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Dateline: Cincinnati
The Reds walked to a victory 7-3 over the Los Angeles Angels.
Struggling at the plate the Reds were gifted nine walks to supplement their nine hits, three by Elly De La Cruz.
The Reds came into the game with a Major League low .160 batting average with runners-in-scoring-position but improved that with a still paltry 2-for-10 fortunately Nathaniel Lowe drove in three runs with one of those. Sal Stewart had the other. Both were in the first inning.
The Reds took advantage rookie right hander George Klassen's wild side. Klassen helped the Reds with three walks. De La Cruz singled Spencer Steer, who walked, to third base with one out. De La Cruz stole second. Sal Stewart handcuffed first baseman Nolan Schanuel with a bouncing ball of his glove. It was ruled a hit and Steer scored. Eugenio Suarez walked. Nathaniel Lowe doubled past first base into the right field corner. All three runners scored. Tyler Stephenson walked as Lowe went to third on a wild pitch. Noelvi Marte hit into a fielder's choice as Lowe was thrown out at home. Ke' Bryan Hayes grounded out to end the inning.
"It let us play with a little room to breath and we needed it," Terry Francona said. "It was a big swing to clear the bases."
Lowe was in the lineup actually giving Matt McLain a rest with Stewart playing second base.
"I was looking for a pitch to do damage with. I found one good enough and it found a hole. You can't think about struggling. You have to think about the task at hand. The team is still trying to find an identity. It's April 11th, right? The last I checked we've got a lot of leeway ahead of us. I'm confident in this group. We're going to bust out. We're going to get consistent and we're going to like the results a lot."
Brandon Williamson walked two batters in the second inning but a double play, De La Cruz to Stewart to Lowe freed him from trouble.
Steer lined a pitch off the left field foul pole in the second inning off Klassen. It was Steer's second home run of the season. He has been hitting the ball hard the last few games but without many hits. He was at .182 to start the game.
"Spence is going to be just fine," Francona said. "We saw him last year start out so slow and look what he did." Steer ended up with a .238 average with 21 home runs and 75 RBI.
"It's part of the process, not getting too wraped up in results," Steer said. "If you worry about results this game will eat you alive. It's natural to try harder when you're struggling but I don't really see that from many guys. I think we've done a good job of battling and keep going."
The Angels loaded the bases with no outs in the third. Zach Neto singled. Mike Trout walked andJo Adell was hit by a pitch. Williamson struck out Jorge Soler. Schanuel grounded out to shortstop as Neto scored. Vaughn Grissom flied out to left.
Williamson's lack of command cost him two runs in the fourth. He walked Yoan Moncada and Neto. Trout delievered them with a double to cut the Reds lead, 5-3
Klassen left the game with a contusion to his index finger. Former Red Brent Suter took over. Suter held the Reds four 3 2/3 innings to keep the Angels within reach.
Connor Phillips walked two more batters bringing eight but was bailed out by Pierce Johnson, who pitched an inning and 2/3 before turning the game over to Graham Aschcraft. Johnson was given credit for the win by the official scorer since Williamson failed to go five innings.
"I thought Pierce Johnson really calmed it down," Francona said. "Willy (Williamson) had six walks. Connor came in and had a couple. Pierce came in and really slowed it down."
"We did some good things because we had to. Walking that many people doesn't lend itself to a crisp game. Fortunately, we caught the ball and turned some double plays."
Tony Santillan entered the game in the eighth. Logan O'Hoppe swung at strike three. The ball bounced off the signs behind home plate, directly back to Stephenson. O'Hoppe was ruled safe at first by the first base umpire Ben May but called out for running inside the baseline by home plate umpire, Adam Beck. Angels manager Kurt Suzuki was ejected for strongly debating the ruling.
Santillan gave up a single to Schanuel but Hayes quickly turned a key double play.
By the time Emilio Pagan was ready to come into the game the Reds expanded their lead to four runs.
Angels reliever did a fine job holding the Reds on one hit, De La Cruz second double of the game but Marte singled in the ninth. With two outs acting manager John Gibbons brought in Chase Silseth, who couldn't find the plate either. Marte advanced to second on a ground ball and scored on two wild pitches. Friedl, defensive replacement Matt McLain. De La Cruz and Stewart resembled a parade as all three walked. Friedl scored on Silseth's third wild pitch of the inning.
Pagan pitched a scoreless ninth but evened the gifts by walking Trout in a hitless, scoreless ninth inning.
The Angels also took nine walks but had just five hits.