
Dateline: Cincinnati
Spencer Steer hit a two-run home run and Elly De La Cruz drove in four runs to send the Reds to a 7-2 win over the Colorado Rockies to open the three game series.
Two players were happy to see Kyle Freeland come off the injured list to make his 10th career start against the Reds. Freeland himself and Spencer Steer
"We try to keep the same mentallity," De La Cruz said. "We play to win. We want to keep it that way. The work I put in the off season was to be healthy to be able to play everyday. I feel pretty good. I feel pretty comfortable at the plate."
Steer belted his fifth home run of the season to allow the Reds to stake Chase Burns to a 3-0 lead. His home run was the third he's hit off Freeland in the nine at bats he faced him.
De La Cruz didn't shed a tear either. He came into the game with three singles and six at bats against the veteran left hander.
"Right handed he has been so much better," Francona said. "You've heard me say and I'll say it again, when you drive the ball the other way, you're fundamentally very sound. He and Sal are strong enough when they hit the ball the other way, they get rewarded."
Dane Myers walked to open the Reds half of the first. He moved to second when second baseman Edouard made a sliding stop on Matt McLain's bullet up the middle. De La Cruz got jammed but placed the bloop just beyond the reach of first baseman, Troy Johnston. Cruz stole second while Sal Stewart was at the plate. After a pop out to second base, Steer reached the left field stands to score two runs.
Burns struck out three batters in the first inning after walking Julien leading off. He gave up a leadoff single in a scoreless second inning but gave up a leadoff home run to Julien in the third, his second of the season. T.J Brumfeld open the fourth with a double but De La Cruz short hopped a high bouncer over the head of Ke'Bryan Hayes at third base and made an acrobatic throw to Stewart, who scouped to ball in time to nip Tyler Freeman at first.
"I just wanted to catch the ball and make a play," De La Cruz said. "It was a high bounce so I was able to see it. You have to throw. If you don't throw, you're not going to make an out."
De La Cruz may not have been impressed with himself but veteran manager, Terry Francona was.
"That play he made to his right was a physically as an impressive play as you're ever going to see," Francona said. "I thought the play that may have been more impressive was the double play ball because that ball probably should have hit him in the Adam's Apple."
The Reds got the the run back in the bottom of the third. Myers singled and stole second. De La Cruz made it 5-for-8 against Freeland with a line drive up the middle to drive in his second run of the game.
Jake McCarthy bunted for a single with one out in the fifth. He stole second and scored on Julien's second hit a solid single.
Burns pitched out of another jam in the sixth. Rumfield singled to become the fifth lead off man to reach in six innings. Stewart alertly took out the lead runner after fielding a hard bunt by Freeman. Johnston doubled but Burns recorded his ninth strike out with Kyle Karros and got Tovar on a fly to right.
"I told Sal that was a great play after the inning," Hayes said. "He's has a great internal clock."
Burns finished with six innings, allowing two runs on seven hits and a walk and nine strikeouts.
"You're trying to go as far as possible. You kind of get fatigued out there so you take it pitch by pitch," Burns said. "When they start making better contact, you bear down and make sure you locate. DJ and I talk about it all the time, just staying in tune and staying in my breath. I try to slow the game down mentally."
"He left a couple sliders that they hit," Francona said. "But when they had a couple runners in scoring position even when we played back, he took it upon himself to go for the strikeout. He reached back and threw some really good sliders."
Graham Ashcraft, first "Grindstone Cowboy" to relieve in the seventh inning. He gave up Julien's third hit and a single by Micky Moniak with to put runners on the corners with one out. Hunter Goodman hit into a 6-4-3 double play.
Tony Santillan entered in the eighth. He allowed a two-out walk and a single but struck out Tovar to send the game to the eighth.
Tanner Gordon pitched two scoreless innings for Colorado but ran out of gas in the eighth.
Myers infield single allowed him to reach base for the third time. De La Cruz hit his 10th home run of the season to the opposite field to increase the margin. He matched Tony Perez as the only Reds' player to hit 10 home runs by May 1. Stewart hit a ground rule double to right center and scored on Nathaniel Lowe's single.
Brock Burke pitched the ninth in a non-save situation with three left handed batters due up. He struck out the last two batters to nail it down. He dropped his ERA to 0.63.
The Reds are 15-1 when they lead after six innings and 14-0 when they lead after seven innings.
