About Me

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I am a freelance writer and a member of the Baseball Writers Association of America. 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.

Thursday, June 11, 2026

Fernando Tatis Jr Sends Reds To Heartbreak Hotel

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

The most dangerous time for the Reds has been when they held a late lead.

Fernando Tatis Jr. hit a 2-1 pitch from Chase Petty into the seats in left to unlock the door for the Reds at Heartbreak Hotel.

On  the brink of taking the first series in their last four tries the Reds were up 4-2 in the eighth inning. The team that at one point this season was 14-0 when leading after six innings and 2-0 when tied after six, has lost leads in the eighth inning in each of its last four losses.

The Reds used home runs by Spencer Steer, his 10th with a man on, solo shots by JJ Bleday, his 11th and Eugenio Suarez, his fifth to send the game to bottom of the eighth with a 4-2 lead.

Left hander, Caleb Ferguson, who was injured all spring but recovered from a strained oblique. He came into the game pitching 7 2/3 scoreless innings on four hits and two walks in his six appearances since his return.

The good thing came to an end with bad timing for the Reds. Left handed batters Jackson Merrill and Gavin Sheets bucked the percentages with doubles to get within a run. Ferguson exited, replaced by Tony Santillan. Samad Taylor burned the Reds with a game tying single.

Brady Singer, started for the Reds. He had been scuffling but turned in a nice outing. He allowed a run in the first and one in the fifth. Singer lasted six innings of two-run baseball on four hits and one walk. He struck out five.

Merrill singled in the first off Singer and scored on Manny Machado’s double. Machado was thrown out at the plate by Bleday fielding a Will Wagner single.

Steer homered with Bleday on base off Padre starter Michael King.

Rodolfo Duran doubled off Singer and scored on a two-out single by Tatis with two outs in the fifth.

Bleday homered off King in the seventh. Suarez hit a pitch from Ron Marinaccio in the eighth.

Petty came up from Louisville today when the Reds sent Zach McCambley back just to have a fresh stretched out arm. The Reds needed to send the game to extra innings for the second straight game.

Petty got two outs but fell behind Tatis 2-0. He threw one strike but Tatis lined his second home run of the season into the left field stands. 

The Reds finished packing for an overnight at the Heartbreak Hotel carrying the baggage of a 1-5 road trip, four straight series losses and a 32-:35 record.



Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Can Brady Singer Win Series For Reds

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

Brady Singer is having a sub par year to this point in 12 starts the 29-year old right hander is 2-6 with an ERA of 5.89.

In 12 starts last season he was 6-4 with a 4.38 ERA.

 The Reds are 5-7 in his starts. He has allowed three or more runs in his last six starts and pitched into the sixth inning once. He has two quality starts, the last one was on April 19 at Minnesota.

The Reds are counting on him to pitch well enough for the team to take the three game series from the San Diego Padres on Wednesday afternoon.

He has one career start against the Padres. It was on May 16, 2023 at San Diego as a member of the Kansas City Royals he was the winning pitcher in a 5-4 win in which he allowed four runs, two earned in six innings.

Michael King a 31-year old right hander will pitch for the Padres.

King was the 12th pick of the Miami Marlins in 2016 out of Boston College.

King is 4-5 with a 3.41 ERA in 13 starts. He lost his last three starts, allowing 13 runs in 15 2/3 innings. His last start he pitched six innings against the New York Mets, giving up four runs in a 5-0 defeat.

He has five appearances and two starts against the Reds. He is 2-0 with a 2.87 ERA. He started against the Reds on September 9 last season in Cincinnati. He pitched five innings with no decision in a 4-2 loss to the Reds. He allowed two earned runs on a pair of solo home runs by Sal Stewart and Will Benson.


Rounding Third And Heading For Home

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

On a warm June day in 1944, Saturday June 10th, young men were riding trains in and out of Cincinnati’s Union Terminal on the West end of town.

Perhaps they were boarding or changing trains but thousands of them were reading the accounts of the D Day invasion of France four days prior. They themselves were on their way to join the fight against Nazi, Germany.


 Perhaps some of them took advantage of a layover to walk a few blocks to Crosley Field to join a crowd of 3,500 to watch the World Champion St. Louis Cardinals play the Cincinnati Reds.

If the stayed to the eighth inning of the game with the Cardinals leading 13-0, they saw a tall, 195 pound, kid come out of the bullpen down the first base line. Joseph Henry Nuxhall was 15 and just out of Wilson Junior High School for the summer, intending to play football and basketball for Hamilton High School that fall.

Major League Baseball decided to continue playing during the war though nearly 500 professional players from the big leagues and minor leagues were in the service, many more worked in the factories to build the items needed in battle.

Orville “Ox” Nuxhall worked in a plant making deisel engines in Hamilton, 30 miles from Crosley Field.

On weekends the 36- year father of five played semi-pro baseball. They too had trouble finding enough players to fill a team. Orville’s son Joe was 14 in 1943 when scouts from the Reds arrived to see him play.

When they got there Joe, a left hander, was pitching. They asked about Ox, and who is that big kid pitching.

“That’s Ox’ son, Joe,” said a teammate. They were pleasantly surprised. They offered the kid a tryout. They offered Ox a tryout.

Orville Nuxhall said no he had five kids to support. Not knowing if baseball would continue through the war or not. After all there were players as old as 47 playing, one nine years after he retired were playing in the big leagues. How long would that last?

Young, Joe went to the tryout. He was impressive enough that Reds’ manager Bill McKechnie took the youngster on a road trip to St. Louis that September. The Reds were offering Joe a contract but he wanted to compete in basketball at Hamilton High School and didn’t sign until after the season in February 1944 to preserve his amateur status. When he signed he was paid a $500 signing bonus and $175 a month which contributed to the family’s income. 

He was sent to Birmingham to train when the school year ended and found himself in the Reds’ bullpen that June 10th, 82 years ago today.

The Cardinals were merciless that day with Hall of Famer Stan Musial in the lineup, the reigning National League batting champion, they had a 13-0 lead when McKechnie called on Nuxhall to warm up.

According to Nuxhall, “He must have called me three times before I realized he was talking to me.” 

Bucky Walters the ace of the Reds pitching staff from the 1939 and 1940 National League Championship teams was within earshot.

“I was so nervous I tripped over the last step in the dugout on the way to warm up,” Nuxhall recalled.

There he was facing the first place Cardinals in front of 3,500 people about a 10th of the capacity with a scattering of soldiers going to war.

It was the ninth inning. Nuxhall was the 9,696th player in Major League history and forever the youngest at 15 years, 316 days.

It started out fine he pitched to George Fallon who grounded out to shortstop. Was a phenom born? Not quite, Nuxhall walked Mort Cooper. Then Augie Bergamo popped out to shortstop. Deb Garms stepped in. Nuxhall threw a wild pitch. “Calm down”, he told himself, “One out to go.” Garms walked. Now the youngster was face to face with the great Musial. 

“That’s when I realized where I was,” Nuxhall said of the experience. Musial singled. Mort Cooper scored. After that Nuxhall misplaced home plate. He walked Ray Sanders, Walker Cooper, and Danny Litwhiler. Emil Verban singled.

McKechnie showed mercy and brought in 21-year old Jacob Eisenhart, who was signed under similar circumstances to Nuxhall, walked George Fallon but retired Mort Cooper on a fly out to first base. It was the last time Eisenhart ever pitched.

Nuxhall was far from finished.

He was sent back to Birmingham the rest of the summer. He voluntarily and temporarily retired to get his amateur status back making All-State in Ohio in football and basketball.

He returned to professional baseball in 1947. He played five more years in the minor leagues and made the Reds out of spring training in 1952.

Nuxhall didn’t appear in another big league game until May 21 at Ebbett’s Field in Brooklyn. It was eerily similar to his debut he entered the game in the sixth inning with the Reds trailing 19-1 but this time he threw three scoreless innings with one hit, no walks, yes zero walks and three strikeouts in the final three innings.

He appeared in 37 games with five starts and started his career over with a 1-4 record and 3.22 ERA. Nuxhall finished a 16-year career on October 2, 1966. He won 135 games and lost 117. He pitched exactly 2,302 innings after his 1944 experience. He walked 776 batters but struck out 1,372, nearly a 2-1 ratio. He finished with a 3.90 ERA and made the National League All-Star  team in 1955 in which he led the league with five shutouts and again in 1956.

But it is not nearly the end of the story. 

Having broadcasting basketball for Miami University eight miles from his native home, with Ray Motley, Nuxhall joined the Reds broadcast booth in 1967. He was mentored by Hall of Fame pitcher turned broadcaster Waite Hoyt. He broadcast Reds games until 2007. He was elected to the Reds’ Hall of Fame and was nominated to the National Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY.

Nuxhall signed off Reds’ broadcast with, “This is the old lefthander rounding third and heading for home.” It is immortalized in lights facing the highway of Great American Ball Park.

Nuxhall passed away on November 15, 2007 at Mercy Hospital in Fairfield , Ohio. His visitation at Fairfield High School where he frequently watched sports, drew over 6,000 people.

His son Kim, who pitched in the Reds’ farm system in 1972 through 1974, along with son Phil, honor their father with the Joe Nuxhall Miracle Field at Hatton Park in Fairfield, Ohio. Kim retired as a PE teacher at Fairfield High School. The field is dedicated to serve special needs children so they can enjoy baseball.




Reds Struggling Players Come Through In 11-inning Drama

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

Several struggling Reds came through in dramatic fashion to best the San Diego Padres in a 5-3, 11-inning triumph. 

San Moll, Tony Santillan and Zach Maxwell came through with clutch pitching performances.

Sal Stewart and Eugenio Suarez busted  slumps with key hits to aid the Reds in breaking a five-game, team struggle with the last three games being snatched from them from the eighth inning on.

 

Sal Stewart hit a game-winning home run to snap an 0-for-14 slump that included two strikeouts in this game. His clutch home run, blasted to the deepest part of Petco Park was his team-leading 13th of the season. To add to the achievement it was against Yuko Matsui who had aWHIP under one at 0.98 in 19 2/3 innings.

Suarez doubled home a run in the 10th to give him a 3-2 lead. He had one hit in his last 24 at bats.

Maxwell got his first career save by standing the ghost runner.

Tejay Antone earned his first win since June 26, 2021 at Minnesota after recovering from three “Tommy John” surgeries.

The Reds scored first in the second innings against Padre’s starter Lucas Giolito. Matt McLain walked with two outs and stole second base. Tyler Stephenson drove him in with a single.

The Reds had Giolito on the ropes but he escaped with minimal damage. JJ Bleday singled with one out. Sal Stewart and Nathaniel Lowe walked. Spencer Steer hit a ground ball back to Giolito, who sprung a leak. The ball went under his glove for an error as Bleday scored. Giolito rallied by striking out Eugenio Suarez. McLain grounded out.

The Padres got to Chase Burns in the bottom of the third. Fernando Tatis Jr. singled with one out. Jackson Merrill walked tripled into right field corner. Reds’ manager Terry Francona questioned whether it bounced out of play but the umpiring crew ruled that it stayed in play. Manny Machado blooped a game-tying single over a infield playing in.

The scores stayed tied through the sixth inning. Burns chalked up his seventh strikout getting Gavin Sheets looking but Will Wagner walked. Samad Taylor lined a pitch to right center, Blake Dunn saved a run by cutting the ball off. Brock Burke replaced Burns. Miguel Andjar pinch hit for Bryce Johnson. Andjar played for the Reds last season and is very effective against left handed pitchers. The Reds walked Andujar intentionally to load the bases. Freddie Fermin grounded directly to Lowe at first and the Reds turned a 1-2-3 double play to escape.

Burns pitched 5 1/3 innings, allowing two runs on six hits and two walks. His ERA rose to 2.14. It is the 10th straight start in which Burns allowed two runs or fewer.

The Reds threatened Padres reliever Adrian Morejon in the seventh. Dane Myers delivered his Major League leading eighth pinch hit. He stole second but Steer and Suarez struck out.

The Reds missed a chance in the eighth inning too. McLain walked to open and stole second Stephenson walked. Edwin Arroyo made a good bunt attempt that just rolled foul. He flied out two pitches later. Dunn struck out looking and Bleday flied out.

Caleb Ferguson got in trouble right away in the bottom of the eighth. Machado laced a double past his protégé, Stewart at third base. Sheets grounded out to put Machado at third. Francona ordered Ty France walked. Tony Santillan replaced Ferguson to pitch to Taylor, who appeared to pull of a successful squeeze but the ball hit him. The base umpire had to change the call. Santillan struck out Taylor looking. Santillan broke Jase Bowen’s bat but the bloop was about to fall but Dunn got to it with a sliding catch.

The Reds went out in order in the ninth.

Santillan opened the bottom of the inning. Sung-Mun Song singled wit one out. Tatis has his fourth hit of the game, a single. Sam Moll entered to pitch to left handed Merrill. After being bunted to submission in two straight games Merrill topped a ball that acted just like a bunt and the bases were loaded on the infield single. 



Tuesday, June 9, 2026

Chase Burns The Franchise Takes His Show To San Diego

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

Chase Burns is called Franchise by his teammates. So far in 12 starts he has lived up to his billing.

The 23-year old will cause discomfort in San Diego’s front office box. The Padres made him their 20th pick in the 2021 draft out of Beech High School in Hendersonville, Tennessee.

He takes his 7-1 record and 2.05 ERA to the mound in San Diego for the first time. He has never faced San Diego at Great American Ball Park either.

 The Reds are on the frowning side of the scoreboard since Saturday. They look to Burns to turn the frown upside down.

Burns is primed to do just that based on his 12 prior outings. He had a bad start on April 10 against the Los Angeles Angels. He was touched for five runs on seven hits and four walks both season highs. 

His other 11 starts have been brilliant. In four starts he’s allowed two earned runs, three with one run and three scoreless outings with a high of seven innings against Pittsburgh Pirates on May 3. 

He pitched six innings, allowing two hits on four hits and one walk against the Kansas City Royals with a season-high tying nine strikeouts, accomplished four times this season.

His mound opponent is Lucas Giolito, a 31-year old right hander. He was the first choice of the Washington Nationals in the 2012 draft out of Harvard-Westlake High School in Los Angeles. 

Giolito missed the 2024 season with an injury. But rebounded to make 26 starts for the Boston Red Sox last season. He made 26 starts an built a 10-4 record with a 3.41 ERA but was granted free agency in November. He was not signed by the Padres until April 22nd and had to build up to compete in the Padres rotation. He had a scare in the minor leagues at San Antonio, taking a line drive off his right wrist.

Giolito joined the rotation on May 17 against the Seattle Mariners. He earned the win by pitching five innings  with three runs on one hit but he walked three and hit a batter.

He walked nine in 7 2/3 innngs in his next to starts but picked up a win in his second start. Giolito gave up three runs, two earned in four innings in his last start against Philadelphia Phillies on June 4.

He enters the game tonight with a 2-1 record and 4.86 ERA.

Giolito has three career starts against the Reds with a 0-1 record and 8.16 ERA.

In 2023 he made two starts against the Reds. As a member of the Los Angeles Angels, he started against the Reds on August 22. He pitched six innings, allowed four runs, one earned on five hits and two walks. He struck out nine but gave up a home run to Matt McLain. 

The Cleveland Guardians managed by Terry Francona selected Giolito off waivers from the Angels. He pitched three innings in an 11-7 loss to the Reds. Giolito pitched 3 1/3 innings, allowing five runs on five walks and four hits which included three home runs, one by Elly De La Cruz.

The Reds lineup is:

Blake Dunn CF

JJ Bleday LF

Sal Stewart 3B

Nathaniel Lowe 1B

Spencer Steer RF

Eugenio Suarez DH

Matt McLain SS

Tyler Stephenson C

Edwin Arroyo 2B


The Padres lineup is:

Fernando Tatis Jr 2B

Jackson Merrill CF

Manny Machado 3B

Gavin Sheets 1B

Will Wagner DH

Samad Taylor LF

Bryce Johnson RF

Freddie Fermin C

Sung-Mun Song SS

Padres Beat The Reds With Bunts

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

The Reds had a horrible time handling bunts in the San Diego Padres 6-2 win that sent the Reds to their fifth straight loss. The Reds fall a season low three games below .500 at 31-33. 

They wasted a real good start by Andrew Abbott and most of their nine hits. A series of bunts led to a second run in the seventh after Abbott left the game. He allowed just two hits going into the inning.

Sam Moll also mishandled a bunt on Sunday that put the St. Louis Cardinals in the lead.

Freddie Fermin broke a scoreless game with a leadoff home run in the third inning. It was his third home run of the season.

The Reds had chances. They stranded two runners in the first inning. Matt McLain was thrown out trying to score in Edwin Arroyo’s fly to left.

The Reds chased San Diego starter Walker Buehler in the fifth inning. Arroyo singled to open the fifth. Blake Dunn struck out on the 11th pitch of his at bat and Arroyo was called out on interference when Dunn crossed in front of Fermin trying to make the throw to catch Arroyo. JJ Bleday hit a ground rule double and scored on Sal Stewart’s single up the middle. Nathaniel Lowe single and rookie manager Craig Stamman called on Bradgley Rodriguez to get Eugenio Suarez to line out to left.

The Reds put runners at first and third with one out in the sixth. Marte singled, stole second and took third on McLain’s deep fly to center. Stephenson walked.

Adrian Morejon replaced Rodriguez.

Arroyo hit a deeper fly to center to score Marte.

The Padres tied the game against Abbott in the seventh. Xander Bogaerts and Gavin Sheets doubled with no outs.

Tejay Antone took over for Abbott. Jase Bowen bunted for a single as Stewart and Antone got tangled up. Samad Taylor laid down a bunt. The charging Stewart couldn’t handle it and Sheets scored the go ahead run. Taylor got credit for a single. Fermin became the third batter in a row to reach on a bunt. He got credit for a sacrifice on Antone’s error. Fernando Tatis Jr flied out to shallow right. Jackson Merrill forced Bowen at the plate. McLain threw out Ty France on a ground ball up the middle after a diving stop.

Abbott finished with six innings, allowed three runs, on four hits and two walks. He struck out six.

The Padres added three runs in the eighth inning on two out hits by Bowen, Taylor and Fermin. Sheets flied out after an 11-pitch at bat that sapped the strength of Zach McCambley preventing him from escaping the inning.


Monday, June 8, 2026

Reds Turn To Andrew Abbott In San Diego

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

Andrew Abbott has a 4-3 record and a 4.03 ERA. He is charged with putting the Reds back on track following a sweep by the St. Louis Cardinals.

The Reds open a series against the San Diego Padres in a three-game series.

base.

 Abbott started out slowly but has turned his season around. Perhaps this turnaround for Abbott could be contagious.

His last two starts were six inning starts. He gave up three runs in each. Prior to that he had three starts allowing two runs or fewer.

Abbott is 2-0 lifetime against San Diego with 0.98 ERA in four career starts. In his sixth career start on July 2, 2023, Abbott shut out the Padres with a 1-0 lead with two outs in the eighth inning. Ha-Seong Kim tied the game with a home run.

Abbott made two starts against the Padres last season. On June 28, he pitched five innings, allowing a run on seven hits and no walks. His last start was on September 10. He pitched eight innings of one-run baseball on five hits. He walked two and struck out six.

Walker Buehler will pitch for San Diego. The 31-year old righthander from Lexington, Kentucky and Henry Clay High School. Buehler attended Vanderbilt University. He was drafted by the in the first round in 2015.

He signed with the Padres on February 15 as a free agent.

He is 3-3 with a 4.53 ERA in 12 starts. 

Buehler made his last two starts against the Philadelphia Phillies both losses. Buehler pitched a total of 11 1/3 innings, allowing a total of three earned runs on seven hits and two walks with eight strikeouts.

Buehler is 2-4 with an even 3.00 ERA in eight career starts.

He started twice against the Reds in 2024 on May 18 and 25. In the first outing Buehler pitched six scoreless innings on three hits and no walks. He struck out seven. In the rematch, Buehler pitched 6 2/3 innings, allowing three runs on six hits and a walk. He struck out four. He gave up home runs to Spencer Steer and Will Benson.

The Reds lineup:

Blake Dunn CF

JJ Bleday LF

Sal Stewart 1B

Nathaniel Lowe DH

Eugenio Suarez 3B

Noelvi Marte RF

Matt McLain SS

Tyler Stephenson C

Edwin Arroyo 2B


The Padres Lineup:

Fernando Tatis Jr 2B

Jackson Merrill CF

Ty France 1B

Manny Machado 3B

Xander Bogaerts SS

Gavin Sheets DH

Jase Bowen RF

Samad Taylor LF

Freddie Fermin C

Sunday, June 7, 2026

The Reds Were Swept Under The Arch With Their Own Broom

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

The Reds were swept in the shadows of the Gateway Arch in a 5-3 loss to the St. Louis Cardinals. 

While they are  short some key bullpen pieces and a huge presence in the middle of the lineup.

That is no excuse for not playing clean baseball and even a resurgence by Mighty Mouse can’t save Polly Purebred when they mishandle the baseball and leave runners hanging at second or third base.

 Matt McLain AKA, Mighty Mouse got off the mat and hit two home runs on Sunday and the Reds got a solo home run by Tyler Stephenson but wasted their other seven hits 

McLain hit three home runs the last two days and hit his seventh off Michael McGreevy, the Cardinals’ starter. Stephenson hit his fifth one batter later.

That sent the Reds into the lead to be guarded by Rhett Lowder, who returned from the injured list. Lowder was not sharp but held the home team scoreless in his shortened three innings. Lowder allowed just one hit but walked five and hit one to cause Terry Francona to install Caleb Ferguson in the fourth inning. He walked one and struck out one in a scoreless fourth

Chris Paddack, who was removed to the bullpen by Lowder’s return, coughed up the meager lead. He gave up back-to-back doubles by Alec Burleson and Jordan Walker to open the fifth inning and cut the Reds’ lead in half.

One out later Brayan Torres hit a two-run home run to send the Cards to a lead.

Paddack pitched a clean sixth.

McLain hit his eighth home run off George Soriano to tie the score.

Brock Burke walked one in a scoreless seventh.

Sam Moll started the eighth. Moll has been one of the most effective Reds’ relievers but he hit a rough patch the last two games of this series.

Jose Fermin and pinch hitter Nelson Velazquez singled. Accomplished bunter Victor Scott II laid down a bunt. Moll got to it quickly but threw the ball down the line allowing Fermin to score the go ahead run. Moll walked  JJ Wetherholt to load the bases with no outs.

Struggling Tony Santillan came into the fire and did his job.

Ivan hit a ground ball right at McLain at shortstop. McLain botched the pickup on an easy force at home. Velazquez scored. Santillan completed the inning getting  force at home on a grounder hit to Edwin Arroyo and McLain made good on another try. Lars Nootbaar flied to left.

The Reds had a chance in the top of the ninth when Stephenson doubled, his third hit of the game.

Fly outs by Arroyo and Blake Dunn to seal the Reds’ fate.

That fate is a season low water mark at 31-33. They are in last place in the National League Central by losing 11 of 13 games within the division.

 One can argue the case the Reds’ are hurting but a lot of the pain is self induced. The pitching staff walked eight batters against the Cardinals on Sunday and oh by the way, hit a batter.

The winning staff issued no walks. The Reds were 0-for-8 with runners in scoring position. 





Rhett Lowder The Cavalry Coming To The Reds Rescue

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

The Reds reactivated Rhett Lowder from the disabled list and Luis Mey was optioned to Louisville.

 The Reds hope the rookie will hold the fort and prevent the St. Louis Cardinals from sweeping the three-game series after recovering from an achy shoulder.

Lowder, making the 15th start of his career and ninth of the season sports a 3-3 record and a 5.40 ERA. 

Back from a year of for injury those stats are skewed. He was 3-1 with a 3.18 ERA in his first six starts but 0-2 with nearly a 23.00 ERA in his last two.

Lowder pitched five innings, allowing three earned runs on five hits and no walks with eight strikeouts in a rehab start at Louisville on Tuesday and deemed ready to return.

He faced the Cardinals one time. That was on September 10, 2024. He pitched five scoreless innings in a five-hit effort in a 3-0 win. Lowder didn’t walk a batter and struck out three.

Lowder is up against 25-year old right hander, Michael McGreevy, the Cards first pick in the 2021 draft from UC-Santa Barbera.

McGreevy is 3-5 with a 2.98 ERA in 11 starts. He gave up five runs on seven hits to the Milwaukee Brewers on May 26 but rebounded to pitch six innings against the Texas Rangers on June 1. He gave up two runs on five hits and two walks and struck out one.

He’s walked 17 batters in 66 innings and struck out 44.

McGreevy is 2-0 against the Reds in two starts with an 0.69 ERA. He allowed the Reds one run in 13 innings on eight hits, five walks and six strikeouts. 

He beat the Reds 4-2 on August 30 last season with six innings with one run on five hits, two walks and no strikeouts. He also pitched seven scoreless innings on three hits and three walks with six strikeouts in a 3-0 win on September 16.


Saturday, June 6, 2026

Dramatic End Goes Cardinals Way

   

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Dateline: Cincinnati 

It looked like it would be a blow out by the St. Louis Cardinals but in stead they had to comeback and hang on for a 6-5 win over the Reds.

The Reds left the bases loaded after an eighth in home run by Lars Nootbaar off usually reliable Sam Moll put the Reds behind.

Riley O’Brian appeared to walk Sal Stewart that forced in the tying run was successfully challenged by catcher Jimmy Crooks. Stewart ground out hard to second base to seal the loss that dropped the Reds to 31-32 below .500 for the first time since losing opening day to the Boston Red Sox.

The Cardinals strung together five single off Nick

 Lodolo in the second inning to jump to a 3-0 lead.

Alec Burleson and Jose Fermin singled to open the inning. Brayan Torres beat out a bunt to load the bases. Lodolo got Pedro Pages to fly out to shallow right. Victor Scott II singled to plate Burleson. Masyn Winn singled in two runs. Eugenio Suarez turned a slow ground ball by Ivan Herrera into an inning ending double play.

The Reds got right back into it on one hit and some genorsity from Matt Liberatore. He walked Noelvi Marte and Matt McLain to open the inning. PJ Higgins had an infield fly. Dane Myers matched Fermin with a perfect bunt to load the bases. JJ Bleday hit a chopper to first that skipped past Burleson, who was charged with an error as two runs scored. Spencer Steer tied the game with a sacrifice fly.



The Reds took the lead in the fourth inning. Blake Dunn singled and Mighty Mouse, McLain hit his sixth home run.

Jordan Walker hit his 16th home run of the season off Lodolo in the fifth.

Fermin and Torres singled to start the sixth. Lodolo was taken out for Tejay Antone. The Cardinals pulled a double steal. Pinch hitter Nootbaar was intentionally walked. Pinch hitter Jimmy Crooks hit into a 3-2-3 double play. Antone got Winn to ground out to short to preserve the lead.

Lodolo gutted through five innings, allowing four runs on 10 hits and one walk. He struck out three.

Herrera singled to lead off the seventh but Antone struck out Walker and Nelson Velazquez.

Terry Francona brought in Sam Moll. Burleson flied out to send the game to the eighth inning.

Fermin singled to open the bottom of the eighth. Torres bunted him to second. Moll got ahead of Nootbaar 0-2 but he drilled his first home run off the season to give the Cardinals the lead.

Riley O’Brien was the losing pitcher in the Reds 11-inning win over the Carfs on May 23. He retired McLain on a fly to right, struck out pinch hitter Nathaniel Lowe but pinch hitter Will Benson and Bleday. Steer walked for the second time in the game. He has reached base in a career-high 24th game. Stewart got ahead in the count 3-0 with one successful ABS challenge. He took a strike. But a high pitch was called ball four by home  plate umpire, Ben May. Crooks challenged. The ball barely nipped the strike zone and the count was full. Stewart hit the ball hard but right at Torres to end the game.