
Dateline: Cincinnati
Alex Bregman took out a season of frustration out on the Reds this weekend, closing out the first half with an 8-4 win over the Reds.
It is the sixth win in seven games for the Cubs against the Reds. The Reds limp into the break with a 43-52, the season low point at nine games under .500.
The Cubs finish the first half with a 54-42 record, 10 1/2 games ahead of the Reds, who have dropped 22 of 18 games against National League Central Division rivals.
"It is always big when they score after you take the lead. I know it happens but when you score, you've got to shut them down," Terry Francona said. "The guys need to get away and rejuvenate. Our record certainly anywhere near what we want it to be. We know that. Still, it's a good group and they play hard. They're exhausted. This will be good for them."
Andrew Abbott walked Pete Crow-Armstrong to start the game. The Cubs center fielder stole second and raced to third on a fly out to center by Seiya Suzuki. Alex Bregman lofted a bloop into shallow center field with the infield playing in. Spencer Steer making his second start, ever in center got a glove on it but couldn't catch it. Michael Busch doubled off the base of the right field fence for an RBI double.
Walks have haunted Abbott all season. He has walked four per game and 10.3 percent of batter faced. It is worse than his rookie campaign which was 3.6 per game and 9.6 percent. Those numbers improved each year until this season.
The Reds tied and passed the Cubs in the bottom of the third against Matthew Boyd. Ke'Bryan Hayes singled on the first pitch of the inning. Elly De La Cruz forced him at second just beating the relay from Nico Hoerner. Sal Stewart hit his 22nd double of the season with De La Cruz holding third.
Stewart is for off the pace of the Major League lead in doubles and it is the most by a rookie.
Steer grounded out to shortstop as De La Cruz scored. JJ Bleday singled to left to tie the game and went to second on the throw home. Eugenio Suarez hit his 11th home run of the season into the upper deck in left to give the Reds a 4-2 lead.
It was Suarez' 200th home run of the list. He is 11th on the Reds list. Eric Davis is 10th with 203.
Walks spooked Abbott again. He walked Carson Kelly. Busch hit his second double in nearly the same spot of his first. Hoerner grounded out to Edwin Arroyo behind second base. For some unknown reason Kelly held third as Hoerner was retired. Abbott loaded the bases when he walked Ian Happ. Dansby Swanson struck out swinging. Kevin Alcantara hit a ground ball up the middle with Arroyo poised to field it but the ball hit second base and bounded into center for a game tying, two-run single. Crow-Armstrong was ruled safe on a ground ball to Arroyo but instead of putting the Cubs up a run, Crow-Armstrong was called out after a Reds' challenge.
"We had some walks. We started the inning. We were unlucky with the ball hitting the base but if we don't have the walks it doesn't matter," Francona said. "Command was a challenge for him. He was at 79 pitches after four. That's a lot. When you see four straight fastballs missing the zone, that's when he's not feeling his best."
The Cubs have 417 walks as a team the most in Major League Baseball.
"They're a good group. We got unlucky there with a bad bounce. It was the third time through the lineup. We were looking for matchups," Abbott said. "I was trying to keep us in the game. With 79 or 80 pitches it saps you of your energy."
In his last start Abbott didn't walk anyone.
"I fell behind some guys. I started nibbling, like my dad would say. I don't want to make a mistake and throw it right down the middle," Abbott said. "I think it is a testament to who they are too. They never come off their approach. They're going to make you throw strikes. They don't chase a lot either. You saw what Hunter (Greene) and (Nick) Lodolo did. They didn't fall behind. I fell behind and really had to grind to get them out."
Chase Petty, called up today when Nick Lodolo was placed on the injured list with a blister, relieved Abbott.
Abbott pitched four innings, allowed four runs on four hits and a costly three walks. He struck out three.
Petty pitched two scoreless innings but left after a leadoff double by Dansby Swanson in the seventh. Sam Moll came on to strike out pinch hitter Pedro Ramirez. Crow-Armstrong singled to put the Cubs ahead 5-4. Suzuki reached on an infield single.
Pierce Johnson relieved Moll.
Alex Bregman hit a three-run home run his ninth of the season to extend the Cubs lead to 8-4. It was his second home run in two days.
"We didn't get the guys out that we were supposed to," Francona said.
