
Dateline: Cincinnati
Chase Burns, the franchise, kept the Reds’ heads above water fashioning a 4-1 win over the Philadelphia Phillies.
It snapped a five-game winning streak the Phillies built.
The Reds keep their heads above water at 25-24. The Phillies have an identical 25-24 record.
Trea Turner hit his fifth home run of the season with two outs in the third to break a scoreless tie.
Elly De La Cruz opened the fourth with a triple off Luzardo. Spencer Steer hit a high chop over the mound. Bryson Stott fielded it but De La Cruz held and no one covered first. Sal Stewart walked after getting a called strike three overturned. Dane Myers flied out foul to Aroldis Garcia in the right field corner. De La Cruz scored the others moved up. JJ Bleday hit a sacrifice fly to put the Reds in front, 2-1.
The Reds got no big hits in situations that could have broken the game open, testing Burns’ resolve.
The Reds loaded the bases with no outs for the second time in the seventh against Tanner Banks. JJ Bleday doubled to open the frame. Blake Dunn, among the fastest players in the Reds organization, beat out a ground ball to first base. The ball was thrown behind the pitcher covering an the Reds had runners on second and third with no outs. Tyler Stephenson, who reached base all for trips to the plate, walked to load the bases. Ke’Bryan Hayes, who hit into two double plays, hit a slow roller to drawn in Edmundo Sosa at shortstop to force Bleday at the plate. Matt McLain, facing Jonathan Bowlan hit a check swing slow roller to Brice Harper at first base. Harper threw home to attempt the force out on Dunn. His speed made it close and home plate umpire Will Little called him out on a close play. Manager Terry Francona challenged and the call was overturned. De La Cruz walked to force in the final run of the game.
The Reds were 2-for-9 with runners in scoring position but neither of the hits drove in a run. All four runs were driven in by players who did not get a hit. There were two sacrifice flies, a fielder’s choice and a walk to drive in runs.
Burns retired the last 10 batters he faced, five of them struck out. Two of them took called third strikes after successful challenges by Stephenson.
Burns allowed three hits and no walks in six innings. He struck out nine to match his season high. His record improved to 6-1 with a 1.83 ERA.
The Reds’ bullpen has been a mess for two weeks but this game they were nearly perfect. Pierce Johnson walked Alec Bohm but retired the next three, one on a diving catch of Garcia’s line drive by McLain and the other two by strikeout.
Sam Moll pitched a perfect eighth.
Tony Santillan, who had a tough loss on a blown save against the Washington Nationals, completed his second save of the year. One on a foul out to the speedy Dunn, who made a great running catch in foul territory. Harper struck out swinging. Bohm ended the game charged with a strikeout when another Stephenson challenged resulted in an overturned ball call to seal the Reds’ win.
It was a bad night for Little. He was overturned with an out call at home. Stephenson challenged three ball calls that were overturned. Stewart got one strike call overturned but lost another challenge. Garcia got a strike call overturned for the Phillies.
