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.

Friday, January 16, 2026

Reds Pick Up Left Handed Pitcher Brock Burke And Trade Gavin Lux To Tampa Bay In Three Team Trade


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Dateline: Cincinnati

Reds President of Baseball Operations Nick Krall today announced  three-way trade, landing LHP Brock Burke from the Angels. The Reds sent Gavin Lux to the Rays, while Tampa Bay sent OF Josh Lowe to Los Angeles in exchange for minor league RHP Chris Clark.

Burke, 29, posted a 7-1 record with a 3.36 ERA (61.2ip, 24r/23er) across a career-high 69 appearances in 2025. His 69 outings were the second-most by an Angels left-hander in a season in team history, while his 7 wins ranked second among all Major League left-handed relievers in 2025.

The Rays chose Burke in the third round of the 2014 draft. Burke has pitched in five Major League seasons with the Rangers (2019, '22-24) and Angels (2024-25). He was a member of Texas' 2023 World Series championship team, pitching in two postseason games as the Rangers secured their first World Series title in franchise history.

Burke was named the Rangers' Rookie of the Year by the local chapter of the BBWAA in 2022 after leading all Major League relievers in innings pitched (82.1) and posting the lowest ERA (1.97) by a rookie reliever in Rangers history. He also finished that year ranked among American League relief pitchers in strikeouts (90, 2nd) and wins (7, T3rd).

Lux, 28, batted .269 in a career-high 140 games with the Reds in 2025. He also set career bests with 120 hits, 28 doubles, 53 RBI, 56 walks, a .350 on-base percentage, and 176 times on base. He was originally acquired by Cincinnati from the Dodgers in exchange for minor leaguer Mike Sirota and the Reds' Competitive Balance Round A (37th overall) selection in the 2025 first-year player draft on January 6, 2025.



 

Thursday, January 15, 2026

Reds Sign International Players Including 16-Year Old Angel Nunez Yosver Zulueta Traded To Seattle


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Dateline: Cincinnati

The Reds signed 16 international players today January 15, 2026. seven are from the Dominican Republic, six from Venezuela, one from Curacao. one from Aruba and one from Panama.

Arias, Eliezer - SS - Dominican Republic

Burgos, Daniel - RHP - Venezuela

Colina, Jose - OF - Venezuela

Cuello, Alexander - INF - Dominican Republic

Delgado, Luis - RHP - Dominican Republic

Felix, Ronny - OF - Dominican Republic

Goncalves, Carlos - C - Venezuela

Gutierrez, Eider - OF - Venezuela

Hernandez, Carlos - SS - Venezuela

Josephina, Gilventon - OF - Curacao

Meyers, Nishentel - INF - Aruba

Nolasco, Xander - C - Dominican Republic

Nunez, Angel - OF - Dominican Republic

Pacheco, Diego - C - Venezuela

Romero, Juandy - SS - Dominican Republic

Saldaña, Jose - RHP - Panama

Nuñez is ranked number 6 among international prospects. He starred for his country during the U15 World Cup in Colombia in August 2024, when he hit .350 and recorded 11 RBIs across eight games. His power is still developing but he has good eye among his age group, showing a willingness to take his walks. A left-handed hitter, he utilizes his quick hands to rip line drives from gap to gap.

He has top level speed and is projected to play centerfield.

Venezuelan catcher Diego Pacheco, a physical beast with a rocket throwing arm who checks in at No. 50 on the list.

Nuñez, 16,  is expected to receive a $3 million signing bonus and Pacheco will land $800,000, according to a source. The Reds received $7,357,100 in pool money this year.

The Reds signed many latin players at the age of 16, Juan Duran and Yorman Rodriguez signed at that tender age in 2008. Duran never made it to the big leagues. Rodriguez lasted 1 games in 2014.

Aristedes Aquino was signed at 16. He made a splash with the Reds in 2019, hitting 19 home runs in 56 games. He hit 10 in 2021 and 2022 then went to Japan for the Chunichi Dragons. He played in Mexico last season. Now 31, Aquino hit .277 with 15 home runs in 70 games for Diablos Rojos del Mexico (the Red Devils of Mexico) last season.

Hours after Yosver Zulueta was designated for assignment the Reds traded him to the Seattle Mariners for minor league RHP Dusty Revis. 

Revis was drafted by Seattle in the 11th round of the 2025 MLB June Amateur Draft from Western Carolina University. He did not pitch in the minors this past season for the Mariners.

Pierce Johnson Wants To Lead By Example


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Dateline: Cincinnati

The Reds moved today to strengthen it bullpen by signing veteran Pierce Johnson.

Johnson is a 34-year old Denver native, who pitched at Missouri State. He was the Chicago Cubs first pick in the 2012 draft and broke in with the Cubs in 2017. 

He pitched one inning on May 19 against the Milwaukee Brewers, allowing two unearned runs in his lone big league inning. The San Francisco Giants selected him off waivers from the Cubs in September of that season and pitched in 37 games.

Johnson pitched in Japan for the Hanshin Tigers in the Japanese Pacific League in 2019. He posted a 1.38 ERA in 58 games.

Johnson returned to the states in 2020 with the San Diego Padres and became good friends with Emilio Pagan.

He pitched in Colorado and Atlanta in 2023 and completed his second full season with the Braves last season, with a 3-3 record and 3.05 ERA in 65 games covering 59 innings.

Atlanta declined to tender him a contract on November 6 and the Reds signed him, today, January 15.

To compliment his curve ball heavy pitching expertise, Johnson is hoping to help the Reds young pitchers acclimate to the big leagues.

"I've done a lot of different things, and I've played this game for a long time, so I've been able to learn a lot, and I'm still constantly learning," Johnson said. " But for the young guys, I just want to be someone that they can, you know, that they can just ask questions and, you know, just be open and honest, and I can help them out with whatever. You know, adversity comes their way.  So I just hope I can be one of those guys for the younger guys."

Johnson confirmed that Pagan lobbied him to sign with Cincinnati. 

"I mean, he and I talk every day, and, you know, we've, we've been super close. But it was literally, Hey, man, like, where we're trying to go. And then Cincinnati ended up signing him, and it was, and he was like, you're coming here. We're getting it done. We're getting it done. And here we are, and we got it done," Johnson said. "This was some place that he wanted to come back to. And, you know, free agency, you never know what's going to happen. There could have been a team that came out and exploded with a massive offer and, and I know for a fact that this was a place that he wanted to come back to. He spoke very highly of everybody throughout the entire organization, and him and his family loved it. So when you have your best friend selling you on something, it's pretty easy to buy in."

"He was trying to trade for me when I was still in Atlanta," Johnson said.


Emilio Pagan's Expanded Closer Role Helps Reds Land Pierce Johnson


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Dateline: Cincinnati

Emilio Pagan added a unique facet to his reinvention as a closer.

Sales professionals know the salesman's mantra, ABC; Always Be Closing. The veteran reliever, who took over the closer's role in the Reds' bullpen with 32 saves, sold his friend and former teammate, Pierce Johnson, to sign with the Reds today.

The pair became close in 2020 and 2021 as teammates with the San Diego Padres and talk to each other frequently.

Johnson, the 34-year old right hander, was granted free agency by the Atlanta Braves on November 6. His free agency ended today with a one-year contract with a mutual option for 2027.

Pagan started the sales process on his good friend.

"Absolutely (I sold him), I talked to him every day since his option was declined," Pagan said. "I talked to him nearly every day. I told him Atlanta did him a favor. I told him that he was going to get at least a two-year deal somewhere. I pumped to have him. He's a great dude, great pitcher, great family. The Reds' fans are going to really enjoy watching him."

So what was the pitch, the sales pitch, that turned Johnson into a Reds' player?

"I told him just come play (here) with me," Pagan said. 

That wasn't enough.

"I talked about our kids being together. My daughter gets along with his kids. They just had a new born. My wife loves helping take care of babies. I told him you have another built in little helper here. My wife and his wife, Chrissy, are real close. I was trying hard to make it happen. It did. I/m excited."

Pagan was 2-4 with a 2.88 ERA last season in 70 games after he took over as the bullpen closer from Alexis Diaz with a career-high 32 saves. 

He felt he let himself and his team down in 2024 and determined to make up for it.

"No one predicted that I'd have 32 saves. We get paid a lot of money and I felt that I didn't do what was expected of me in my first year here. I wanted to put my best foot forward last year. Did I anticipate doing what I did? No. Being able to finish strong; throwing four of the last five days of the season, that was a blast. I had a great time. I expect to deliver close to that or even better this year."

Pagan worked at perfecting the delivery that coach Matt Tracy recommended last year.

"I worked a lot with Matt Tracy last year with my delivery," Pagan revealed. "I've always been a guy that strides across my body. He was telling me I was banging my head against the wall. He said that if I stride open with your delivery. I think it will work out better. He was right. The more that I began to stride even with home plate or slightly open, my velo (velocity) jumped; my command jumped. the action on all my pitches was better. I've been focused on that until it feels more and more natural."

Johnson, 34, pitched to a 3-3 record with a 3.05 ERA across 65 appearances with the Braves this past season. He retired 26 consecutive batters over a span of 9 outings from April 19 to May 10, the longest-such streak by any Major League reliever in 2025.

Selected by the Cubs in Compensation Round A (43rd overall) of the 2012 first-year player draft, Johnson has pitched in 8 Major League seasons with Chicago (2017), San Francisco (2018), San Diego (2020-22), Colorado (2023), and Atlanta (2023-25). In 2023, Johnson set career highs in several categories, including games (67), innings (62.2), strikeouts (90), and saves (13).

Johnson owns a 1.50 ERA across 12 career Postseason outings for San Diego (2020, '22) and Atlanta (2023, '24). Of his 12 Postseason appearances, all but one have been scoreless. He appeared in each of the Padres' first 5 games of the 2020 Postseason, becoming the third pitcher in club history to appear in 5 or more consecutive Postseason games.

Johnson was born in Denver. He spent the 2019 season with Nippon Professional Baseball's Hanshin Tigers, where he was recognized as NPB All-Star after ranking second among Central League relievers in ERA (1.38), strikeouts (91), and holds (40). Johnson pitched collegiately at Missouri State University (2010-12), where as a junior in 2012 he set a single-season program record with 119 strikeouts.

The Reds designated for assignment RHP Yosver Zulueta to make a roster space for Johnson. 

Cincinnati's 40-player roster is at capacity.
















Wednesday, January 14, 2026

Reds Invite Non Roster Players To Compete For Jobs


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Dateline: Cincinnati

The Reds invited to Major League spring training camp: RHP Tejay Antone, C Will Banfield, INF Michael Chavis, RHP Hagen Danner, INF Garrett Hampson, RHP Lyon Richardson, RHP Carson Spiers, INF Michael Toglia, and LHP Joel Valdez.

Antone is coming off his third elbow surgery. He has 45 appearances with five starts in between surgeries. He has been effective when healthy. The 32-year old sports a 2.47 over 76 2/3 innings. Antone's last appearance was on April 7, 2024.

Banfield filled in for Tyler Stephenson last season, appearing in seven games.

Chavis,30, was the top pick of the Boston Red Sox in the 2014 draft. He signed with the Reds on Christmas Eve. He is a right handed hitter, who can play first, second and third base. Chavis played in 357 games in the Major Leagues with a .238 average and 45 home runs. He played for Boston, Pittsburgh and Washington. His best year was with Pittsburgh in 2022. He played in 129 games with a .229 average, 16 doubles, three triples, 14 home runs and 49 RBI. He last appeared in the Major Leagues in 2023 with Washington. Chavis played in 48 games, hitting .242.

Danner,  27, signed with the Reds on January 7. He was the second round pick of the Toronto Blue Jays in 2017 out of Huntington Beach, California High School. Danner has just 1/3 innings in his big league career, pitching against the Chicago Cubs in 2023 on August 11. Danner has 150 games of minor league experience. He pitched for Tacoma last season in the Seattle Mariners system. He pitched in 54 games in relief with a 6-4 record and a 5.59 ERA in 56 1/3 innings.

Hampson is 31-years old and is taking his second tour with the Reds, who signed him on December 29. He was released by the Arizona Diamondbacks on May 18 last year. The Reds signed him six days later. He played in nine games with the Reds nine games with three hits in 18 at bats. The St. Louis Cardinals selected him on waivers on June 24, appearing in 35 games while hitting .103 until his release on September 11.

Lyon Richardson is 27. He pitched for the Reds in 39 games over the last three seasons. He has a 0-5 record and a 6.05 ERA. He was designated for assignment to make room on the 40-man roster when the Reds acquired Dane Myers. He was sent outright to Louisville's roster.

Carson Spiers earned a spot in the Reds starting rotation, saving a place for Andrew Abbott. He made two starts and logged a quality start in his first start against the Texas Rangers on April 1. The 28-year old pitched six innings and allowed just one run in a 1-0 loss. He has 14 starts and 29 appearances over three seasons. Carson has a 5-10 record with a 5.69 ERA in 117 innings. Spiers had UCL surgery on his right elbow in July. Spiers was granted free agency on November 21 and resigned with the Reds three days later.

Toglia is a 27-year old switch hitting first baseman/outfielder. The Reds signed him to a minor league contract on January 7 after the Colorado Rockies granted free agency to their top pick in the 2017 draft. He played in 88 games for Colorado last season. Toglia hit .190 with 15 doubles, a triple, 11 home runs and 32 RBI. Toglia hit 25 home runs in 116 games for the Rockies in 2024.

Valdez is a 25-year old left handed pitcher from El Seibo, Dominican Republic. He pitched in 26 games at Chattanooga last season. Valdez posted a 2-1 record with a 1.97 ERA. He was promoted to Louisville amd pitched in nine games with a 6.00 ERA. The Reds picked him up in the minor league phase of the 2024 draft from the New York Yankees system. He pitched 1/3 an inning for Escondigo in the Dominican Winter League after he became a free agent at the end of the season. He resigned with the Reds in December on a minor league contract. 




Monday, January 5, 2026

Jeff Brantley Wins Award


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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The National Sports Media Association announced that Reds' broadcaster, Jeff Brantley was named The Sportscaster of the Year for Ohio.

Brantley completed a 14-year career as a Major League pitcher with the Reds, San Francisco Giants, Philadelphia Phillies, St. Louis Cardinals and the Texas Rangers in 2001.

He joined ESPN as an on-air contributor from 2002-2006. Brantley joined the Reds' broadcast team in October 2006. He appears on the radio and television network broadcasts of Reds' games.

The National Sports Media Association Inc. is a nonprofit organization that seeks to develop educational opportunities for those who are interested in pursuing a career in sports media through networking, interning, mentoring, and scholarship programs.

The NSMA also honors, preserves, and celebrates the diverse legacy of sports media in the United States.

Founded in 1959 as the National Sportscasters and Sportswriters Association in Salisbury, N.C., the NSSA added its Hall of Fame in 1962, with Grantland Rice as its first member. The organization rebranded to the National Sports Media Association in 2016 and moved to Winston-Salem, N.C. one year later.

Friday, January 2, 2026

Punt John Punt Indiana Hoosiers Making Football History


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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

John Isenbarger died last March at the age of 76.

He played a huge roll with the 1967 Indiana Hoosier football team, ranked number four in the country with a 9-1 record in a three-way tie in the Big 10. Indiana, Purdue and Minnesota were all 6-1 in the conference, who's winner had an automatic ticket to the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. Indiana defeated Purdue. Minnesota defeated Indiana and Purdue defeated Minnesota.

The league had a no repeat rule which eliminated Purdue who played in the 1967 Rose Bowl. The league voted Indiana in over Minnesota because, in part, they were the only conference member that had yet to appear in the classic

Isenbarger was a great all around athlete out of Muncie Central High School. He had a scholarship offer to play basketball for Adolph Rupp at Kentucky. Heisman Trophy winner and broadcaster, Tom Harmon, lobbied Isenbarger to play at Michigan.

Harry Gonso of Findlay, Ohio High School and Isenbarger were sophomore phenoms at Indiana. They competed head-to-head for the quarterback job. Coach John Pont chose Gonso but moved Isenbarger to running back. Isenbarger was the punter too.

Isenbarger was named All Big 10 twice and at the time of his death was still 10th on the Hoosier's list with 1,217 yards rushing.

The dream of a conference title nearly crumbled on October 21 at Michigan. 

The Hoosiers jumped in front of the Wolverines, 20-0 but Michigan closed the gap to 20-14 and stopped the Hoosiers inside the 10 forcing a punt.

Instead, Isenbarger decided he could run for a first down. He fumbled the ball at the Indiana 16. Michigan scored a touchdown but a botched snap kept the game tied. 

Pont told Sports Illustrated it was the maddest he had been in his life. Isenbarger told his coach, “Why do I do things like that?”

The coach was so angry he pulled Isenbarger from the game, intending to leave him there until he rotted.

Michigan missed a 22-yard field goal and Indiana put a drive together. Gonso pleaded with Pont to bring Isenbarger back which he did. The near goat, scored on a one-yard run with less than two minutes left.

“It was a kind of the goat-to-hero deal,” Isenbarger said. “Had that not happened, I might never have played again.”

The rest of the season the Hoosier student section would yell, "Punt John Punt", whenever Indiana lined up in punt formation.

The Hoosiers took care of Arizona. 42-7, beat Wisconsin 14-9 and edged Michigan State on the road, 14-13, going into the key games against Minnesota and Purdue to finish the Big 10 slate.

Minnesota defended their home turf with a 33-7 drubbing on November 18. That left a game with intra state rival Purdue the defending champion. Purdue fielded what many people consider it's best team in history. The Boilermakers were led by quarterback Mike Phipps and two-way All-American, Leroy Keys. 

Indiana upset the Boilermakers 19-14 with Purdue fumbling on Indiana's the one-yard line as time expired. It was Purdue's lone loss of the season.

The Hoosiers took on the University of Southern California on New Year's day 1968. USC won 14-3.

Indiana soundly defeated Alabama 57 years later, 38-3. Fernando Mendoza, the Hoosier quarterback, became the first Indiana player to win the Heisman Trophy, picking up Gonso's legacy. Coach Curt Cignetti will lead his 15-0 team into the NCAA football finals against Miami University in Miami on January 19. The Hoosiers man handled Otegon in the Peach Bowl on January 9, 56-22. Indiana handed the Ducks both of their losses this season.

Indiana defeated Oregon in Big 10 play, 30-20 on October 11 at Oregon.

Isenbarger was the second round pick of the San Francisco 49ers in the 1970 draft. He played four seasons in the NFL. 

Sunday, December 28, 2025

Bengals Control First Half To Wing The Cardinals


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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The Cincinnati Bengals defense smothered the Arizona Cardinals in a 37-14 decision that grounded the Cardinals for the eighth straight week.

The Bengals (6-10) won for the second week in a row as their improving defense held the Cardinal (3-13) to its lowest point total of the season. 

It was the best performance by the improving Cincinnati defense which allowed 35 points or more in five games. The Baltimore Ravens scored 14 against the Bengals in a 32-14 Cincinnati triumph on November 27. The Bengals held Cleveland to 16 points on September 7. The Browns visit the Bengals next Sunday.

The Bengals improved its all-time record over the Cardinals to 8-6.

The Cardinals got a late score on an 18-yard pass from Brissett to Trey McBride to provide the final margin. McBride set the Cardinals record for receptions with his 10 catches, giving him 119 on the season. He had 76 yards receiving, leaving him 32 short of the franchise record 1,205 yards by Hall of Famer,  Jackie Smith in 1967.

"It's cool that I got the record in 16 games," McBride said. "I wish we had one the game. We need to play better as an offense. I wish I was more excited about it. Maybe after the season it will be something that I will cherish but right now, it's frustrating."

Cardinals coach Jon Gannon indicated that McBride is a light in the darkness.

"I'm really proud of him," Gannon said. "He comes to work every day. I know it is of secondary significance to him but just the season, he's had. He's the best player out there."

Brown rushed for 101 yards on 22 carries it was his seventh game in a row in which he rushed for over 100 yards. He improves to 957 yards rushing on the season. 

Jamar Chase had seven catches for 60 yards and two touchdowns. Tee Higgins, who missed a game under concussion protocol was limited to four catches for 59 yards.  

Arizona was 3-for-13 on third down while the Bengals were 10-for-15.

Gannon pointed out that was the key to the game.

"We got a couple of chances to make it a game," Gannon said. "I think it really comes down to, for me, third down. They converted a bunch. We didn't. They stayed on the field. We didn't. They scored points. We didn't. It got out of hand. We have to coach better and play better."


Arizona Cardinals Cincinnati Bengals Third Quarter Summary


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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The Cardinals did little with the second half kickoff.

They returned the kick to the 32 yard line but lost three yards on three plays. Haack punted to the Bengals 10 and Williams picked up six yards to the Bengals 21 with a penalty.

Chase Brown covered 20 yards on the 11 play, 79-yard drive that resulted in a one-yard TD run. Brown carried it across to put the Bengals up 30-7 with 7:33 on the third quarter clock.

Arizona got the ball at its own 20. The Cincinnati defense held the Cardinals to its fourth three and out in seven possessions the other two possessions were five plays.

Cincinnati began its drive on their own 18.

The Bengals scored again on a one-yard run by Brown. The Bengals took 10 plays to cover 82 yards in 4:45 with 1:38 left in the third quarter. The lead expanded to 37-7. 

The drive included a 21-yard pass from Burrow to Cody Ford, who drove to the Cardinals two.

Arizona escaped a three and out when a Bengal defender failed to get off the field in time. The Cardinals started the fourth quartee on its own 31, trailing 37-7.



Arizona Cardinals Cincinnati Bengals Second Quarter Summary


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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


Samaje Perin carried the ball into the endzone to give the Bengals a 2-for-2 in scoring possessions. The Bengals scored with two seconds elapsed to go up 14-0 on Arizona.

Arizona fought back with a 38-yard pass from Jacoby Brissett to Michael Wilson. The Cardinals drove 70 yards in five plays and took just 3:14 to pull within a touchdown at 13-7. Evan McPherson missed the extra point. 

The Bengals lost five yards on its third possession. Burrow was sacked by Calais Campbell on a third down, seven play.

The Cardinals took over at their own 33 after the 42-yard punt by Ryan Rehkow. The Cardinals third possession started with 10:14 in the first half.

The Cardinals possession stalled at the 35 yard line with the only gain a two-yard run by Roger Bacon and University of Cincinnati grad, Corey Kiner.

Arizona punter Matt Haack pinned the Bengals at the Cincinnati two with 9:09 remaining in the half.

The Bengals drove to the Cardinals 42 yard line but a pair of sacks forced the Bengals into a third and 22. Burrow found Chase Brown on a 15-yard gain to set up a 56-yard field goal by McPherson and a 16-7 Cincinnati lead with 3;21 left in the first half.

Arizona returned the kickoff to the Cardinals 27 yard line.

The Bengals forced a punt from the Arizona 29 yard line. Ke'Shawn Williams returned the kickoff to the Arizona 36 for a 43-yard return.

Cincinnati scored on a eight-yard strike with 1:15 left in the half. The Bengals navigated 36 yards in three plays. Chase Brown picked up 28 yards in two carries on the drive.

Arizona took over at their own 29 yard line trailing 23-7.

A pair of Cardinal penalties forced them to punt with 25 seconds left. The Bengals got the ball on the nine yard line with 14 seconds left. They took a knee and walked off with a 23-7 lead.

The Cardinals totaled 19 plays from scrimmage in the first half, gaining 91 yards. They had 7:49 of possession time.

The Bengals gained 230 yards on 40 plays, 74 rushing and 156 passing. The held the ball for 22:11 in the half.

Arizona will get the second half kickoff.


Arizona Cardinals Bengals First Quarter Summary


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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The Cincinnati Bengals took the opening kickoff and drove 72 yards in 12 plays to take a 7-0 lead over the Arizona Cardinals.

The drive took 5:43 off the clock. The Bengals converted on three, third down plays. Joe Burrow picked up 60 yards through the air and his backs got 12 yards on the ground during the drive.

The Cincinnati defense forced a punt from the Cardinals 41-yard line to regain possession on the Bengals 21-yard line with 7:48 to go in the first quarter. 

Burrow picked up a first down on the Arizona one-yard line on a fourth down play from the two. The Bengals started the second quarter at the Cardinals one.

The Cardinals held the ball for just 1:29 on its only possession of the quarter.


Reds Trade For Another Outfielder Dane Myers


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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The Reds added Dane Myers to their roster in a trade with the Miami Marlins for Double A outfielder, Ethan O'Donnel. Myers also plays some centerfield as does JJ Bleday signed December 27. Myers bats from the right side and Bleday from the left.

Neither are power hitters.

Myers, 29, made his first career Opening Day roster with the Marlins this past season, slashing .235/.291/.326 (72-for-307) across 106 games. Defensively, he appeared in 68 games in center field (58 starts), 31 games in right field (18 starts), and 11 games in left field (6 starts).

Prior to joining the Reds, Myers had previously spent his entire Major League career with Miami after being claimed off waivers from the White Sox on December 7, 2022. Originally selected by the Tigers in the sixth round of the 2017 first-year player draft, he made his Major League debut on July 4, 2023, and set a Marlins record by collecting 16 hits across his first 10 career games.

O'Donnell, 23, was originally selected by the Reds in the sixth round of the 2023 first-year player draft. He spent the entire 2025 campaign with AA-Chattanooga, where he slashed .236/.327/.325 in 125 games. In 2024, O'Donnell was recognized as a Midwest League All-Star for his efforts with A-Dayton.

The Reds designated for assignment RHP Lyon Richardson. 

Cincinnati's 40-player roster is at capacity.



 



Saturday, December 27, 2025

Reds Sign Left Handed Bullpen Member And Left Handed Centerfielder



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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


The Reds signed left handed relief pitcher Caleb Ferguson, who pitched for the Seattle Mariners this past postseason

Ferguson, 29, split the 2025 season between the Pirates and Mariners, pitching to a 5-4 record with a 3.58 ERA across a career-high 70 appearances. He opened the season with Pittsburgh before being traded to Seattle for RHP Jeter Martinez on July 30.

Ferguson has pitched in the Postseason in each of the last 3 years and in 4 of his 7 Major League seasons, logging a combined 12 appearances with the Dodgers (2018, '23), Astros (2024), and Mariners (2025). He did not allow a hit in any of his first 10 career Postseason outings, the second-longest streak by a Major League pitcher at any point of his career in Postseason history.

He is a workhorse filling the void left by Brent Suter’s free agency.

Since the start of the 2023 season, Ferguson's 200 appearances rank fourth among all Major League left-handed pitchers.

Originally selected by the Dodgers in the 38th round of the 2014 first-year player draft, Ferguson has pitched in parts of 7 Major League seasons with the Dodgers (2018-20, '22-23), Yankees (2024), Astros (2024), Pirates (2025), and Mariners (2025). Born in Columbus, he is a 2014 graduate of West Jefferson High School in West Jefferson, Ohio.

The team signed JJ Bleday on Saturday (December 27). He will compete with TJ Friedl for the starting centerfield job.

Bleday, 28, slashed .212/.294/.404 with 14 homers and 17 doubles across 98 games with the Athletics in 2025. He posted a .324 batting average (22-for-68) against left-handed pitching, the third-best mark among all Major League left-handed batters with at least 60 at-bats against left-handed pitchers.

In 2024, Bleday set career highs in nearly every offensive category, including games (159), batting average (.243), runs (74), hits (139), doubles (43), home runs (20), RBI (60), and walks (67). His 43 doubles that year ranked fourth in the American League and sixth in the majors.

Bleday served as the Athletics' Opening Day starter in center field in each of the last 2 years. He's appeared in 278 career games in center field, 73 in left field, and 39 in right field.

He was selected by Miami with the fourth-overall pick in the 2019 first-year player draft, Bleday has played in parts of 4 Major League seasons with the Marlins (2022) and Athletics (2023-25). A native of Danville, Pennsylvania, he played collegiately at Vanderbilt, where as a junior in 2019 he was recognized as the SEC Player of the Year after leading all Division I batters with a program-record 27 home runs.

In a corresponding move, the Reds designated RHP Keegan Thompson for assignment. Cincinnati's 40-player roster is at capacity. Thompson signed a 1-year Major League contract on November 4 of this year.





Thursday, December 25, 2025

Pete Rose Through The Eyes Of A Ten Year Old



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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

Pete Rose the rookie Redleg

Swung a very lively bat

He was proud that white C

Stitched onto his baseball hat


All of the other Redlegs

Used to laugh and call him names

Charlie Hustle

They didn’t want young Pete Rose

To take over from Blasingame


Then one sunny Tampa Day

Hutch came round to say

Pete Rose with your hustling play

You will start on opening day


And how the Reds fans loved him

As he hustled every game

Pete Rose the rookie Redleg

You’ll go to the Hall of Fame


The rhyme which roughly fits the tune of Rudolph the Rednosed Reindeer was published in a program by Reds’ PR director Hank Zureick in a program for a meeting of veteran baseball players in 1964.


A 10-year old son of one of Zureick’s many friends just made up the rhyme while playing one day and wrote it down. His father, a bartender where Zureick often ate lunch, showed it to the PR man, who liked it enough to put it in the program.


It was long forgotten with the ironic prophecy in the last line.


Pete Rose’s controversial, yet prolific baseball icon, passed away on September 30, 2024 at the age of 83. His accomplishments and controversies are well chronicled and can be found anywhere.


This is about a young fan's perspective on the Shakespearean Tragedy of Rose’s life.


A young man from Sedamsville, who was once cut from his high school team, became the “Hit King” in a story that rivals that of Shoeless Joe from Hannibal Mo in the broadway play Damn Yankees. The character, a baseball fan, who hated the New York Yankees, made a deal with the Devil to become a baseball star and defeat the Yankees.


Rose did that in 1976.


The journey to that is filled with luck, hard work and pure drama that ended when his heart stopped on Monday morning in Las Vegas.


His uncle recommended Rose, who really was not strong on pure talent. The Reds took a chance to fill its minor league roster and ended up striking gold.


The drive and ultra competitive nature that allowed him to eclipse baseball legend Ty Cobb and participate on three world champions was also his fatal flaw.


The 10-year old who penned the poem can remember where he was at key moments in the Rose saga.


He was in the stands with his family when Rose collided with Ray Fosse at home plate in the 1970 All-Star game.


He was watching on a 12” black and white TV in his college dorm when Rose and Bud Harrelson scuffled at second base in Shea Stadium because Rose’s slide was thought to be too aggressive by Harrleson.


He and a friend from college were on their way home after the 1974 tornadoes ravaged the area the night before the Opening Day game against the Atlanta Braves. The pair of students managed to elude security at the service entrance and emerge with a box seat level view of the field when Hank Aaron hit his 714th career home run that tied Babe Ruth. 


They stayed around until the 11th inning when Rose scored the winning run from second base on a wild pitch by Buzz Capra. “FROM SECOND BASE”.


He watched game six of the 1975 World Series in bits and pieces while delivering pizza in the college town. Every stop had the game on where he would watch an out or two then get back to work.


Carlton Fisk’s home run broke his heart but Rose famously told his manager Sparky Anderson, “Wasn’t that the greatest baseball game you’ve ever seen. We will win tomorrow but that was the greatest game.”


It was that competitive spirit that let him file a disheartening loss and keep his edge.


The kid watched the next night with friends. Rose’s head-first dive into third base on Joe Morgan’s hit in the top of the ninth as Ken Griffey Sr. scored the winning run, is a staple highlight of the game. Rose drove in the tying run off Roger Moret in the seventh inning.


The series clinching game in the 1976 World Series at Yankee Stadium was viewed in a group setting in the main lounge of the University student center. At least a hundred students gathered to watch it.


There was the night that Rose’s 44-game hitting streak came to an end as the long-time fan watched in his Toledo apartment.


The kid got a job and lived in Queens, New York where cable TV was three years away on the night that Rose got the hit that made him the “Hit King” off Eric Show on September 11, 1985. As fate would have it, the conditions were right to pick up the WLW broadcast in Queen’s that night from an apartment with a view of Shea Stadium. The next day he went to the news stand and bought every New York paper. It was front page news above the fold in the snooty New York Times.


As a side note the lineup that night had four players who grew up in Cincinnati, Dave Parker, Buddy Bell and Ron Oester joined by Rose.


He watched the game in his apartment on April 30, 1988 when Rose argued and bumped home plate umpire, Dave Pallone.


The kid was in Manhattan, 10 blocks from the offices of Major League Baseball when commissioner Bart Giamatti suspended Rose for life.


And finally, the full circle, the 10-year old was in the press box to witness Pete Rose Jrs, 14 big league at bats. He had two singles to give the father-son combination 4,258 hits.


It seemed like all week the adult “boy” had to defend his hero in front of Mets’ and Yankees’ fans that remembered the Harrelson scuffle and the quote battle between Rose and Thurman Munson from the ‘76 World Series. 


When Munson was compared to Rose’s teammate Johnny Bench. Rose backed manager Sparky Anderson who said,”Don’t try to compare him to Johnny Bench.” Rose praised Munson for his great 1976 World Series but took the side of his manager and teammate for the statement that hurt the Yankee’s catcher’s feelings.


The former 10-year old refused to believe the “Dowd Report” that concluded, Rose bet on baseball. His faith was shattered two decades later when Rose finally admitted that he bet on baseball albeit on his own team. It was baseball’s golden rule that he indeed violated.


The fatal flaw that compelled a competitor, idle in the off season to compete by gambling and gambling to a fault. There is the contradiction that made him infamous as a person but never did erase his on-field accomplishments.


In 1991, baseball’s Hall of Fame passed a rule post facto that a player suspended from the game could not be elected to the Hall of Fame. The edict is profoundly disingenuous with Rose memorabilia, videos and records dominating baseball’s shrine. The man who hoped to be alive and be inducted, lost that battle on Monday. It is ironic that such a winner lost the fight.


Yet there is hypocrisy on the part of Major League Baseball that can’t be overlooked as the aged 10-year old looks back. Major League baseball now promotes gambling on its sport. Once saying it was a slippery slope to let the game be in any way associated with gambling.


However, with gambling money and a drastic change in morality. Major League baseball runs ads during games for gambling sites, FanDuel and MGM Sports Betting. They plunged down that slippery slope like the kids water slide in the backyard.


Rose didn’t see the day that he had a plaque with his name on it in Cooperstown but that injustice can and should be corrected for the sake of Pete Rose Jr and daughter Fawn. 


And oh yes, the 10-year old who stands by his hope and wish that his flawed, yet human, hero is honored for eternity.



Friday, December 12, 2025

The Defection Era Of Cuban Baseball Players In Reds History



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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico

The Defection Era

Tony Menendez was born in Cuba but debuted with the Reds in 1992 after attending high school at the American High School in Miami, Florida. He pitched the first of his three games with the Reds on June 22 at the age of 27. He was 1-0 with a 1.93 ERA over 4 ⅔ innings.

Osvaldo Fernandez was a member of the Cuban national team that won a gold medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics in Barcelona. On July 29, 1995, Fernández defected when Cuba played the United States in Millington, Tennessee. He signed as a free agent with the Reds in February 2000. Fernandez started a total of 28 games in 2000 and 2001. He was 9-9 with a 5.26 ERA.

Yonder Alonso was born in Havana in 1987 and settled in Miami after his father Luis and mother Damarys defected to the US in 1996. His father coached the Industriales in the Cuban National Series. Alonso graduated from Coral Gables High School and took a baseball scholarship with the University of Miami baseball team. The Reds drafted him with their first pick in the 2008 draft. Alonso broke in with the Reds in the 2010 season. He played in 98 games in 2011 and hit .330 with five home runs. Joey Votto was the Reds’ first baseman and the Reds attempt to move Alonso to left field just didn’t work out. The Reds packaged him and fellow Cuban born, Miami player Yasmani Grandal for Mat Latos of the San Diego Padres. Alonso played 10 years with seven teams and hit .259 with 181 doubles and 100 home runs. Alonso embarked on a new career as an analyst for the MLB Network.  

Yasmani Grandal was the Reds first round pick in the 2010 draft but broke into the Major Leagues with the San Diego Padres in 2012. Grandal was born in Havana, Cuba, where he played shortstop and third base on a junior national team.[ He entered the US through a lottery system with his mother, stepfather, and maternal grandparents at age 10 through the lottery system. He entered the United States in July 1999 and became a United States citizen five years later.

Brayan Pena, a catcher, was born in Havana in 1982. He was a member of the Cuban National Junior team. He entered the US in 1999. Pena signed with the Reds as a free agent in November 2013. He caught 115 games in 2014 and 108 in 2015. The switch hitter hit .253 and .273 respectively. He signed with the St. Louis Cardinals as a free agent in November 2015.

Raisel Iglesias was born in 1990.  In September 2013, Iglesias attempted to defect from Cuba. He hid in the mountains of Isla de la Juventud, his home town, but was caught and was detained. In November of that same year, Iglesias successfully defected from Cuba. He established his residency in Haiti before holding an open tryout in Mexico in December 2013. The  right hander, signed with the Reds as an amatuer free agent in June 2014. He started 16 big league games in 2015. Iglesias was the opening day starter in 2016 but only made four more starts before moving to the bullpen. Iglesias pitched in 274 games in six seasons with the Reds. He had an 18-32 record and a 3.15 ERA. Iglesias saved 106 games before being traded to the Los Angeles Angels after the 2020 season.

Jose Iglesias born in Havana, one day after Raisel, he also defected from Cuba. With pitcher Noel Argüelles, Iglesias left the Cuban junior national team while in Canada in July 2008. Iglesias signed as an international amateur free agent with the Boston Red Sox in September 2009. He signed with the Reds as a free agent on February 23, a week into spring training. The Reds moved Jose Peraza to second base. Iglesias played in one season. He played 146 games, hit .288 with 21 doubles, four triples, 11 home runs and 59 RBI. He signed as a free agent with the Baltimore Orioles the next January. Iglesias played for the New York Mets last season and is currently a free agent.

Yasiel Puig defected from Cuba in 2012 and signed a seven-year, $42 million contract with the Dodgers. He made his MLB debut on June 3, 2013. That season, Puig hit .319 in 104 games with 19 home runs, and was selected by Baseball America to their annual "All-Rookie team". The following season, he started in the All-Star Game. The Dodgers traded Puig to the Reds before the 2019 season, and the Reds traded Puig to the Indians at the 2019 trade deadline. Longtime Dodgers broadcaster, Vin Scully, called him the “Wild Horse” and it fit the loud, emotional temperament that was difficult to manage. He played 100 games with the Reds, he hit .252 with 15 doubles, a triple, 22 home runs and drove in 61 runs.

The last two are the beginning of the modern era where leaving Cuba is not the hazard it once was. Getting Visas from the current US government is the bigger problem.

Jose Barrero is a 27-year old Havana native. He changed his name from Garcia to honor his mother who died of COVID in 2020. The Reds signed him as an international free agent in 2017. He was once a top prospect for the Reds. Barrero played 2019 with the Low-A Daytona Tortugas, appearing in 104 contests and batting .280/.343/.436 with eight home runs, 55 RBI, and 15 stolen bases. After the season, he played in the Arizona Fall League. The Reds invited Barrero to Spring Training in 2020,] but he was not immediately assigned to an affiliate after the minor league season was cancelled as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. He played 24 games in 2020 and 21 in 2021. He was set to make a bid to open the season with the Reds but Barrero would miss at least six weeks with a hamate injury in his left hand/wrist. He made his season debut on August 3. On August 6, Barrero hit his first major league home run off of Milwaukee Brewers starter Aaron Ashby. The two-run shot was part of a two-homer, three RBI game (the second homer coming off of Hoby Milner). In 48 games for the Reds, he slashed .152/.195/.206. Barrero was in the opening day lineup in 2023 but was optioned to Louisville in mid-June hitting .218 with two home runs. He resurfaced with the Cardinals last season but he was granted free agency in June and signed with the Baltimore Orioles.

Yosver Zulueta, the only current Cuban national on the Reds roster, was signed by the Toronto Blue Jays in June 2019. The Reds claimed off waivers in March 2024 because Toronto could no longer protect him. The 27-year old has been up and down with the big club the last two seasons mostly to cover for injuries or over use. He has pitched in 19 games combined the last two seasons, logging 23 ⅔ innings with a 5.32 ERA. He won his only Major League decision with ⅔ innings of scoreless relief on September 1 when the Reds rallied for three runs in the bottom of the ninth against Toronto.




Thursday, December 11, 2025

Cuban Baseball Intersects With Reds' History



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Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


The Reds released the 2026 spring training schedule that includes an exhibition game against the Cuban National team on March4 before the Cuban team opens the World Baseball Classic in Puerto Rico on March 5.

The Cuban national team has always been a top contender in international baseball competition. The Major Leagues boasted 26 players on major league rosters in 2025, the most ever from the island and more than the previous high of 23 in 2016.

Two Cubans played in the 2025 World Series. Outfielder Andy Pages for the Dodgers and Yariel Rodríguez a right handed pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays.

Cuban Players History

There are three distinct periods for Cubans who longed to play in the Major Leagues. 

The early 1900’s when Major League owners barred black players from participating. Several players from the Negro Leagues tried to get around it by claiming Cuban citizenship. Satchel Paige famously tried this angle.

The pre Castro ERA in the mid 1950’s through the revolution in 1960.

The defection era Castro’s pride in baseball played on the island allowed Cuban teams to compete internationally. It led to players abandoning their teammates and their families.

The Cuban Work Around the Color Line

Adolfo “Dolf” Luque pitched for the Reds in the 1919 World Series against the Chicago White Sox. He pitched five scoreless innings with no walks and six strikeouts in the series, (known for the Black Sox scandal. Eight Chicago players were bribed by gamblers to throw games.) Luque is in the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame. He led baseball with 27 wins and a 1.93 ERA in the 1923 season. Luque won 154 games for the Reds in 12 seasons. 

Mike Gonzalez, a catcher who played for the Reds in 1914. He hit .333 in 95 games for the Reds and managed the Havana Reds in the Cuban winter leagues.

Manuel Cueto played in 151 games for the Reds in three seasons from 1917 through the 1919 World Championship season, in which he hit .250 in 29 games.

Rafael Almeida played in a total of 102 games for the Reds at third base from 1911 through 1913 with a .270 batting average with three home runs. He also hit six triples.

Pedro Dibut, a right hander pitched in parts of 1924 and 1925. He started in two of his nine appearances with a 3-0 record and 2.21 ERA. He pitched to three batters on April 22, 2025 and never pitched another Major League game.

The Havana Sugar Kings Pipeline

The Reds have always been strapped for cash. With the reserve clause and few roster limits, the team looked to Cuba for players. Branch Ricky had more minor league teams than the Reds had funds. The New York Yankees could outbid everyone for amatuer players and stock pile them. It was a practice that shut out poor teams from signing talent. It also kept players who deserved to be in the Major Leagues a chance to compete.

The Sugar Kings began life in 1946 as the Havana Cubans, founded by Washington Senators scout Joe Cambria. That year, they (rather than a Cuban League side) represented Cuba at the inaugural Interamerican Series, the predecessor to the modern Caribbean Series.

Roberto "Bobby" Maduro bought the team during the 1953 season with aspirations of bringing Major League Baseball to Havana. After the 1953 season, the Springfield Cubs folded, leaving an opening in the Triple-A International League. Maduro moved his franchise to the IL and renamed it the Sugar Kings. After playing the 1954 season as an independent club, the franchise signed an agreement with the Cincinnati Reds for the 1955 season and the Sugar Kings became Cincinnati's top farm club for the remainder of their existence. When Castro nationalized businesses in Cuba, Maduro moved the team to Jersey City.

Tommy de la Cruz pitched in 34 games, 20 starts in 1944. He had a 9-9 record with a 3.25 ERA. De la Cruz's big break was World War II. On September 16, de la Cruz pitched a one-hitter, the first ever pitched in the major leagues by a Latin American pitcher—against the Pittsburgh Pirates, winning 2–1. 

Leo Cardenas, the Reds shortstop from 1960 through 1968, had a double in three at bats against the New York Yankees in the 1961 World Series. He still lives in Cincinnati today and at the age of 86, the native of Matanzas Cuba, attends Reds events. He played for the Sugar Kings before playing for the Reds. Cardenas was a National League All-Star in 1964, 1965, 1966 and 1968. He hit 20 home runs in 1966 and had a career-high .287 batting average in 1965.  

Tony Perez, a key player for the Big Red Machine, is the only Cuban native in the National Baseball Hall of Fame. He immigrated to the United States in 1960 and played in the Reds minor leagues along with Pete Rose and Tommy Helms. He made his debut with the Reds on July 26, 1964 and played for 16 seasons with the Reds. Perez, known as “Doggie" or the “Big Dog” was an All-Star seven times, 1967, 1968, 1969, 1970, 1974, 1975 and 1976. He was the All-Star MVP in 1967. Perez finished third in the National League behind teammate Johnny Bench and the Cubs Billy Williams in 1970. That season he posted career-highs with a .317 batting average, 40 home runs and 129 RBI.

The native of Camaguey, Cuba, played in four World Series with the Reds, hitting three home runs in the 1975 World Series win against the Boston Red Sox, including the key home run in game seven that put the Reds on the scoreboard in a 3-0 game the Reds eventually won. 

Perez left Cincinnati after that season and played for the Montreal Expos, the Boston Red Sox and the Philadelphia Phillies (he played in the 1980 WS) before returning to the Reds in 1984 to finish his playing career on October 5, 1986. He coached first base for the Reds and was the Reds’ manager for 44 games in 1993. His son Eduardo played three seasons for the Reds.

Mike Cuellar joined the Reds from the Sugar Kings in 1959. His three brothers worked in the sugar fields. Cuellar joined the Army, allowing him to play baseball on weekends. He pitched two games with the Reds in 1959. He pitched four innings in two games and allowed seven runs. The Reds lost track of him and he struggled playing minor league baseball in Nicaragua and Mexico for five years, Teammate Ruben Gomez taught him to throw a screwball and he resurfaced in 1964 with the Cardinals. They traded him to Houston, who dealt him to Baltimore where he became a star. Starting in 1969 Cuellar won 23,24,20,18,18 and 22 in straight seasons. His 24 wins and 40 starts in 1970 led the majors. He completed 172 games over 15 years.

Miguel de la Hoz played in one game for the Reds in 1969 after being a starter for the Cleveland Indians and a utility player for the Braves in Milwaukee and Atlanta.

Tony Gonzalez broke in with the Reds in 1960 as part of the Havana Sugar Kings pipeline along with Cardenas, Cuellar and Perez. He played 39 games with the Reds in 1960 before he was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies for Wally Post, who was a key player for the 1961 Reds.

Vicente Armor, a right hander, broke in with the Chicago Cubs in 1955. He appeared in four games for the Reds, starting four of them. He had a 1-2 record with a 5.92 ERA. Amor started four games for the Reds in 1957. 

Raul Sanchez pitched for the Reds in 1957 and 1960. He appeared in 46 games over those two seasons, all in relief.

Danny Morejon played 12 games for the Reds in the outfield in 1958. He hit .190.

Orlando Pena started his 14-year career with the Reds in 1958. In his three seasons with the Reds, Pena was 6-10 with a 4.27 ERA in 59 games. He appeared in 427 big league games with eight teams. Pena started 93 games. He had a career 3.27 ERA and a 56-77 record. He also saved 40 games.

Rogelio Alvarez played first base for the Reds in 17 total games during the 1960 and 1962 seasons. He hit .189.

Joe Azcue broke in with the Reds in 1960. He caught in 14 games for the Reds that season and hit .097. The Milwaukee Braves purchased his contract that winter and traded him to the Kansas City Athletics where he started a 10-year career in the American League in 1962. He played seven seasons in Cleveland.

Hiraldo Sablon “Chico” Ruiz started his career with the Reds in 1964. He played a utility role with the Reds and famously said, “bench me or trade me,” in jest after he started  64 games of his career-high 105 to cover injuries to Tommy Helms, including 31 in a row. In his six seasons with the Reds through 1969, Ruiz hit .239 in 466 games. Ruiz stole home with Frank Robinson at bat to beat the Philadelphia Phillies on September 21. It was the only run in a 1-0 game. Ruiz was on third base with two outs in the sixth inning after a single by Vada Pinson. Pinson was thrown out at second trying for a double. He stole home. Robinson had no idea he was coming. Robinson grounded out to end the inning. The game was the second win in a nine-game winning streak that saw the Reds erase a 6 ½ game lead to take over the NL lead from the Phillies on September 27. 

Camilo Pascual was a 20-game winner for the Minnesota Twins in 1962 (20) and 1963 (21). He pitched in five games for the Reds in 1969 with one start.

Pedro Ramos pitched for the franchise that was the Washington Senators in 1955 and moved to Minnesota to become the Twins in 1961. Ramos led the American League in losses from 1958 through 1961. He had a high of 20 losses in 1961. Ramos pitched for the Reds in 38 games in 1969. He was 4-3 with a 5.16 ERA. He also saved two games. The Reds were the only team among the six that he played for which he had a winning record. Ramos lost a total of 160 games while winning 117 in his 15-year career. However, he logged 2,355 ⅔ innings, including the 66 ⅓ in a Reds’ uniform. He led the American League in hits allowed, 277 and runs allowed 222 in 1958.

Infielder Cookie Rojas played for the Sugar Kings in 1959. He also started the season with them but left Havana after Castro took over in January of that year. Rojas was with the team when it moved to New Jersey.. He broke in with the Reds in 1962, joining the defending National League champions. Rojas hit .229 in 39 games for the Reds. Rojas was traded to the Philadelphia Phillies for pitcher Jim Owens in November. He played for the Phillies, Kansas City Royals and briefly with the St. Louis Cardinals over a 16-year career. Rojas played in 1,822 games and had a .263 career average. In 1988 after a long stint as a coach at Kansas City, he managed the California Angels and had a 75-79 record before he was fired. Rojas managed the Florida Marlins for one game in 1996 between Rene Lachemann and John Boles. He won that game.


Reds Spring Training Tickets Go On Sale December 12


Also  Follow Reds on https://athlonsports.com/


Dateline: 1,209 Kilometers from the Gulf of Mexico


Reds 2026 Spring Training tickets on sale tomorrow

Cactus League games start February 21 at Goodyear Ballpark in Arizona

Single-game tickets for Cincinnati Reds Spring Training home games will go on sale Friday, Dec. 12, at Noon EST (10 a.m. MST) at reds.com/spring. 

reds.com/spring

The Reds open 2026 Cactus League play on Saturday, Feb. 21 vs. the Cleveland Guardians at Goodyear Ballpark.

The Reds are scheduled to play 17 games at Goodyear Ballpark, including a World Baseball Classic exhibition vs. Cuba and two games as the visiting team against the Guardians. 

Highlights of the 2026 season at Goodyear Ballpark: 

• Opening Day - Saturday, Feb. 21 vs. Cleveland Guardians (2026 Schedule Magnet)

• Monday, March 2 vs. Chicago Cubs 

• Wednesday, March 4 vs. Cuba (World Baseball Classic exhibition) 

• Thursday, March 5 vs L.A. Dodgers 

• Tuesday, March 17 vs. Cleveland (St. Paddy’s Day Pint Glass)

• Sunday, March 22 vs Cleveland (Ace Stress Ball/Fan Appreciation Day)

For the full spring training schedule and additional details on Single-Game Tickets, Season Ticket Packages, Mini Plans and Group Tickets, visit GoodyearBP.com or reds.com/Spring.

Schedule and promotions are subject to change.