutout innings before being relieved by Jonathan Loaisiga.

The Reds tied the score against the right hander, who allowed runs in just three of his 15 outings. 

With one out Tyler Stephenson worked his second walk of the game. Rece Hinds and former Yankee Jose Trevino hit singles to load the bases. Christian Encarnacion-Strand cleared the bases with a double into the left field corner.

Former Red Fernando Cruz entered the game to face Santiago Espinal. He grounded out to third. Friedl grounded out to end the inning.

Ian Gibaut pitched a scoreless sixth. Brent Suter struck out the side in the seventh and came out to face left handed batters, Trent Grisham and Ben Rice, both of whom flied out.

Terry Francona summoned Lyon Richardson to face Judge. He grounded out in the shortstop hole as Elly De La Cruz threw him out. 

Former Red Luke Weaver, who returned from the injured list on Friday, opened the eighth for the Yankees facing Matt McLain, De La Cruz and Spencer Steer.

Weaver allowed a single to Steer, his second hit but Stephenson flied out to right. 

Bellinger opened the ninth with a single off Richardson. Paul Goldschmidt flied to right. Chisholm struck out. Richardson struck out Volpe to take the tie game into the bottom of the ninth.

Devon Williams, who owned the Reds as a Milwaukee Brewer came in for the ninth.

Chisholm was ejected by home plate umpire Mark Wegner before the inning started. DJ LeMahieu replaced him. 

Williams retired the Reds in order to send the game into extra innings. 

Tony Santillan took the mound in the 10th with Volpe on second. Santillan retired the first two hitters but walked two in front of Judge, who popped out in the infield to end the threat.

Mark Leiter Jr. relieved Weaver with Encarnacion-Strand on second and the Reds' best bunter, Espinal, up. Will Benson ran for CES. Leiter retired the next three batters.

Connor Phillips came on in the 11th with Judge on second base. Steer made a diving stop on a hard shot down the first base line by Bellinger. Judge went to third and scored on a wild pitch.

Leiter Jr. remained in the game with McLain on second base and De La Cruz at the plate.  De La Cruz reached on an infield single as McLain went to third. Steer tied it with a single his third hit of the game. De La Cruz stopped at second, thinking it was the winning run. A wild pitch moved the runners to second and third with no outs. Stephenson walked to load the bases. The Yankees brought in Bellinger as a fifth infielder and played the infield in,

Gavin Lux pinch hit for Hinds. Lux singled to achieve a walk off win. 

"I don't think I've been in a situation where there were five infielders," Lux said. "My head was like, I have to get the ball in the air and stay inside the ball. It worked out. There were a lot of good at bats in front of it."

Before the game winner, Lux enjoyed watching Burns' first start. 

"I was excited to watch Chase throw. His stuff is electric. He's not scared at all against one of the best lineups in baseball."




Chase Burns To Challenge New York Yankees In Major League Debut

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


The crown jewel of the Reds' farm system, Chase Burns, will get a baptism of fire tonight against the New York Yankees, the reigning American League champion.

Burns was drafted with Reds first pick and the second player taken. He did not pitch professionally after his college career at Wake Forest ended.

This year he dominated batters in Dayton, Chattanooga and Louisville after one impressive inning in spring training.

"He threw that one inning the day we sent him down. It was the ninth inning or the eighth. It was late." Terry Francona said. "I temember when we were getting out of the calf carts, Brad (Meador) and Nick (Krall). We knew we had to talk to him and it was should we tell him he made it? It was said jokingly but the point was he was impressive."

"It's exciting," Francona continued. "There is no getting around it. It sends a huge message. We're trying to win and there's no guarantees but when everyone is on the same page pulling in this direction, it bouyies you up a little bit." 

The talent is obvious. Burns made three starts at Dayton, eight in Chattanooga and three more in Louisville. combined he was 7-3 with a 1.77 ERA. He struck out 89 batters and walked 13. His WHIP was 0.773.

When Hunter Greene and Wade Miley went down with injuries and the other Chase,  Petty had two cracks at starting with limited success to put it kindly. This time the decision was an obvious one.

"You can't replicate your first big league start. It is the most exciting day in your life," Francona said. "Whatever happens won't define him. If he pitches seven shut out innings people will have him in the Hall of Fame. If he gives up seven, people will talk about him being sent down. I told him just be who you are. If we have to make adjustments  wwe will but don't try to be something you're not. Let's see if they can hit you. You get him on a five, occasionally, six game schedule and let's go."

Burns was with his roommate in Louisville, Blake Dunn when Louisville manager, Pat Kelly, called him back to the stadium. He was wearing shorts, a T-shirt and gym shoes. 

Kelly told Burns that his wardrobe was totally unacceptable. "They won't let you wear that in the Big Leagues."

"I'm excited," Burns understated. "It's dream come true, walking in to see some familiar faces and be a Big Leaguer. Hard work paid off. I talked about wanting to move up fast. Now that it's happened it's surreal. It was like in Dayton making my first start."

A year ago at this time Burns was in the College World Series with Wake Forest University.

Burns was born in Italy, the city is listed as Napoli but he was actually delivered on a ship sailing back to the United States. His father, David and his mother Trinetti met each other while both were serving in the US Navy. His father played football at North Greenville college. His mother is from Lake Charles, Louisianna.

The family settled in Hendersonville, Tennessee. H attended the University of Tennessee but transfered to Wake Forest because they had advanced technology that applied to pitching. He broke Rhett Lowder's strikeout record. Lowder, who is injured, was the Reds' first pick in 2023.

His father is the voice he most listens to for advice and he is in the stands, tonight.

Ironically, Burns grew up a Yankee's fan because his favorite was Derek Jeter. Burns played shortstop growing up.










B


Monday, June 23, 2025

Reds Shake Off The Judge Ruling And Left The Yankee Mystique As A Myth

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The Reds opened a series against the mystique of the New York Yankees and came back to defeat the defending American League champions, 6-1.

The win gave the Reds its second win in as many games and lifted them three games over the .500 make

As advertised, Aaron Judge hit his 28th home run in the first inning against Reds' starter Nick Lodolo.

The left hander survived two doubles and a single mixed in with a long drive to center field by Judge in the third inning. He kept the Yankees off he scoreboard into the bottom of the fifth inning.

Allan Winans came to the Yankees from the Atlanta Braves in spring training. He made nine starts for Scranton Wilkes-Barre and built a 7-0 record and an 0.90 ERA. He faced the Reds with the Braves last season and the Reds hung seven earned runs on him.

Winans gave up an infield hit to Spencer Steer but faced the minimum nine batters in the first three innings when Tyler Stephenson hit into a double play. 

The Reds fourth was a revival for the Reds. TJ Friedl grounded out to the first baseman, Paul Goldschmidt. Winans hit the suddenly hot Matt Mclain with a pitch. Elly De La Cruz hit a line drive, 110 mph, over Cody Bellinger's head in center for a triple. Steer drove him home with a line out to left. Gavin Lux slammed an 0-2 pitch into the Yankees bullpen on a line in right field. It was Lux' fourth homer of the season.

"I love it when Elly gets dirty, we're good," Francona said. "He can puke on the field all he wants." 

"When I'm dirty, it means I did something, today," De La Cruz agreed.


The Yankees threatened Lodolo in the top of the fifth. Jasson Dominguez reached on an infield single. Goldshmidt hit a line drive to the wall in right but Jake Fraley made a leaping catch for the first out. Bellinger dumped a single just out of the reach of third baseman, Christian Encarnacion-Strand. 

Terry Francona lifted Lodolo to allow Scott Barlow to face Judge. Barlow retired Judge on one pitch with a fly out to shallow center, then struck out Giancarlo Stanton looking to preserve the lead. 

The Reds chased Winans in the bottom of the fifth. He hit Fraley to open the inning. CES flied out. Friedl singled Fraley to third. Aaron Boone brought in Ian Hamilton, who walked McLain to load the bases. De La Cruz hit a run scoring single to right. Steer hit into a 6-4-3 double play on a 3-1 pitch.

Barlow retired all five batters that he faced. "That team is going to get on base for sure. Limiting damage is huge and you don't want to create more by nibbling around the zone. You stay on the attack. It gives you the best option," Barlow said.

Barlow faced the Yankees 13 times while in the American League. "Anytime you get to have that rapport where you know what the see off you and you can avoid that. It is helpful," Barlow said.

"It looked like it was starting to get messy," Terry Francona said. "He did a great job. It's amazing how much we miss (Graham) Ashcraft. You get to that point in the middle of the game. It doesn't always work out but he (Barlow) clutched up."

The Reds used starter Nick Martinez in relief and he pitched a scoreless seventh.

"We talked about this in St. Louis. I called Singer and Martinez in," Francona said. "One was going to pitch Wednesday and the other Friday. Singer really wanted to stay on his regular routine. Martinez said, 'I don't care this way I can give you an inning tomorrow. I'm not sure if it was anybody else, I'd really believe him but he's so good about that. I told him that really fired me up."

Lodolo pitched 4 1/3 innings, allowing one run on six hits, no walks and three strikeouts.

"I thought he had good stuff but give them credit. He got to two strikes and they fouled off a ton of pitches to get his pitch count up. I wanted to leave him out the but when Bellinger's hit fell in. You start managing with your heart instead of, that's not a good thing," Francona said.

Tony Santillan gave up a bloop double to Bellinger and walked Judge with no outs but he fanned both Stanton and Jazz Chisholm. He ended the inning getting Anthony Volpe on a ground out. 

De La Cruz deposited his 18th home run into the right field stands. It came right handed off lefty Tim Hill. 

Al Leiter Jr. relieved Hill. Steer singled for his second hit of the game. Steer stole second and with two outs scored from second on an infield hit by former Yankee, Jose Trevino.

It was no longer a save situation but the Reds went with Emilio Pagan because he was already warm. He faced the bottom three in the Yankee's lineup. He had no trouble with them. allowing just a two-out single.





Aaron Boone Returns As New York Yankee Manager

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


New York Yankees manager, Aaron Boone, copped to the plea that the return to Cincinnati and Great American Ball Park brought out emotions.

"There are the familiar faces. It is the organization that drafted me and brought me to the big leagues. This is an important place to me in my life," Boone said. "I had my best years here. I owned my first home here. There are a lot of people, I became very close with. Some of those people I will bump into when I'm back here. I love the city. It is always very nostalgic and even emotional. I don't get back here that much obviously, but I love it."

Boone was chosen in the third round of the 1994 draft out of the University of Southern California.

He played his first big league game on July 20, 1997 with a single, RBI and stolen base in three at bats against St. Louis.

Boone played for Ray Knight and Jack McKeon that first season. His father, Bob Boone, became the Reds' manager in 2001. His brother Brett was a Red from 1994 through 1997 and was Aaron's teammate for half a season.

His grandfather, Ray Boone, played in the Major Leagues from 1948-1960 and was an opponent of Terry Francona's father, Tito. He is one of the two three generations families involved with the Reds. Gus Bell, Buddy Bell, Mike Bell all played for the Reds. David Bell was the Reds manager from 2018 through 2024.

In seven years in Cincinnati, Aaron Boone, hit .271 with 141 doubles, 14 triples. 86 home runs, 362 RBI and 83 stolen bases in 668 games. He hit .294 in 103 games in 2001. He hit .241 with a carrer-high 38 doubles, two triples, a career-high 26 home runs, a career-high 32 stolen bases in 162 games.

Boone was traded to the Yankees at the trade deadline, three months after the Reds fired Bob Boone and General Manager Jim Bowden. The Reds got LHP Brandon Claussen and RHP Charlie Manning. 

Boone combined with the Reds and Yankees in 2003, set career-highs with 92 runs scored and 96 RBI. He hit a walk off home run to beat the Boston Red Sox that sent the Yankees to the World Series.


Friday, June 20, 2025

Jim Frey passed away April 12, 2020 at the age of 88. It was not noticed because of Covid 19.


 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


Jim Frey passed away April 12, 2020 at the age of 88. It was not noticed because of Covid 19. To those who overlooked the contributions to baseball from this Western Hills Grad from Bridgetown. This is a retrospective you will want to read.

http://www.wiedemannbeer.com/
Joan Frey would rather trade financial security than live with a crotchety old man, drinking a beer and wondering what-might-have-been.
 
James Gottffried Frey was inducted into the Price Hill Oldtimers Hall of Fame along with Herman Flea Clifton, Dick Drott, Larry Kleem and his oldest friend from Cincinnati's Western Hills High School.

After hitting .302 in 13 minor league seasons that included an International League batting title in 1960, Frey faced life after baseball.


Frey had a real estate license and was going to earn a living with it but the Baltimore Orioles had other ideas for him. They offered him a job as a scout in Ohio, to be a minor league batting instructor and manage its rookie team in the minor leagues.

Frey didn't like the idea.  He told them he was going into the real estate business, thinking he could make a lot of money in real estate.

Joan, his wife, whom he had dated in high school, intervened.

"When we were growing up together all you ever talked about is that you wanted to be a coach," Joan told him.  "You have a chance to coach. I don't want you sitting on the couch drunk when you're 60 years old, telling me you wished you'd have tried it.  Give a few years and if you don't make it you have plenty of time to sell real estate."

Frey couldn't argue.  "I'll give it five years," he told her.

The resident of suburban White Oak, near Cincinnati, went off to spring training earning a modest $6,000.  His neighbors made twice that sum, easily in the mid 60's.

The diminutive Frey signed a contract with the Boston Braves out of Western Hills High School. He along with Don Zimmer were members of the 1947 Ohio State High School Champions and the pair won an American Legion National Championship under legendary amateur manager, Joe Hawk.

He began his playing career in 1950, leading the Paducah Chiefs with a .325 batting average that year. On July 4, 1956, Frey was traded by the Milwaukee Braves to the Brooklyn Dodgers for Ray Shearer. In 1957, he hit .336 with 11 triples and 74 RBI for the Tulsa Oilers en route to being named the Texas League MVP. He ended his 14-year playing career in 1963. Frey won batting titles in 1957 (.336 in Texas League) and 1960 (.317 in International League).

He went to spring training with the St. Louis Cardinals in 1958 and hit .420. Manager Fred Hutchinson chose Frey over Curt Flood, who hit around .220 that spring but injured his left shoulder.  Frey couldn't throw the ball back to the infield for two years, when he was 29-years old.

At Joan's urging, Frey managed at Bluefield in the Appalachian League in 1964 and 1965, then scouted for the Baltimore Orioles' organization until he became a member of Earl Weaver's staff with the Orioles from 1970-1979.

"We had a 17-day road trip with the Orioles," Frey said. "My meal money from that trip was more money than I made my first year in the minor leagues.  I made $200 a month and we got two dollars in meal money, one if we were going home."

The Orioles defeated the Reds in the World Series in 1970.

"I thought I won the lottery," Frey said.  "I was making $12,000 as a coach and the World Series check was $17,000.  I thought we had all the money in the world.  I thought we might be able to go out to dinner or something."

Frey also was a substitute teacher at Colerain High School where his son Jimmy was a wide receiver on the football team.

Frey spent 10 seasons as batting coach for Frank and Brooks Robinson, Boog Powell, Davey Johnson and Don Baylor.  The latter two also went on to manage in the major leagues.

After the 1979 season, Frey decided he had enough.  On the last day of the 1979 World Series in Pittsburgh, Frey decided to resign.

"Physically, I was tired. I had bad knees, bad shoulder, bad everything," Frey said.

The next day the Kansas City Royals' general manager Joe Burke called.

"He said how would you like to manage for the Royals," Frey said.  "I told him I wasn't interested.  I thought they were offering me a minor league job.  I told them that I wasn't going back to the minor leagues.  He said no, the major league team.  I said, 'I'll take it." We didn't talk about money or anything. I told him that I would take his offer, I don't want to tell what it was but it wasn't much. I told him to remember the conversation because when we win, the next time."

In 1980, Frey became manager of the Kansas City Royals and led the team to their first World Series appearance that first year, ultimately losing in 6 games to the Philadelphia Phillies.

Frey got a big raise.  "It was the first time I made some money," Frey said.

However, the club struggled in 1981, going 30-40 under Frey, and he was replaced by Dick Howser. At the time, he was criticized for his lack of strategic acumen, which was exemplified by his work in the 1981 All-Star Game: he used all his substitutes early in the game, and was forced to let P Dave Stieb bat in the 9th inning with the game on the line when he had run out of potential pinch-hitters.

The real reason stemmed from a disagreement with management.

"We had a big fight," Frey said.  "I had five players on drugs.  I wanted to trade them before anyone else found out. They didn't want to hear anything or know anything. They got mad and fired me."

He was a member of the New York Mets' coaching staff in 1982 and 1983.

"I went into the general manager and told him that I was finished coaching.  I was going to go home," Frey said.  "He asked me what I was going to do.  I told him that I didn't know. I would find something.  The next day the Cubs called me and asked me to manage.  Every time I try to quit they called me back.  A friend told me if I get fired three more times, I'll run for president."

Frey couldn't understand it.

"I had no credentials to be a big league manager.  Even my brother would ask me, 'How did you get a big league job?' He managed kids and thought he knew more than I did."

In his first season with the Cubs, he led the team to their first postseason appearance since 1945, but they blew a two-game-to-none lead in the NLCS against the San Diego Padres and failed to advance to the World Series.

"When we won the first two games against the Padres, I remember thinking we could play the Tigers and Sparky Anderson.  The last time the Cubs played in the World Series, they played the Tigers and Flea Clifton was on the team.  He grew up on the same street in Bridgetown that I did. Can you imagine two guys from the same small neighborhood being in the World Series with the same two teams," Frey said.

The Cubs didn't make it but at the same period in the mid 80's, four major league managers were from the Western Hills community. Frey with the Cubs, Don Zimmer with the Red Sox, Russ Nixon with the Braves and Pete Rose with the Reds were all former West Hi Mustangs.

The Cubs had never drawn more than 1.6 million fans before Frey got there.

"The CEO of the Tribune Company asked me, what we had to do to improve attendance," Frey said.  "I asked him if he'd ever been to the circus.  Do your kids like the clowns?  He said,'yes'. Do you remember Casey Stengel?  You better hope you hired another clown.  Well the clown got lucky."

The Cubs' attendance jumped to over two million in both of Frey's seasons as manager.

The Cubs fired Frey and thirdbase coach Zimmer to hire John Vukovich in June of 1986.  All five pitchers in the Cubs' starting rotation were on the disabled list at the same time in 1985.  General manager Dallas Green expected them to bounce back.  They didn't.  He was still owed $250,000 on his contract.

"The CEO of the Tribune liked me," Frey said. "I had an offer to be manager or general manager of the Minnesota Twins.  My wife didn't want to go because she couldn't smoke in their ballpark. I had no job, no money and my wife wants to smoke.  They offered me a job to work on the radio. I told them I didn't know anything about it.  They said not to worry about it. I'd be fine.  If I go to Minnesota I give up the money on the contract and they were going to pay me another $150,000 on top of it.  It was an easy decision."

Frey spent a year in the radio booth with Harry Carey.

"My first day someone hit one and I said it's gone.  Harry grabbed my arm and said. 'It might be. It could be. It is.  I knew that three minutes ago.  But Harry said, 'There are millions of people that want to hear me say,' It might be. It could be. It is."

The Cubs fired Dallas Green at the end of the season and asked Frey to be the general manager.

His first move was to hire a manager.

"They wanted me to interview five guys and asked me for their names," Frey said.  "I told them I wouldn't name them. That it wasn't fair to them if the press got a hold of it.  They called me back in three weeks to ask how it was going.  I waited another week and called Don (Zimmer) at home.  He wasn't there.  Where else would he be? I found him in Las Vegas.  I told him to not say anything for a couple days.  I got him a hotel room under another name."

Zimmer and the Cubs won the Eastern Division in 1989, losing to the San Francisco Giants in the NLCS.

The Cubs had not been to the postseason for 39 years until two childhood friends from Western Hills took them there twice in five years.

Frey was named Executive of the Year by the Sporting News in 1989.  Zimmer was named Manager of the Year, as Frey had been in 1984.

Frey left baseball after 43 years in 1992, retiring to Ft. Myers, Florida.

It was fitting that the "country boy" who thought Western Hills High School was like a college campus and his friend of 70 years were honored in the same year.

"I was from Bridgetown.  It is built up now but back then it was country.  We had 2,000 residents if you counted the pigs and cows.  Zim was from Sedamsville.  We called him the river rat," Frey said.

Together they made an unbeatable team from winning American Legion national championships, an Ohio High School state championship, to playing and/or managing in major league World Series.

Their coach Joe Hawk has to be smiling.

Professionally edited by ML Schirmer
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Thursday, June 19, 2025

Byron Buxton Powers Twins With Two Home Runs As Twins Evade A Sweep

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


Byron Buxton hit two home runs and a double as the Minnesota Twins took out two days of frustration with a convincing, 12-5 win.

The Twins avoided a sweep and losing streak at six games and returned to .500 on the season. The Reds four-game winning streak was shattered.

For the third straight game Buxton  homered. For the second straight game his 14th home run of the season lead off the game. He is fifth all-time on the Twins with 14 leadoff home runs.

Terry Francona managed Cleveland a division rival of the Twins for years.

I've seen him too much. He's one of those guys if he's on your team, you can really admire him. When he's on the other team, it's no fun," Francona said.

The Reds came back against Chris Paddack, the Twins' starter. TJ Friedl doubled to lead off the Reds' first inning. Two outs later Tyler Stephenson singled to score Friedl from third base. Spencer Steer doubled down the left field line and Stephenson scored from first base to give the Reds the lead.

Reds' starter, Nick Martinez, got the first two outs in the second inning. He walked Ryan Jeffers. Kody Clemens, the son of Roger Clemens, hit his seventh home run of the season into the Twins' bullpen. Buxton followed him with his fourth home run of the season and 15th of the season to put the Twins ahead, 4-2.

Minnesota added three more runs in the third against Martinez. Willi Castro and Carlos Correa singled. Ty France hit a double over Steer's head in left. Elly De La Cruz had a chance to get Castro at the plate but his throw was over Stephenson's head. Jeffers doubled to score Correa and France.

Lyon Richardson relieved Martinez. He struck out Clemens to end the rally.

Martinez allowed seven runs on seven hits and a walk in 2 2/3 innings. He struck out four but three of the seven hits were home runs.

"I thought his stuff was good. He didn't locate it like he can. He made mistakes and paid for it," Francona said. "It seamed like it happened all day. We got the first two out then couldn't get the third out. It drove every one's pitch count up and lead to some runs.

The Reds got two runs back in the third. Friedl singled and Gavin Lux lined his third home run into the Twins' bullpen. 

The Twins got the two runs back. Richardson repeated Martinez mistake by walking Castro with two outs. Trevor Larnach doubled and Correa singled for the second time to replenish the five run lead at, 9-4.

The Reds got closer with a two-out run in the seventh. Matt McLain singled with two outs. He went to second on wild pitch by Cole Sands. Friedl's third hit of the day drove in McLain. Connor Joe hit for Lux when Twin's manager, Rocco Baldelli, summoned left hander Danny Coulombe. Joe walked and both runners moved up but De La Cruz struck out to end the inning.

Jeffers hit his fifth home run of the year with Correa on base with his third hit. It came off former Twins' pitcher Taylor Rogers.


Reds Win When Rain Stopped The Last Three Innings

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


The start of the middle game between the Minnesota Twins and Reds was delayed two hours and seven minutes, as rain fell with a vengence. 

It returned in the sixth inning and was called after the statutory delay nearly at midnight for the Reds 4-2 win.

For the second straight night, Byron Buxton homered. This time against Nick Lodolo, he hit his 13th of the season.

The Reds answered with a two-run home run from Spencer Steer facing Twins' starter Bailey Ober. It was Steer's sixth home run of the season.

The Reds added a run in the third off Ober. Jose Trevino singled to start the inning. One out later, Jake Fraley and Matt McLain singled to plate Trevino. McLain extended his hitting streak to six games.

Steer doubled and sbcored on a single by Will Benson in the third to put the Reds on top, 4-1.

Lodolo pitched two scoreless innings before Willi Castro opened the bottom of the fourth with a single. Brooks Lee extended his hitting streak with a single that sent Castro to third. A ground out by Trevor Larnach closed the gap.

Lodolo threw two scoreless innings before the rain returned with Trevino on first with two outs and Fraley due up. He finished with another quality start, his ninth, while improving his record to 5-5. Lodolo's ERA is reduced to 3.71.

"I was able to get back in the counts really well. I would have liked to finish a few more (with strikeouts)," Lodolo said. "I don't think about the rain. I just try to go as long as I can."

The game was called and the Reds won their fourth straight game, third straight series and are a season-high four games above .500 at 39-35, tied with the Milwaukee Brewers for second place in the National League Central 6.5 games behind the Chicago Cubs.

Wednesday, June 18, 2025

Strategic Walks Overlooked But Key To Reds' Win

 

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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


In the Reds 6-5 win over the Minnesota Twins on Tuesday (June 17).

Gavin Lux didn’t get a hit but walked three times. The first one in the fourth inning led to a four-run inning. His other two walks allowed Reds’ star Elly De La Cruz another chance to hit.

Lux walked 31 times this season in 65 games. He is third behind TJ Friel and Elly De La Cruz with 38 and 34 respectively. Lux is second on the team with a .370 on-base-percentage to Friedl’s .381 which are Joey Votto numbers.

On the other side of the equation, Reds’ closer Emilio Pagan had a runner on first and two outs but walked Byron Buxton, the Twins’ best hitter, who had already homered in the game.

On deck was Christian Vazquez, a .188 hitter, who was in the game because starting catcher Ryan Jeffers was taken out of the game with a contusion.

The Twins already emptied their bench. They couldn’t pinch hit and he was the only catcher left.

Pagan walked Buxton on four pitches. The conventional wisdom is never put the winning run on first base.

“I got to play with Bux for two years. I wish the situation was a little different so I could challenge him a little bit better,” Pagan said. “But yeah, a one-run game. He already hit a homer. I was trying to execute a few pitches. I threw two heaters up under his hands. He laid off both of them. After that I was content with throwing two sliders below the zone and moving on to the next guy.”

Pagan struck out Vazquez to earn his 17th save in 19 chances.

Manager Terry Francona was happy with Lux’ and Pagan’s performance after winning the game.

“I think they are a little different,” Francona said. “Lux had really good at bats. He took those 3-2 change ups like a good hitter. I think with Pagan he was fighting it a little bit with Bader (Harrison Bader walked with one out and represented the tying run). He yanked a couple (out of the strike zone) But then with Buxton, I think it is a little different case. You're not sure you really want to let him reach one. I know it kind of goes against the baseball…..but they had to take their catcher out. You’d rather that than have him hit one 400 feet.”