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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.

Friday, February 16, 2018

New Hair Style, Same Attitude For Luis Castillo







Reds players are rocking new hair styles.

Eugenio Suarez reported with platinum gray hair and a deep dark beard.  He was told it was backwards because my hair is brown but my beard is stone gray.

Luis Castillo has a curly mohawk style but his attitude for the season is the same as last year when he was an unknown in the Reds' clubhouse.

http://www.wiedemannbeer.com/
The Reds came up with a gem as Straily then 27, won 14 games for the last place Reds.  At the end of the season the Reds resisted the temptation to keep Straily and traded him to the Miami Marlins for a talented pitcher five years younger.

Luis Castillo came to the Reds in the deal and was impressive right away in spring training with his easy flowing motion that delivered the ball at nearly 100 mph.  He had a good change up.

“Velocity sets him apart,” manager Bryan Price said.  “We were impressed last spring but his breaking ball was a distant third.”

A Major League starter needs three quality pitches that he can throw for strikes.

Castillo started the season with Double A Pensacola and worked on his breaking pitch.  The work earned a mid-season promotion to the Reds where he had a deceiving 3-7 record.  The Reds were competitive in most games that he pitched but either lacked scoring or a tired bullpen surrendered leads after he left games.  His 3.12 ERA was tops among National League rookies.



From July 8 on his ERA was 2.84, the seventh lowest among pitchers with 12 or more starts.

That strong finish prompted the Reds to declare that he will be in the 2018 starting rotation barring something unforseen.

This season the confident native of the Dominican Republic arrived in Arizona with a job in hand.  It is his to keep as long as he performs.

“I have the same attitude,” Castillo said through interpreter Julio Morrillo.  “I am going to keep working to help my team win.”

Price also praised Castillo’s poise on the mound, rare for a pitcher his age, thrust into a Major League season.
“There are a lot of pitchers with the stuff to be in the big leagues,” Price said.  “It is rare for a young pitcher to feel like he belongs.  Doubts can creep into you thoughts about, how they’ll be accepted by teammates; what if they are hit hard.”

From the time Castillo stepped on the mound in Washington against the Nationals, he was comfortable.

“For me its the same game,” Castillo said.  “When you’re in Double A you compete against the hitter like you do in the big leagues, obviously, the hitters are a lot better but it’s the same.  I do try to focus more in the big leagues because you can’t get by with the mistakes you make in Double A.  Other than that it’s the same mentality. Just go out and compete.”

In his debut against Washington he gave up a home run to the second batter he faced, Brian Goodwin.  He gave up another hit in the first, walked a batter in the second, and walked the bases loaded in the third.  Castillo got out of both innings with double play grounders.  Anthony Rendon hit a home run in the fourth.

“He got into trouble with his command early, trying to make the perfect pitch” Price   “He managed the environment very well for a debut and he settled in.”

Castillo worked five innings allowing the two runs before he turned the game over to the bullpen, leading 5-2.  The bullpen gave up the lead in a 6-5 10-inning loss.

The 25-year old has shown that he can field his position and hold baserunners.  This spring he just wants to get stronger.  He knows the challenge ahead of him.

“I want to be ready for 162 games,” Castillo said.  “It is a lot different than a minor league season.  I want to be strong and help my team win.”

It appears he plans to stay in the big leagues all year.



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