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Game 140: Reds vs. Blue Jays (6:40 PM ET) – Littell vs. Bieber

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It’s go-time for the Cincinnati Reds, who’ll merely be a .500 club if they lose today’s series finale to the Toronto Blue Jays.

Zack Littell gets the start, and first pitch is set for 6:40 PM ET.

Lineups below. Go Reds!

Today’s Lineups​

George Springer – LFTJ Friedl – CF
Addison Barger – RFNoelvi Marte – RF
Vladimir Guerrero – DHElly De La Cruz – SS
Bo Bichette – SSAustin Hays – LF
Daulton Varsho – CFGavin Lux – DH
Alejandro Kirk – CSpencer Steer – 1B
Ty France – 1BKe’Bryan Hayes – 3B
Andres Gimenez – 2BJose Trevino – C
Ernie Clement – 3BMatt McLain – 2B
Shane Bieber – RHPZack Littell – RHP
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BLUE JAYS​
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REDS​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-threads/48525/shane-bieber-vs-cincinnati-reds-toronto-blue-jays
 
Scouring the Cincinnati Reds roster for key 2026 pieces

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With just 22 games remaining in the 2025 regular season, the Cincinnati Reds are flat at .500.

They sit an alarming 16 games back of the Milwaukee Brewers for the division lead in the NL Central, and are 6 games back of the 2nd place Chicago Cubs. Meanwhile, their wanting pursuit of an NL Wild Card spot as a route to the playoffs sees them 5 games behind the New York Mets for the final spot (the Mets being behind both the Cubs and San Diego Padres), while the San Francisco Giants have leapfrogged the Reds in said chase, too.

The prospects for the 2025 playoffs are grim. FanGraphs has them at just 2.5% as of this morning, and even that feels incredibly optimistic. This season, I’m afraid, is just about on ice.

That may change with a miracle. What won’t, though, will be the emphasis placed on future seasons by this franchise’s front office, a group perpetually chasing persistent mediocrity in lieu of actually putting together a team that wins anything. With that in mind, here’s an early look at what pieces the Reds will likely still be leaning on come March 2026 that are already in-house (barring any significant dealing). I’ve provided some very rough estimates of what those players will be earning in salary for 2026, too.

Starting Rotation​


Hunter Greene is under team control through 2029, and all signs point to him returning to anchor the team’s rotation next year. He’ll earn $8.33 million, per his contract terms.

Brady Singer will be in his final year of team control, and will likely chomp innings in the middle of the rotation (unless the Reds deal him and replace him for cheaper). He’ll earn a raise on his 2025 salary of $8.75 million in his final arbitration year, likely making in the ~$10.5 million range.

Nick Lodolo, barring further blister outbreak, will occupy a big part of the team’s rotation, too. He’s earning just a hair under $2 million in his first arbitration year in 2025 and will easily double that for his 2026 salary his second trip through the arb process, likely pushing ~$5 million after his excellent 2025 work.

Andrew Abbott will be back as a cog in the team’s rotation, the lefty slated to still be pre-arb and making just about league minimum again in 2026.

Chase Burns will still be earning roughly the league minimum in 2026, and the hope is that he jumps right into a prominent role in the rotation from day one.

In a similar vein, Rhett Lowder will be back on a near minimum salary, and the hope is that his arm is fully recovered to the point where he’s impactful in the rotation from day one.

Chase Petty won’t turn 23 until April of 2026. He got hammered hard in his debut this season and likely is on the outside looking in, though he’s surely still part of the team’s plans for some point of 2026.

Brandon Williamson, who’s been out all season after recovering from Tommy John surgery, will be another option for a rotation spot. The same can be said for Julian Aguiar all around – and both will still be making roughly league minimum.

Carson Spiers, meanwhile, underwent Tommy John surgery just this July, and odds are he’ll miss the bulk of the 2026 campaign while recovering, too.

Former starting options like Graham Ashcraft, Lyon Richardson, and Connor Phillips are all under team control in their pre-arb years in 2026, though all look set for relief roles going forward.

Each of Nick Martinez, Wade Miley, and Zack Littell will be free agents at the end of the 2025 season.

If the Reds stay in-house with a five-man rotation that features all the players making over league minimum (and is rounded out by some combination of the league-minimum options listed above), they’ll have nearly $25.5 million alotted to their starting rotation.

Bullpen​


We should start with the departures here, since they’re significant not only in terms of roster numbers, but also in terms of salary numbers. In other words, in no world do I anticipate the Reds trying to complete their 2026 Opening Day bullpen simply by staying in-house, so there will be significant money needed to invest in this part of the roster from outside.

Emilio Pagan, Scott Barlow, Martinez, and Brent Suter will potentially be free agents, though the Reds do hold a $3 million team option on Suter. That’s a combined 168 relief appearances and a little over $34 million in total salary obligations for the 2025 roster.

As for the in-house options who the Reds will control in 2026, Tony Santillan will still be earning roughly league minimum as a key piece, as will Ashcraft. Richardson and Phillips, as mentioned earlier, likely have their names pencilled in as pre-arb pieces earning league-minimum, too.

Ian Gibaut, if healthy, will be controlled in his second year of arbitration, and could potentially serve as a bulk-inning setup guy again. His salary will be ever so slightly higher than the $800K he earned in 2025, his first arbitration year.

Sam Moll will earn a slight raise on his $1.01 million 2025 salary in his second arbitration year and likely profiles as one of the team’s go-to lefties. Reiver Sanmartin, who was recently added back to the roster and then quickly demoted, is another lefty option – he’s still going to be pre-arb.

Hard-throwing rookies Luis Mey and Zach Maxwell figure to feature in the bullpen in some form or fashion in what will be their second season as big leaguers, both of whom will still be on league-minimum salaries.

Yosver Zulueta will be out of options in 2026 but still earning league minimum, should the Reds keep him around.

It’s an incredibly cheap bunch that’s still around, but that’s not nearly enough arms to flesh out an entire bullpen for a season. There will be significant additions in some form or fashion.

Catcher​


The Reds sought out Jose Trevino, traded for him, and promptly signed him to an extension last offseason. He’ll be making $5.25 million in 2026 and will feature prominently behind the plate.

Tyler Stephenson, meanwhile, enters his final season of team control in 2026 and will earn a raise on his $4.92 million 2025 salary. The Reds face a critical decision with him, as he’s once again flashed brilliance at times while also a) being banged up a bunch and b) largely underperforming all peak expectations. If they aren’t going to sign him to an extension, well, this winter would be the time to trade him and move on. However…

Will Banfield isn’t exactly a viable alternative, and he’s next up on the depth chart. If the Reds were to move on from Stephenson, they’d need to find another catcher capable of playing significant time, since their best prospect behind the plate – Alfredo Duno – is still years away from the bigs.

Infield​


Sal Stewart just got here and looks like he’ll be here for awhile, though where he plays is still very much TBD. The quickest path, I’d say, is to be the team’s regular 1B.

That leaves Spencer Steer in a bit of a questionable spot, though his versatility does make him look like a pretty great utility option if the Reds choose to use him that way. He’s only been good for a 93 OPS+ since the start of last year with a .402 SLG, which isn’t good enough for a corner infielder who’s also not an elite defender, and he’s going to get a raise in his first trip through arbitration this winter.

Elly De La Cruz is the team’s star, even though he’s disappointed greatly in this season’s second half. His defense at SS has been bad at crucial moments even though, on the whole, he’s an incredibly talented defender out there. I doubt the Reds move him off the position this winter, and he’s not yet arb-eligible until 2027.

Ke’Bryan Hayes looks like he’s going to be the everyday 3B now that his bat has shown up enough to match his elite glove skills. He’s under contract through at least 2029 and will make $7 million in 2026.

Matt McLain has been brutal this year, but at least he’s slightly heated up lately – since July 31st, he’s hit .277/.323/.398 in 95 PA (26 G). Of course, that’s come with a bit less than regular playing time while also having Stewart promoted to potentiall eat into his playing time, but maybe it’s competition that he needs to get him back in gear. He’s going to keep getting time at 2B (and maybe at SS a little) because his glove is elite, and he’s not yet arb-eligible until 2027 – so he’s still dirt cheap.

Gavin Lux hasn’t really been an infielder at all of late, but that’s where he came up (and probably should be) so he’s listed here. He’ll be in his final year of team control in 2026 earning a raise off his $3.33 million 2025 salary

Santiago Espinal is a dugout favorite, for whatever reason, and is earning $2.4 million this year with his final arbitration year set for 2026. I would non-tender him, though the affinity for what he does sincerely makes me wonder if the Reds will bring him back to do so once again.

Christian Encarnacion-Strand won’t be arb-eligible until 2027, and it remains to be seen just how much, if at all, he’s in the Reds plans going forward after struggling once again at the plate in 2025. They did experiment with getting him some time at 3B again, so perhaps there’s just enough defensive versatility for him to be a bench guy, though I doubt that’s what they have in mind. Tyler Callihan, though, could be that bench guy should his surgically repaired arm have him back to 100% by next spring. He’s pre-arb.

Connor Joe will likely be non-tendered after making $1 million in his first year of arbitration, but he does have a pair of options left should the Reds choose to bring him back at roughly the same cost.

Miguel Andujar is a free agent at season’s end.

Outfield​


Noelvi Marte made the move to RF when Hayes was acquired at the deadline and he’s been the best Reds hitter ever since. He looks like a cornerstone the way he did before his 2024 PED suspension, and frankly I wouldn’t be shocked if he was atop the team’s priority list for an extension. That’s not to say they’ll, y’know, actually extend him since this team is broke and largely failson, but he’s probably atop that list anyway. He’s not arb-eligible until 2028.

TJ Friedl turned 30 this month but is also turning in another solid season in CF. He’s too old to want to lock-in to an extension, but he’ll have well earned the raise he’ll get in his first year of arbitration in 2026. Something in the ~$3 million range, I’d estimate.

Will Benson will hit arbitration for 2026, and while the team’s decision to cut ties with Jake Fraley initially looked like it would open up time for him as a righty-masher, his playing time has been sparse. I think he offers enough at what will still be a relatively cheap cost that they keep him around, but I doubt he gets the chance to really play his way into regular time.

Blake Dunn began the year at the big league level and never really made it back, did he? He’s not arb-eligible until 2028 and turns 27 tomorrow. Roster depth, and nothing more I don’t think.

Rece Hinds turns 25 tomorrow and, to his credit, has mashed the hell out of the ball at AAA this year. He’ll be in the mix for a role next year, though I’d be shocked if the Reds don’t sign someone with a similar profile as him who’s actually proven it at the big league level already…

…someone like Austin Hays, who’ll be a free agent at season’s end.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/cincinn...-roster-2026-preview-noelvi-marte-sal-stewart
 
Cincinnati’s bullpen blasted in 12-9 loss to Toronto Blue Jays

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The Cincinnati Reds made the decision on Tuesday to scratch scheduled starter Nick Lodolo due to an illness, and instead opted to lean on a bullpen game from the get-go against the Toronto Blue Jays.

That’s the same Toronto Blue Jays club who entered play today with a collective .333 wOBA that ranked behind only the New York Yankees (.338) in all of Major League Baseball. Safe to say, that number’s going to be higher come Wednesday when the stats are updated.

The Blue Jays jumped all over opener Scott Barlow for 4 runs in the Top of the 1st, and backed it with 4 more against lefty Brent Suter in the Top of the 2nd. And while Cincinnati’s offense ultimately rallied hard against Toronto starter Jose Berrios to inch to 8-6 off Austin Hays’ mammoth 3-run dinger in the Bottom of the 2nd, catching up with the Jays on the day was simply not in the cards.

The Reds fell, 12-9, and did so while maxing out their bullpen the entire time.

If there’s a caveat here, it’s that Toronto was forced to throw 191 total pitches to Cincinnati’s 155, meaning their own bullpen is just as taxed heading in to Wednesday’s rubber match. Berrios (6 ER on 66 pitches) lasted just 2.0 IP, meaning the Reds may well be lined up for a chance to win the series against the AL East leaders with a solid performance on Wednesday afternoon, which they’ll do behind starter Zack Littell.

Of course, to do so they’ll have to get through former Cy Young winner Shane Bieber, who came to the Jays via Cleveland at the deadline this year after recovering from 2024 Tommy John surgery. But if anyone knows Bieber, it’s manager Terry Francona, who was his skipper in Cleveland for many years prior to 2024.

If there were plusses to this game, they came in the form of a) Cincinnati’s resilience after finding out Lodolo was out and after watching their bullpen get shelled and b) their offense smacking out 15 hits. Each of TJ Friedl, Noevli Marte, Austin Hays, Ke’Bryan Hayes, Jose Trevino, and Matt McLain had multihit outings, while both Hays and Friedl swatted homers. Sal Stewart, who started at 1B again in his second big league game, also legged out an infield single, while Elly De La Cruz was on base twice (once via single, once via walk).

A loss is still a loss, however. At the time of writing this, the New York Mets logged another victory on the day to move 5 full games ahead of Cincinnati for the second Wild Card spot in the National League playoff chase, and the San Francisco Giants hold a 5-4 lead over the Colorado Rockies in the 8th inning of their game with a victory moving them into a tie with Cincinnati at 70-69 in the standings.

To paraphrase the late, great Yogi Berra, it’s getting late early for these Reds, with perilously few chances left for them to surge the way we hope they could.

First pitch on Wednesday is set for 6:40 PM ET once again, with an off-day looming Thursday before an absolute make-or-break series against the Mets themselves over the weekend next on the docket.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-recaps/48518/toronto-blue-jays-springer-dinger-cincinnati-reds
 
Reds scratch Nick Lodolo due to illness, Scott Barlow to start bullpen game

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It’s a day of hard-luck news for the Cincinnati Reds.

Nick Lodolo, who only just returned to the active roster after over two weeks on the pine with blister issues on his throwing hand, was slated to start tonight’s matchup with the Toronto Blue Jays when the day began. However, he’s apparently fighting an illness that’s bad enough that the Reds chose to scratch him from his scheduled start.

Now, Scott Barlow will toe the rubber in a bullpen game, as Reds Live co-host Brian Giesenschlag revealed on Twitter.

Nick Lodolo has been scratched from tonight’s start due to illness.
Reds will have a bullpen game with Scott Barlow opening.

— Brian Giesenschlag (@BGiesenschlag) September 2, 2025

Given the overworked nature of the bullpen, it’s no surprise that the Reds made a secondary move on this news, too. Lefty Reiver Sanmartin was added back to both the 40-man and active rosters to serve as extra depth, with Joe La Sorsa being designated for assignment (for the 40-man spot) and Sam Moll being optioned to AAA (for the active roster spot) as the other end of said transaction.

The #Reds today announced the following transactions: pic.twitter.com/500EO7iNsD

— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) September 2, 2025

Despite the fact that Lodolo has had an otherwise excellent season, the Reds have received just 6.1 IP in total from him since the beginning of August, as the blister issue wiped out most of his month. How quickly he recovers from this particular illness remains to be seen, as the Reds have not announced whether they’ll simply skip his turn in the rotation altogether or bump him back a day or two instead.

First pitch against the Blue Jays this evening will be tossed by Barlow at 6:40 PM ET.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-previews/48510/nick-lodolo-scratched-illness-cincinnati-reds-rumors
 
The Cincinnati Reds stopped running

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The 2023 Cincinnati Reds roster looked a whole lot like the 2025 Cincinnati Reds roster, especially on the position player side of things. Those Reds ran, too – all over the place.

That season saw Cincinnati explode for 190 stolen bases, and that came despite only partial seasons from Elly De La Cruz (35 in 98 games) and Matt McLain (14 in 89 games). That team total was the highest in all Major League Baseball, and 6 of the top 7 players on the Reds leaderboard suited right back up for Cincinnati in 2025:

  • Elly (35)
  • TJ Friedl (27)
  • Jake Fraley (21)
  • Will Benson (19)
  • Spencer Steer (15)
  • McLain (14)
  • Jonathan India (14)

These guys are two years older now, sure. They aren’t old, though, with Friedl and the since-DFA’d Fraley having just turned 30 this calendar year. In fact, they stole even more bags just last year – 207 as a team, good for 3rd most in the majors – than they did in that league-leading season.

Swiping bags was just part of their hallmark during those David Bell-led seasons, as being hyper-aggressive taking extra bases on balls in play was similarly the goal of that club. They had speed above power on their priority list while building the roster, and they put it to work to make up for their lack of ability when it came to hitting the ball over the wall.

Fast-forward to the 2nd half of the 2025 season, and you’ll find that these Reds just don’t run anymore.

The much more conservative Terry Francona has harped repeatedly over the course of this season about reducing the number of outs made on the bases, and that’s become part of this club’s DNA. Problem is, it’s still a roster that doesn’t hit the ball over the fences, meaning they’re now depending even more on stringing together multiple hits to get runs across the plate – the single most difficult thing to pull off in this three-true-outcomes era of power pitching.

During the 2nd half of 2025, the Reds have swiped just 20 bags in 44 games, a number greater than that of only five other clubs. That’s despite a healthy-enough 8.4% walk-rate (12th among MLB clubs) and OBP (.320, 14th), so it’s not merely a function of them not getting on base enough to try. But while their .131 ISO in this 2nd half ranks ahead of only St. Louis (.126), they’re simply not making up for it by taking bags with their speed anymore.

The Nick Krall front office built this roster on speed and line-drive contact, eschewing power (likely due to the fact that power often costs money to sign). Now, they’ve removed the outsized priority placed on speed from how they deploy their players, meaning we’re watching a powerless, speed-avoidant club that’s trying its ass off to score runs purely through singles into the gaps.

Maybe, just maybe, they should’ve been leaning harder into their strengths this whole time.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/stat-colored-glasses/48535/cincinnati-reds-stolen-bases-elly-de-la-cruz
 
Game 141: Reds vs. Mets (6:40 PM ET) – Abbott vs. Peterson

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The Cincinnati Reds began the 2nd half of their season by taking 2 of 3 off the New York Mets in Queens in mid July. Beginning Friday, they’ll need to match that – or better – over the course of the weekend in Great American Ball Park if they’re going to have any shot at making the playoffs this year.

If they lose tonight, of course, they’ll officially be under .500.

Tick, tock!

Andrew Abbott will toe the rubber in this vital contest, with Denver, Colorado’s own David Peterson on the bump for the Mets.

First pitch is set for 6:40 PM ET. Lineups below.

Go Reds!

Today’s Lineups​

Francisco Lindor – SSTJ Friedl – CF
Juan Soto – RFNoelvi Marte – RF
Pete Alonso – 1BElly De La Cruz – SS
Mark Vientos – 3BMiguel Andujar – DH
Brandon Nimmo – LFAustin Hays – LF
Starling Marte – DHSpencer Steer – 1B
Jeff McNeil – CFTyler Stephenson – C
Francisco Alvarez – CKe’Bryan Hayes – 3B
Luisangel Acuna – 2BMatt McLain – 2B
David Peterson – LHPAndrew Abbott – LHP
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REDS​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-threads/48538/cincinnati-reds-new-york-mets-andrew-abbott
 
Sal Stewart swats first big league homer as Reds beat Mets, 6-3

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The Cincinnati Reds are back to .500!

While the sarcasm with that initial sentence is real, I assure you, the excitement that came with watching rookie Sal Stewart sock his first big league homer 412 feet over the CF wall in Great American Ball Park on Saturday evening was all optimism. Stewart, the Reds top prospect after Chase Burns graduated off the list, got the start at 3B on the day after having spent time both on the bench and at 1B since his call-up, and responded with a big time blast with most of his closest friends and family on-hand to watch in GABP.

The Reds beat the New York Mets by the score of 6-3 on the evening, and in doing so won their 71st game of the season to go alongside their 71 losses. They’re still 5 games back of the Mets for the final National League Wild Card spot, but Saturday’s victory at least sets the stage for them to win the series with another win over their rivals on Sunday afternoon.

Brady Singer got the start on the day and was once again rock solid. He allowed just a lone earned run in 6.0 IP, fanning 5 and scattering 4 hits and 4 walks to keep his team right there in the game. In the process, he lowered his season ERA down to a very respectable 3.98, a rather amazing heel-turn of form mid-year after he’d endured a pair of sub-par months that had him firmly on the ‘non-tender’ radar.

The concept of the Reds making the playoffs is still incredibly farfetched. Much more farfetched than when the season began with this young team, in fact, and now just 20 games remain for them to pull off the miracle. However, if this game is to serve as something of a catalyst, having ace Hunter Greene on the mound tomorrow opposite Brandon Sproat – a talented rookie who is nonetheless making his big league debut – sure seems like the next dependable domino to fall.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-recaps/48545/sal-stewart-cincinnati-reds-prospect-home-run-new-york
 
Game 143: Reds vs. Mets (1:40 PM ET) – Greene vs. Sproat

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Hunter Greene takes the mound for the Cincinnati Reds as they look to keep their fleeting hopes of making the playoffs alive against the New York Mets.

New York, meanwhile, sends rookie Brandon Sproat to the mound for his first big league start. Be patient, make him throw strikes, and hammer mistakes, Redlegs!

First pitch is set for 1:40 PM ET in Great American Ball Park. Lineups below.

Today’s Lineups​

Francisco Lindor – SSTJ Friedl – CF
Juan Soto – DHNoelvi Marte – RF
Pete Alonso – 1BElly De La Cruz – SS
Brandon Nimmo – LFAustin Hays – DH
Starling Marte – RFGavin Lux – LF
Jeff McNeil – 2BSal Stewart – 1B
Francisco Alvarez – CTyler Stephenson – C
Brett Baty – 3BKe’Bryan Hayes – 3B
Cedric Mullins – CFMatt McLain – 2B
Brandon Sproat – RHPHunter Greene – RHP
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REDS​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-threads/48549/hunter-greene-new-york-mets-cincinnati-reds
 
Game 142: Reds vs. Mets (6:40 PM ET) – Singer vs. Tong

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It’s bleak out there for the Cincinnati Reds, again.

They’ve lost 3 in a row. They’ve gone just 2-8 in their last 10 games, and just 3-11 over their last 14.

They’re playing the New York Mets – the team who occupies the playoff spot they’re chasing – and lost to them at home in last night’s series opener. They’re also about to head west on another 9-game road trip, something that always and forever throws them into the gutter of the season.

This young club, which one held such high hopes, has lost more games this season than they have won. It’s hard to recall that they were 7 games over .500 as recently as August 19th, but that’s how dreams get so dashed – there has to be enough rampant optimism over something to get the hopes so high in the first place.

FanGraphs has nuked the Reds odds of making the playoffs down to just 1.5% as they find themselves 6 games back of the final Wild Card spot and now also behind both the Arizona Diamondbacks and San Francisco Giants in the standings.

It’s up to Brady Singer to throw a no-hitter, or something similar, this evening. Or, y’know, the bats the Reds rely on could actually sock a few dingers for a change.

First pitch is set for 6:40 PM ET. Lineups below.

Today’s Lineups​

Francisco Lindor – SSTJ Friedl – CF
Juan Soto – RFNoelvi Marte – RF
Brandon Nimmo – LFElly De La Cruz – SS
Pete Alonso – 1BAustin Hays – LF
Jeff McNeil – 2BGavin Lux – DH
Mark Vientos – DHSpencer Steer – 1B
Brett Baty – 3BSal Stewart – 3B
Luis Torrens – CJose Trevino – C
Cedric Mullins – CFMatt McLain – 2B
Jonah Tong – RHPBrady Singer – RHP
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METS​
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REDS​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-recaps/48542/game-142-reds-vs-mets-640-pm-et-singer-vs-tong
 
Cincinnati Reds links – Hunter Greene an ace among aces

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Hunter Greene struck out 12 New York Mets on Sunday while helping lead the Cincinnati Reds to a 3-2 victory that handed them the series win over their NL Wild Card rivals. The win inched Cincinnati back over the .500 mark at 72-71 and brought them within 4 games of a real, live playoff spot – something that gives us just enough of a glimmer of hope to not completely slam the door shut on this season.

Yet.

Greene’s excellence has seen his season numbers rise to simply elite territory, too. His combination of high strikeouts and career-best unwillingness to walk batters has shown a true sense of refinement, and the names that pop up next to him on MLB leaderboards is beginning to reflect that, too.

His 11.26 K/9 ranks 5th among the 128 pitchers who have logged at least 90 IP so far this season, behind only the likes of Seattle’s Logan Gilbert, Philly’s Zack Wheeler, Atlanta’s Chris Sale, and San Diego’s Dylan Cease. Reigning AL Cy Young Award winner Tarik Skubal ranks right behind him, as does Boston ace Garrett Crochet.

Greene has also managed to pitch his way over the plate well enough to crack the top 10 in lowest BB/9 in that group, too. His 1.89 BB/9 ranks 10th, just ahead of former Reds All-Star Sonny Gray – and both Zack Littell (1.52, 4th) and Nick Lodolo (1.67, 5th) are in that top 10, too.

It’s both an indication of just how brilliant Greene truly is and an indictment on how much the Reds missed him while he was again shelved this season. The Reds got their ace back for the stretch run, of course, but it remains to be seen whether he can impact the team enough in this short run to help push them over the edge and into playoff contention again.

In other news, the Chicago Cubs have signed former Cincinnati leadoff man and base-swiper extraordinaire Billy Hamilton to a minor league deal. Said deal apparently went down before the September 1st deadline to add players that will retain eligibility for postseason rosters, which shows that the Cubs have a pretty clear idea that Billy could be a perfect pinch-runner and defensive replacement on a playoff roster. He’s in Arizona ramping up after having been basically out of baseball all year, but there’s a chance we could see him in a playoff dugout in a month, which is cool.

The Atlanta Braves claimed Alexis Diaz over the weekend, something that’s a bit odd on the surface for a club that’s out of contention altogether. Their idea, I suppose, is to see if they can fix him at all in the season’s final three weeks to make tendering him a contract at all for 2026 worthwhile, something that seems all but a foregone conclusion after his disastrous season to date. Or, rather, impress him enough to make him want to resign with that organization even after a non-tender.

Finally, former Reds manager and longtime big leager Davey Johnson died on Friday. He was 82 years old, and managed the Reds back in 1995 during their last actual playoff success. That ‘95 club likely holds outsized distinction in the memories of Reds fans of my generation due to the complete and utter lack of any success by the franchise since then, but on its own it was a fantastic conglomeration of brilliant players managed by Davey that was jst about as awesome to watch as you could imagine. RIP to an icon of the 1990s Reds franchise.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/red-reposter/48552/cincinnati-reds-links-hunter-greene-ace-trade-rumors
 
Game 144: Reds at Padres (9:40 PM ET) – Lodolo vs. Darvish

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The Cincinnati Reds are in San Diego to face off against Yu Darvish and the San Diego Padres, and are doing so with lefty Nick Lodolo back on the mound after whatever ailment (the poops?) had him miss his last scheduled start.

It’s late for you east-coasters, so find the courage to stay up!

Lineups below. Go Reds!

Today’s Lineups​

TJ Friedl – CFFernando Tatis – RF
Noelvi Marte – RFLuis Arraez – 1B
Elly De La Cruz – SSManny Machado – 3B
Austin Hays – LFGavin Sheets – DH
Gavin Lux – DHRamon Laureano – LF
Spencer Steer – 1BJackson Merrill – CF
Ke’Bryan Hayes – 3BJose Iglesias – SS
Jose Trevino – CJake Cronenworth – 2B
Matt McLain – 2BFreddy Fermin – C
Nick Lodolo – LHPYu Darvish – RHP
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REDS​
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PADRES​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-threads/48560/yu-darvish-cincinnati-reds-san-diego-padres-preview
 
Reds fumble bag again in extra innings loss to Padres

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For a time the bugaboo about why the Cincinnati Reds couldn’t turn a positive run differential into a playoff spot was their record in one-run games. That bit them often during the David Bell days, as the team made a habit of either winning comfortably or losing closely, the latter unfortunately carrying much more eventual weight than the former.

If the 2025 Reds are ever to be closely studied, though, it will be their work in extra-innings that will be pinpointed as an exercise in futility.

Cincinnati took an immediate 1-0 lead in last night’s crucial game against the San Diego Padres as TJ Friedl launched a leadoff homer off Yu Darvish, and the Reds eventually ran that to 3-0 behind an excellent outing from Nick Lodolo – one made that much more spotlit by his absence from both blisters and illness in the last five weeks. Once the Reds turned things over to their overworked bullpen, however, the Padres immediately muscled their way back into a 3-3 tie, with the game then eventually heading to extra-innings to be decided.

The Reds, as they are wont to do, left their ghostrunner high and dry on 2B after a trio of attempts at scoring him never once pulling together either the kind of big fly that’s eluded this club all season or the small-ball they were purportedly built around instead. That left the Padres with the significant upper hand, something the capitalized on immediately in the Bottom of the 10th as they claimed a vital 4-3 victory.

The loss puts Cincinnati’s record in extra-innings games this year at a putrid 3-11. It’s not the only thing that’s been the difference in this season being something potentially special, or not, but it sure as hell has been the most glaring dent of late.

The Padres victory kept them right on the heels of the Los Angeles Dodgers in the NL West race (and kept them firmly in Wild Card position). The Reds loss sent them right back to .500, still 4.0 games back of the New York Mets for the final Wild Card spot after the Mets lost on Tuesday, too. The Reds, though, have also slipped behind the San Francisco Giants by a game in said chase.

Cincinnati’s last gasp is that this series, like their last one at home against the Mets, has its script flipped beginning today. The Reds dropped the series opener in that one to fall under the .500 mark altogether before ripping off a pair of wins to seal the series, and that’s precisely what will need to happen for them against the Friars in Petco for them to have any chance of staying within miracle distance over the final three weeks of the 2025 regular season.

Zack Littell earns the task of helping the Reds to that goal with the start on Tuesday night, though he’ll be sharing the mound with Michael King, who will be activated off the IL to make the start. King, whose excellence last year earned him a 7th place finish in NL Cy Young Award voting, has pitched to a brilliant 2.92 ERA (143 ERA+) for the Padres since coming over from the New York Yankees prior to the 2024 season, a span of 231.1 IP in which he’s been really, really tough to hit.

First pitch Tuesday is set for 9:40 PM ET once again for the make-or-break Reds.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-recaps/48563/cincinnati-reds-extra-innings-padres-francona
 
Game 145: Reds at Padres (9:40 PM ET) – Littell vs. King

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After blowing multiple opportunities to win the first game of the series in San Diego last night, the Cincinnati Reds are back in must-win territory in the second game of the series this evening. The Padres won 4-3 in 10 innings after the Reds fumbled a 3-0 lead (and couldn’t score their ghostrunner in extras), and now it’s up to Zack Littell and the punchless offense to find a way somehow.

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They’ll be up against Michael King, too, who will be fresh off the injured list to make his return start against them. He’s been positively brilliant for the Friars since being acquired from the New York Yankees in the massive Juan Soto deal prior to 2024, so the Reds will have their work cut out for them against the righty.

Sal Stewart is in the lineup at 1B again, and he’s batting in the #2 spot in the order today while Noelvi Marte gets a break. Will Benson, meanwhile, is in the starting lineup as the RF on the evening.

First pitch is set for 9:40 PM ET. Lineups below.

Go Reds!

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-threads/48566/cincinnati-reds-san-diego-padres-preview-zack-littell
 
The biggest home run of Tyler Stephenson’s Reds career

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The surface stuff here is plenty cool enough. Tyler Stephenson, back off the injured list last week after having been shelved once again due to a busted thumb, launched a 2-run dinger off San Diego Padres closer Robert Suarez in the Top of the 9th last night, and it was the difference in the 4-2 victory by the Cincinnati Reds.

The further in you look, though, it just keeps getting cooler.

For one, it was Tyler’s first homer since coming off the IL on September 5th, and his first homer overall since way back on August 4th. He’s just one of many Reds who’s suffered a serious power outage this summer, and his homer couldn’t have come in a bigger spot.

On top of that, said homer came in the same game in which he’d already been robbed of a separate would-be dinger by Fernando Tatis, Jr. with one of the finer robberies I’ve ever seen.

Incredible shot of Fernando Tatis Jr.'s latest robbery from Sean M. Haffey of Getty Images. 📸

Darnay Tripp (@darnay.bsky.social) 2025-09-10T02:43:08.596Z

That’s the kind of catch that may well cause your brain to say nope, not my night and I wouldn’t blame anyone for it.

Stephenson’s homer also breathed just a little bit of life back into these Reds, who inched back over .500 to 73-72. They’d already blown a lead and game against the Padres in the series opener on Monday night, and Tuesday night’s storyline had begun to look oh-so-similar. The Reds had jumped out to a 2-0 lead, Zack Littell pitched quite well for a time, and the Padres eventually inched their way back level as Cincinnati’s offense sputtered. The homer, though, blasted that narrative out the window and gave the Reds an absolutely vital win (should the remainder of this season actually turn into anything).

If you keep digging for a story here, though, it’s hard not to notice that we’re just a bit over two full weeks away from the end of the 2025 regular season, and Stephenson’s team control is dwindling right there with it. Though to many (me included) it still seems like a hot minute since he was selected out of high school in the 1st round of the 2015 MLB Draft, 2026 now marks his final year of team control – and he’ll turn 30 during the 2026 season, too. He’s been brilliant at times as a Red, injured through a ton of it (as catchers often are), and just like that the Reds are entering their final offseason with him part of their plans…unless they get around to making a deal to keep him here longer.

This past winter they dealt for Jose Trevino – and they promptly signed him to a contract extension that could run through the 2028 season. Stephenson will earn a decent raise through arbitration on his nearly $5 million 2025 salary next year, and you rarely see the Reds pay any position once, let alone twice. So, we’re just about at the point where you begin to wonder just how long both of these catchers are going to be around Cincinnati, making that swing from Tyler last night stick out a lot, lot more in your memory if you frame it right.

Maybe I’m putting the cart a bit too far before the horse here, but I don’t think I am. Good baseball teams need two good catchers, and the Trevino/Stephenson combo is a pretty damn good and balanced one. Good baseball teams also spend money to take potential problems out of the equation, and I’d like to wish the Reds were one of those ‘good’ teams despite their tendencies. Still, it’s impossible not to wonder if that homer last night might stand out more down the road because it came near the end of a player’s tenure with the club in a big, big spot.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-re...trade-rumors-cincinnati-reds-san-diego-padres
 
Alfredo Duno, Cam Collier to represent Reds in Arizona Fall League

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It’s been a slow, albeit steady rise for Alfredo Duno up the list of top prospects within the Cincinnati Reds system, something that’s not at all atypical for young catching prospects.

Heck, as of the start of the 2025 Daytona Tortugas season, he wasn’t technically even a ‘catcher’ in the most pure sense of the term – he’d never once started a game stateside at the position as a professional. After signing for $3.1 million as one of the top prospects in the international signing window in 2023, he spent 45 games impressing most everyone around him in the Dominican Summer League, but injuries (and cautious kid gloves on the part of the Reds) meant that he only DH’d for Daytona upon arrival in the states for the 2024 season.

It was up and down for him that season in the extreme pitcher-friendly environment of the Florida State League, though at just 18 years old he posted an impressive .367 OBP even though the purported power in his bat didn’t exactly show out.

Everything changed in 2025, however. Duno got behind the plate for 81 of his 113 games with the Tortugas, blasted 18 dingers as part of an overall .287/.430/.518 (.948) line, his dingers and OPS leading all hitters within that league. He represented the Reds in the MLB Futures Game during All-Star weekend, to the top of the prospect rankings within the Reds system (aided by the graduation of Chase Burns and pending graduations of Rhett Lowder and Sal Stewart), and even began cracking Top 100 overall lists.

To some, he’s even the future top catching prospect in the game – he is, after all, still just 19 years old.

It was announced on Wednesday that Duno will be part of the Cincinnati Reds contingent playing in the prestigious Arizona Fall League, too, in yet another feather in his already full 2025 cap. He’ll be joined by former 1st rounder Cam Collier, infielder Leo Balcazar, and pitchers Trevor Kuncl, Johnathan Harmon, and Luke Hayden.

The six-pack will ply their respective trades for the Peoria Javelinas, with play set to begin on October 6th.

The Reds haven’t shied away from using the AFL not only to push their better prospects into competition with those of other franchises, but also as a way to help build up game experience for players coming off time missed due to major injuries. Edwin Arroyo, Matt McLain, and Christian Encarnacion-Strand (remember him?) are recent examples of such strategy, and Duno (his 2024 DHing already mentioned), Collier (a busted thumb in spring training that required surgery and cost him months), and Balcazar (missed almost all of 2023 recovering from ACL surgery) all fit that same bill.

Each of Duno (#3), Collier (#6), Balcazar (#23), and Hayden (#30) rank among the Top 30 prospects in the system according to MLB Pipeline.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/farmers...r-arizona-fall-league-rosters-cincinnati-reds
 
Cincinnati Reds links – Reds down Padres, Chase Burns to return

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Andrew Abbott was an incredibly deserving All-Star this summer, but ever since the break he’d been more ‘good’ than ‘excellent.’

In 9 GS dating back to July 20th, he’d fired 52.1 IP and allowed 25 ER – good for a 4.30 ERA (albeit with a 3.87 FIP). It was enough to make us worry that the late-season slides he’d experienced in each of his first two seasons were something of a pattern, especially when last season’s fatigue eventually materialized as a pretty serious shoulder problem.

In a huge spot in San Diego on Wednesday night, however, Abbott reminded us all that there’s a whole helluva lot more life in that left arm than we’d been crediting him with.

Abbott scattered 5 hits across 8.0 brilliant innings, limiting the Cincinnati Reds NL Wild Card rival Padres to just a lone run across 102 pitches. He paired with Tony Santillan to keep San Diego’s offense off the board and allow Cincinnati’s meager 2-run offense to prevail, something that’s happened only 6 times in the 47 games in which they’ve scored that little (or fewer) in a game this season.

#Reds pick up a rare win scoring fewer than three runs. They’re now 6-41 this year when scoring two or fewer.

— Gingersaurus Rex (@HeyGingersaurus) September 11, 2025

As the dominoes fell on Wednesday, the Reds picked up some serious benefit. Both the New York Mets and San Francisco Giants lost on the day, meaning the Reds inched up to just 2.0 games back of New York for the final NL Wild Card spot – tied with San Francisco in the standings.

The Mets are in the midst of a 5-game slide that began in Great American Ball Park, with the Philadelphia Phillies doing their part to mash their NL East rivals (and will try to sweep them entirely this evening). The Mets then play host to the Texas Rangers before welcoming the same Padres to town. San Francisco, meanwhile, plays the Los Angeles Dodgers in 7 of their next 10 games, 4 of which come as part of a 7-game road trip that also will take them to Arizona.

Keep in mind that the Giants finish their regular season with a 3-game series against the moribund Colorado Rockies, however.

In other (great) news, Chase Burns is set to make his return to the Reds on Friday after Thursday’s off-day, as C. Trent Rosecrans of The Athletic relayed. He’ll pitch out of the bullpen when he returns, albeit with ‘restrictions’ such as not being a guy who gets up and ready mid-inning when things go sour. Still, his electric arm and presence alone will throw opposing managers into fits when they know he’s available on a given day, and he’s absolutely going to get some big leverage opportunities to finish this 2025 season.

Want some baseball rage bait? Here’s a ‘pitcher power rankings’ list from MLB.com that does not include Hunter Greene among its Top 10. He makes their ‘honorable mention’ list, which is almost worse because I could potentially excuse them from having overlooked the Reds, but I cannot excuse them from having seen Hunter pitch and legitimately think there are 10 dudes better than him right now.

Finally, Will Benson is mostly OK and has avoided a major injury after his scary collision with the RF wall in Petco during the series in San Diego, as The Enquirer relayed.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/red-rep...-chase-burns-rumors-wild-card-playoffs-padres
 
Reds continue playoff quest on road against Athletics

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The New York Mets look completely lost, and it’s the Cincinnati Reds who look like they might stand to gain because of it.

The Mets lost again on Thursday evening to the Philadelphia Phillies, who swept them in a 4-game series between the two NL East titans. New York actually got off to a punctual start with a 4-run Top of the 1st, but Jesus Luzardo responded by retiring 22 straight Mets as his Phillie bats rallied, the end result yet another Mets loss as their season unravels.

Now, the Reds sit just 1 game back in the loss column from the Mets (and 1.5 games back in the Wild Card chase overall). Next up for Cincinnati, in timely fashion, is a team that’s as geographically lost as New York is metaphysically.

The poor Athletics are plying their trade at a AAA ballpark in Sacramento this year, fresh off their owner’s callous decision to exit Oakland for a future in Las Vegas that’s still very, very, very much up in the air. The A’s are just 67-80 on the season as they rebuild around Nick Kurtz & Co., and their home stadium has served as a dinger paradise for almost any and all hitter who’s set foot in it.

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To date, A’s pitchers have served up 115 homers in home games this year, with only Coors Field (122) having yielded more to home-sided pitching staffs in 2025. The .346 wOBA A’s pitchers have yielded at Sutter Health Park in Sacramento is similarly behind only what Rockies pitchers have allowed in Coors, suggesting that a Reds offense that has struggled so mightily at times this year might actually be set up to feast in the coming days.

Luckily for the Reds, the A’s also have a trio of right-handed starting pitchers lined up to face them, meaning the Reds will dodge lefty starters for the time being. Each of JT Ginn, Luis Severino, and Luis Morales are scheduled to start for the opposition, and that’s a net positive – remember, Cincinnati hitters own just a 78 wRC+ against LHP in 2025 (3rd worst ahead of only Colorado and Pittsburgh), but their .317 wOBA against RHP ranks a semi-respectable 15th overall.

The Reds also have perhaps their three hottest starters lined up to face the A’s this series. Brady Singer, who has pitched to a stellar 2.11 ERA in 47.0 IP across 8 games since I mentioned he might be a potential non-tender candidate, will start the opener on Friday night. He’ll be followed by Hunter Greene on Saturday and Nick Lodolo in the series finale Sunday afternoon.

The Reds, despite all their extra-inning faults and foibles of late, are in this, man. It’s appointment viewing for you tonight even though it’s a late start on the east coast – 10:05 PM ET.

Turn on, tune in, and drop a bunt down the 3B line.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-previews/48595/cincinnati-reds-mlb-playoffs-wild-card-standings
 
Game 147: Reds at Athletics (10:05 PM ET) – Singer vs. Ginn

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The Cincinnati Reds and manager Terry Francona have Sal Stewart on the bench to start, again.

Still, there’s enough optimism around this ball club (read: pessimism around the New York Mets) that tonight’s series opener in Sacramento against the roving A’s has ample storylines worth watching.

Brady Singer will toe the rubber to start, and the Reds have a chance to potentially pull within a half-game of New York for the final National League Wild Card spot.

Watch it!

Lineups below. Go Reds!

Today’s Lineups​

TJ Friedl – CFLawrence Butler – CF
Gavin Lux – DHShea Langeliers – C
Elly De La Cruz – SSNick Kurtz – 1B
Austin Hays – LFBrent Rooker – DH
Tyler Stephenson – CJacob Wilson – SS
Will Benson – RFJJ Bleday – RF
Spencer Steer – 1BDarell Hernaiz – 3B
Ke’Bryan Hayes – 3BCarlos Cortes – LF
Matt McLain – 2BZack Gelof – 2B
Brady Singer – RHPJ.T. Ginn – RHP
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REDS​
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ATHLETICS​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-threads/48604/cincinnati-reds-bench-sal-stewart-again
 
Game 148: Reds at A’s (10:05 PM ET) – Greene vs. Severino

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I dunno, maybe let Hunter Greene hit for himself tonight?

The Cincinnati Reds get another chance to inch within a half-game of the final National League Wild Card spot tonight as they take on the A’s in Sacramento.

First pitch is set for 10:05 PM ET. Lineups below.

Today’s Lineups​

TJ Friedl – DHLawrence Butler – CF
Noelvi Marte – RFShea Langeliers – C
Elly De La Cruz – SSNick Kurtz – 1B
Austin Hays – LFBrent Rooker – DH
Gavin Lux – 2BJacob Wilson – SS
Sal Stewart – 1BJJ Bleday – RF
Tyler Stephenson – CDarell Hernaiz – 3B
Will Benson – CFCarlos Cortes – LF
Ke’Bryan Hayes – 3BZack Gelof – 2B
Hunter Greene – RHPLuis Severino – RHP
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REDS​
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ATHLETICS​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-threads/48612/hunter-greene-cincinnati-reds-sacramento-athletics
 
Game 149: Reds at A’s (4:05 PM ET) – Lodolo vs. Morales

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The Cincinnati Reds try to avoid being swept by the Sacramento A’s and, in the process, avoid falling below the .500 mark again.

Season’s on the brink, folks.

Lineups below.

Today’s Lineups​

TJ Friedl – CFShea Langeliers – DH
Noelvi Marte – RFJacob Wilson – SS
Elly De La Cruz – SSNick Kurtz – 1B
Sal Stewart – 1BBrent Rooker – RF
Gavin Lux – DHColby Thomas – CF
Will Benson – LFDarell Hernaiz – 2B
Ke’Bryan Hayes – 3BBrett Harris – 3B
Jose Trevino – CWillie MacIver – C
Matt McLain – 2BMax Schuemann – LF
Nick Lodolo – LHPLuis Morales – RHP
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REDS​
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ATHLETICS​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-threads/48620/nick-lodolo-cincinnati-reds-preview
 
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