
Dateline: Cincinnati
Spencer Steer broke up a scoreless game with his 14th home run and Nick Lodolo kept the Baltimore Orioles off the board for five innings as the Reds took a 3-1 decision.
The win avoided a sweep and stopped the Reds six game losing streak at home.
Kyle Bradish retired the first 12 Reds of the game but walked Eugenio Suarez to start the fifth in front of Spencer Steer’s 14th home run.
Bradish (5-9) pitched 7 ⅔ innings, allowing five hits and one walk. He struck out five.
Rookie All-Star, Sal Stewart doubled home Edwin Arroyo to knock Bradish out of the game. Stewart has 61 RBI, tied for seventh in baseball and the most by a rookie this season. He is tied for 10th with 21 doubles, also the most by a rookie.
"That was huge for us. I'm glad we got that extra run," Terry Francona said.
Lodolo’s string of 14 scoreless innings ended in the sixth inning. Taylor Ward doubled and scored on a single by Coby Mayo with two outs.
"I thought his stuff was crisp. He got a lot of quick outs," Francona said. "It is a combination of throwing the ball over the plate and them not wanting to get in a hole so the ambush the first pitch. The last inning was a long one for him but up to that point he was really economical."
He walked two to load the bases but he struck out Jeremiah Jackson to complete the inning.
"You definitely get tired but you have to bear down and make some pitches to get out of that," Lodolo said. "The game could get sideways on you there. I threw a good slider to Jackson there. It definitely feels good."
Brock Burke relieved Lodolo in the seventh with his 44th appearance, tied for second most in baseball. He pitched a perfect seventh and turned the game over to Tejay Antone, who pitched a scoreless eighth.
Lodolo (3-2) pitched six innings, allowing one run on six hits. He walked two and struck out four.
"It was the best count control, the first pitch strikes to set me up to get quick outs," Lodolo. "We have to go deeper in the game and count control will help us to that. Count leverage gives me a chance to do more things I want to do."
Emilio Pagan, the Reds closer, got his first save chance since, May 4 after missing 46 games with a strained left hamstring. The Orioles loaded the bases with two walks and Blaze Alexander's third hit of the game. Henderson hit a sacrifice fly to left to cut the lead to one before All-Star Adley Rutschman lined out to end the threat. Pagan earned his seventh save in 10 chances.
"It feels better that we got the win. I had an idea my first save opportunity would be something like that," Pagan said. "It hasn't been easy for us. It is human nature to want to come back and have an impact. It wasn't pretty by any means but I'm happy I got the job done."
It was Pagan's first save since April 17 and it was not easy.
"I feel good. My delivery feels good. It will be easier," Pagan said. "It is the same thing I say all the time. I try to remind myself. I need one good pitch. I go one pitch at a time. I'm one good breaking ball away from a double play or one good fastball away for a pop up and kind of wipe away all their momentum."
It was a relief to Francona, who has seen a lot of leads disappear late in the game.
"It was getting a little iffy. There was one pitch that Stevo (Tyler Stephenson) and I'm glad he challenged but it was a hair off," Francona said. "I thought 'please don't hurt us now' but I think he held his stuff pretty good. He stayed at it. One thing about him. I think he kind of enjoys being out there. He's not going to back away. He said the next one will be easy. I believe him."


Sal Stewart hit a ground rule double off Brandon Young and scored on Eugenio Suarez single to center. TJ Friedl tripled to tie the game. Elly De La Cruz put the Reds ahead.