News Reds Team Notes

Reds outlast Brewers, move back into playoff position with Mets loss

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Timely hitting from Miguel Andujar and Gavin Lux and a fortuitous bounce off the bag at second base will dominate the storylines from Friday’s massive 3-1 victory by the Cincinnati Reds in the series opener in Milwaukee. Rightfully so, too, as Cincinnati’s offense has lacked the ability to pick up hits when they matter time and time again over the course of the season.

That kind of outage has put outsized pressure on a pitching staff that’s already been incredibly up to the task, but tonight that’s exactly what also came through for them as well. Zack Littell was nails as the starter, yielding just a lone earned run in 4.2 IP before manager Terry Francona turned to the fireballers in his bullpen to get the rest taken care of. Take care of it they did, as Connor Phillips, Graham Ashcraft, Tony Santillan, and Emilio Pagan combined to close things ot in lockdown fashion thereafter.

The win vaulted the Reds back into playoff position, as they’re in a tie with the New York Mets in the standings after the Metros lost to the Miami Marlins down in south Florida earlier on the day. The Reds hold the tiebreaker in the even those two clubs finish the season tied, meaning Cincinnati now controls its own destiny with just two regular season games remaining.

Keep in mind that the Brewers are not going to simply roll over this series. They’re one win away from clinching home field advantage through the NLCS, something that remains paramount for them after the chasing Philadelphia Phillies defeated the Minnesota Twins to stay mathematically relevant in that race for another day. So, the Reds are still going to face an A-lineup and effort in tomorrow’s game, too.

For tonight, at least, we’ve got the hopiest of hopes in Reds Country as the little club that could simply refuses to bow out just yet.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-recaps/48767/cincinnati-reds-wild-card-milwaukee-brewers
 
New York Mets take on Miami Marlins at 4:10 PM ET

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Despite winning 96 games during an epic 1999 regular season, the Cincinnati Reds were pushed to a 163rd regular season game due to a tie in the standings (and a playoff system that hadn’t been expanded to today’s standards).

Al Leiter, as those of us old enough to recall, slammed the damn door shut on the Reds that day, his New York Mets thumping Cincinnati 5-0 to eliminate them from any and all playoff scenarios.

That would be a blip on the radar for a lot of Major League Baseball franchises, but not in Cincinnati. Only three times in the 26 seasons since have the Reds so much as won 90+ games, and only in 2012 (97) did they manage to top that total. And, as everyone is well aware, any snippet of postseason success that may have come with those solid regular seasons has also completely eluded this franchise.

The 2025 Reds aren’t going to win 90 regular season games, but the postseason has expanded to allow them the chance to sneak in with significantly fewer wins if things continue to break their way. One of those things is a complete collapse by the Mets, something that they’ve been working on for weeks as the season winds down.

Last night’s loss by the Mets to the Miami Marlins paired with Cincinnati’s win over Milwaukee puts them into a tie in the standings with a pair of games left, with Cincinnati sporting the tiebreaker between the two clubs that would send them to the playoffs if both teams finish in similar fashion. The Mets, though, could throw the Reds one more lifeline today with another loss to the Marlins, meaning all the Reds would have to do to make the postseason is win just one of their remaining two games against the Brewers.

The Mets play first today, taking on Miami at 4:10 PM ET in south Florida. Clay Holmes will start for New York opposite Miami’s Eury Perez, and you can view that game on MLB.tv if you’ve got a subscription.

I’m not saying today has the chance to provide full retribution for the way the 1999 season ended, but I am saying there’s a chance it could make up for a lot of it if things go exactly the way the Reds hope. So, don your Marlins cap if you’ve got one and pray to the great Marlins dinger sculpture in the sky this afternoon.

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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-previews/48770/new-york-mets-playoff-scenarios-reds-marlins
 
Reds blast past Brewers 7-4, inch closer to playoff berth

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Cincinnati Reds rookie Sal Stewart blasted a laser of a single up the middle to drive in the first run of the game against the Milwaukee Brewers on Saturday evening, and he later homered to add an insurance run to the ledger of the eventual 7-4 victory.

The Reds used a 6-run Top of the 3rd inning to both chase Brewers starter Robert Gasser and also put enough runs on the board to take the game, backing Andrew Abbott (5.1 IP, 3 ER) before manager Terry Francona once again leaned hard on his exhausted bullpen to take home the win.

Emilio Pagan picked up the save, his 32nd of the season, while pitching for the fourth time in four days. Nick Martinez chipped in with a pair of IP as all hands were on deck, and the initial inklings suggest that the Reds may even have lefty Nick Lodolo back from his groin injury scare to help chip in (if needed) in Sunday’s season finale.

The New York Mets defeated the Miami Marlins with a 1-hit shutout earlier in the day on Saturday, meaning the two clubs enter play on the day of their 162nd game of the season Sunday tied in the standings (with Cincinnati holding the tiebreaker). That means that either a Reds win or a Mets loss tomorrow would send the Reds to the postseason for the first time in a full 162 game season since the days of Shin-Soo Choo.

As of right now, Brady Singer is slated to pitch tomorrow opposite Freddy Peralta, but seeing as it’s the last game of the season that could well shift before first pitch. That game is slated for a 3:10 PM ET first pitch, so turn on, tune in, and scream your butts off at the television for the hot-dang Redlegs.

Tony Graphanino​

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Box Score & WPA chart via FanGraphs

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-re...yoffs-wild-card-milwaukee-brewers-sal-stewart
 
MLB Playoff Race Live Blog – Reds, Mets chase Wild Card

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The Cincinnati Reds wrap their regular season on the road in Milwaukee today, doing so against a Brewers club that long ago clinched the NL Central title and a spot in the playoffs. With a win today, the Reds will join them in the postseason, though they can also sneak in if the New York Mets fall apart and lose to the Miami Marlins.

Thanks to the loss by the Philadelphia Phillies on Saturday, the Brewers have already wrapped up the #1 seed on the National League side of the bracket. Ace Freddy Peralta is still slated to start for the Beers against the Reds today, but it remains to be seen how far he’ll be pushed as the Brewers look to get themselves set for the NLDS beginning at the end of next week.

Both the Mets/Marlins and Reds/Brewers games will commence at 3:10 PM ET, so we’ll have dualing action as the regular season wraps. The Reds will be starting Brady Singer, though it’s likely that most every single pitcher on the Cincinnati roster who can stand up and grip a baseball will be available in some form or fashion as the action picks up.

We’ll be following it all here and updating it as developments arise, so follow along with us!

Sal Stewart on the bench to start (11:45 AM)​


The Reds dropped their starting lineup for the day, and yep – Sal Stewart’s on the bench again. Ke’Bryan Hayes and his wet noodle aren’t just starting, he’s hitting 7th on the day.

Do it.

Powered by @PNCBank pic.twitter.com/DqxFIiMdps

— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) September 28, 2025

Brewers activate All-Star closer Trevor Megill (1:00 PM ET)​


The Brewers made a series of roster moves on Sunday prior to the season finale against the Reds, the biggest of which being the activation of All-Star closer Trevor Megill.

Today's moves pic.twitter.com/yCJTV9bPUN

— Milwaukee Brewers (@Brewers) September 28, 2025

Here’s how the Mets/Marlins will line up on Sunday (1:05 PM ET)​


Pretty stock-issue for the Mets as they face Marlins righty Edward Cabrera on Sunday afternoon.


Here’s how Miami will counter with lefty Sean Manaea on the mound against them.

Here’s how Milwaukee will line up on Sunday (2:17 PM ET)​


The Brewers will roll out their regulars to begin Sunday’s season finale despite having the #1 seed in the NL Playoff picture already wrapped up.

ELLY DE LA CRUZ GOES YARD (3:33 PM ET)​


Elly blasts a solo homer to give the Reds a 1-0 lead!!!

TJ FRIEDL GOES YARD, TOO (3:55 PM ET)​


The Milwaukee Brewers pulled Freddy Peralta early, as it was revealed they would do, and the recently activated DL Hall was brought in as his lefty replacement. The first batter he faced? That would be TJ Friedl, who socked a solo dinger of his own over the wall in RF to give Cincinnati a 2-0 lead!

SAY GO TJ pic.twitter.com/PLnprbqKk0

— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) September 28, 2025

Milwaukee gets on the board (4:03 PM ET)​


Jackson Chourio nearly went yard, but had to settle for a double off the wall in right-center. He scored a batter later when Bryce Turang singled into right, and that carved Cincinnati’s lead in half to 2-1.

That got Chase Burns up and active in the Cincinnati bullpen.

Marlins take the lead over the Mets (4:15 PM ET)​


Eric Wagaman doubled to CF to plate Connor Norby, who had earlier singled, and the Marlins took a 1-0 lead over the New York Mets in the Bottom of the 4th in Miami. Brian Navarreto later doubled to score Wagaman, and the Marlins had a 2-0 lead!

It’d be sweet if the Reds won today to clinch the final NL Wild Card spot, but the Mets losing would also hand it to the Reds even if they lose to the Brewers, too.

Danny Jansen homers, gives Brewers the lead, chases Brady Singer (4:22 PM ET)​


Danny Jansen flipped the scoreboard by mashing a Singer meatball for a 2-run homer, and the Beers led 3-2.

That finally prompted Terry Francona to go to his bullpen, though the ‘bullpen’ in this case is Nick Lodolo, who’ll come on and give the Reds what he can after that groin injury scare earlier in the week.

Marlins piling on Mets in Miami (4:25 PM ET)​


Miami now holds a 4-0 lead over the Mets, which is welcome news to all non-NY parties involved!

Nick Lodolo can’t stop the bleeding (4:29 PM ET)​


Lodolo took over for Brady Singer, but the Milwaukee bats continued to find their way on-base. Andrew Vaughn looped an RBI-single into CF to give Milwaukee a 4-2 lead. Lodolo would later strand a pair of runners, but the Reds have dug themselves quite the hole on the road.

Go Marlins!

Lodolo gives way for Chase Burns (4:44 PM ET)​


Nick Lodolo’s day is done after he walked a man on his 26th pitch in the Bottom of the 5th inning. Chase Burns takes over.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/playoffs/48784/mlb-playoff-race-live-blog-reds-mets-wild-card
 
The Cincinnati Reds are going to the playoffs!

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The Miami Marlins held up their end of the bargain on Sunday afternoon despite the 4-2 loss to the Milwaukee Brewers by the Cincinnati Reds.

Miami wiped away the New York Mets by the score of 4-0 after Francisco Lindor grounded into an inning-ending double play in the Top of the 9th, leaving both the Mets and Reds done for the regular season with identical 83-79 records. However, the Reds held the tiebreaker over the Mets by virtue of beating them more often during the 2025 slate, meaning THE CINCINNATI REDS ARE GOING TO THE PLAYOFFS!!!

The final Postseason spot belongs to the @Reds! pic.twitter.com/DcG8NNuGYf

— MLB Network (@MLBNetwork) September 28, 2025

The Reds will face the Los Angeles Dodgers in their first postseason ‘series’ in a non pandemic-shortened season since 2012, back when half this current roster was still in middle school.

First pitch in Game 1 of that NL Wild Card series will be tossed in Dodger Stadium at 9:08 PM ET on Tuesday, September 20th, and thanks to the Reds deciding to hold off on using Hunter Greene in today’s game, he’ll almost certainly be getting the start there.

It’s postseason time in Reds Country!

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/playoffs/48839/cincinnati-reds-are-going-to-the-playoffs
 
The Cincinnati Reds got here, but where do they go next?

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Some will say that it doesn’t really matter how the Cincinnati Reds got into the playoffs, and all that really matters now is what they do next with the opportunity.

That’s true, to an extent. It’s a clean slate for all twelve teams participating in the postseason, with short series on the docket to earn the right to play in slightly longer ones, all with the World Series at the end of the postseason bracket. Still, it’s impossible to overlook that the Reds now fly west to face the mighty Los Angeles Dodgers on California turf for at least two games, possibly three, and will potentially play as many as five postseason games before they ever have the chance to host one themselves.

That’s what 83-79 got them this year. It’s a mountain they’d failed to climb in a full season in at least a dozen years, though if you want to count actually making it to a postseason ‘series’ and not just a one-game play-in, it’s been a baker’s dozen. The good teams – the teams that won a helluva lot more games during the regular season – are rewarded handsomely in this expanded playoff system that Rob Manfred has created, with the Milwaukee Brewers, Philadelphia Phillies, Toronto Blue Jays, and Seattle Mariners all off for an entire round before playing host to whomever shows up as their opponent. Meanwhile, the Dodgers, Chicago Cubs, New York Yankees, and Cleveland Guardians all stay home in the Wild Card round, their opponents coming in as the road clubs for the entirety of the first round.

Despite the celebration, the general feeling of accomplishment, and the honest and genuine fun the players, staff, and fans had yesterday, let’s not forget there’s actually a big trophy and a prize now on the table for the Reds, and let’s definitely not forget that there are easier ways to pursue that trophy baked into the system that the Reds did not manage to qualify for.

Making the playoffs is great. It’s cool. We’re going to get to watch them in October on national television! I’m texting people I stopped having baseball conversations with years ago about this particular team, and they’re replying back with legitimately joful responses. It’s big deal!

But, it’s a big deal because we let it get to this. The team let it get to this. The owners, in particular, let it get to this.

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A letter so old they probably printed it.

Cincinnati is a baseball city, and has been for longer than anywhere else. It’s a place that’s hung banners in print, on radio, and on black & white television. They’ve hung banners when there were just three channels, and even hung a banner when Pearl Jam was cool. For generations of Reds fans, the idea of making the playoffs was an afterthought, an assumption, a birthright. It’s what every 40 year old Braves fan assumes is part of the ticket package each offseason, what Yankees fans still consider a fireable offense for their managers.

It’s an accomplishment, no doubt. It’s a mountain that has been climbed. But from the top of this mountain it becomes easy to see that there are many, many more mountains – bigger mountains – behind it, mountains you can only begin to see when on top of this first one.

What if the Mets won yesterday? Is this the kind of front office and ownership group that really exudes the idea of being devastated by that development? Do you really get the impression that score in that one game in Miami yesterday being different would’ve prompted them to push the pedal down on trying to actively win more games next year than they did in this one?

What I’m saying here, I think, is that the celebrations yesterday were worth it. This team earned it, and they’re on a bigger stage. I have zero doubt that the players in that locker room, in that dugout and bullpen, are going to play their asses off in Los Angeles and try to win as many games as often as possible until it’s the end.

What I’m also saying, though, is that I hope this ownership group and this front office view this as means, and not as ends. I hope they view it objectively, that they needed a loss by the Mets on the final day of the season to get the worst seed in the bracket, and that there’s still a ton more work to be done to host games in Great American Ball Park in October of 2026. I hope they see that enough things worked out this year to get them to this point, but a lot of things failed badly to keep them from hosting a Division Series next week while other, less successful teams do battle this week.

The beauty in it having been since 2013 since the Reds played for six months and then got a tiny postseason spotlight is that we now see how trite that year was. All that work, all those 90 wins, just to be dumped right onto the golf course after a couple hours in Pittsburgh. We celebrate that year a bit now because it’s the last time we really tasted even a sip of proverbial playoff Budweiser after a six-month grind, but the reality is it wasn’t that special after all. If you’re only going to make the playoffs once ever decade and a half, and when you do it’s an immediate and complete bust, well, you’re going to exhaust being able to celebrate making the playoffs even when you do.

As a reminder, 1995 was a horribly long time ago, yet we remember that team as iconic as much for what hasn’t happened since as for what happened during those playoffs. We didn’t know those good times were actually that good until we saw how bad they could truly get.

Make the playoffs once, and you’ll get remembered for a bit. Make making them a routine, and you’ll pick up fans who didn’t know you before. Actually win some games in the playoffs, and you’ll create a new generation of fans that you missed out on once, twice before – and you’ll be able to play your games in front of them, with the sights and sounds of playoff baseball searing memories in their brains.

Tomorrow when Hunter Greene toes the rubber past your bedtimes on the east coast, it’ll be awesome. I’ll have chills. We’ll be nervous together, Reds fans all over. But sooner rather than later, he needs to be on the mound in GABP for that, with all of us physically together in the stands, for Cincinnati to really become a baseball city once again. They were pretty good this year – better than most – but still need to get much, much better for us to have that opportunity again.

Tomorrow’s a great first step. But, it’s a first step nonetheless on a path I implore this ownership group and front office to continue walking – even though it is uphill, and it is steep.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/playoffs/48844/cincinnati-reds-playoffs-castellini-wild-card
 
Cincinnati Reds set roster for Wild Card series vs. Dodgers

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The Cincinnati Reds finalized their playoff roster for their upcoming Wild Card series against the Los Angeles Dodgers in Dodger Stadium, and it featured a a notable omission.

Despite the fact that the Reds leaned on Brady Singer for two starts during the crucial final week of the regular season, Singer has been left off the Wild Card roster altogether. He pitched on Sunday, obviously, and as a starter with no real relief experience lately that meant he wouldn’t even be available on regular rest until a potential Game 3 of this series.

Rather than wait on him, the Reds added extra relievers, including Nick Lodolo – he’ll be a big piece out of the bullpen this series alongside Nick Martinez, as manager Terry Francona opted to give Zack Littell the start for Game 2 of the series on Wednesday night.

Here’s the entire 26-man roster for Cincinnati’s series vs. Los Angeles, which begins on Tuesday at 9 PM ET:

Starting Pitchers​


RHP Hunter Greene

RHP Zack Littell

LHP Andrew Abbott

Bullpen​


RHP Emilio Pagan

RHP Tony Santillan

RHP Nick Martinez

RHP Graham Ashcraft

RHP Scott Barlow

RHP Connor Phillips

RHP Chase Burns

LHP Nick Lodolo

LHP Brent Suter

Infield​


Spencer Steer

Sal Stewart

Matt McLain

Elly De La Cruz

Ke’Bryan Hayes

Santiago Espinal

Tyler Stephenson

Jose Trevino

Outfield​


TJ Friedl

Noelvi Marte

Gavin Lux

Austin Hays

Will Benson

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/playoffs/48852/cincinnati-reds-playoff-roster-brady-singer
 
Reds vs. Dodgers Game 1 Preview – Hunter Greene vs. Blake Snell

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Hunter Greene was drafted 2nd overall by the Cincinnati Reds over 8 years ago, and after tonight he’ll finally have a ‘Postseason Pitching’ section on his Baseball Reference player page.

Greene, a Los Angeles native who went to high school in nearby Sherman Oaks, will take the mound for the Cincinnati Reds in Game 1 of their Wild Card Series against his hometown Dodgers. Los Angeles, meanwhile, will turn to a two-time Cy Young Award winner in Blake Snell, who has logged 48.2 IP across 12 games in his postseason career dating back to the 2019 season with the Tampa Bay Rays.

That’s a storyline you’ll hear early and often in this particular series – the vast playoff experience of a Dodgers squad featuring four to seven future Hall of Famers versus the upstart, inexperienced Reds. In fact, tonight’s starting lineup for the Reds features exactly two players who’ve ever actually stepped into a batter’s box in the postseason – Austin Hays and Miguel Andujar – and they’ve totaled just five hits and no homers in their playoff careers.

Gavin Lux, who’s 14 for 85 in his postseason career as by far and away the most experienced playoff player the Reds have, will begin the night on the bench with the lefty Snell on the mound. So, we’re just going to have to find out who can manage to step up against incredibly competition under the bright lights on the biggest stage as it happens.

Maybe that’s to Cincinnati’s advantage. Maybe, though, their putrid 79 wRC+ against LHP all season is actually a problem that the Dodgers chose to specifically attack.

Coverage of tonight’s game will begin at 9:00 PM ET on ESPN, so track down the ESPN app if you don’t have it already elsewhere.

Reds Lineup, Game 1​

Let's get Wild. pic.twitter.com/YkL2NQouxJ

— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) September 30, 2025

Dodgers Lineup, Game 1​

Game 1.

Tonight’s #Dodgers Wild Card Series lineup vs. Reds: pic.twitter.com/airXp2QfrF

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) September 30, 2025

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-pr...gers-preview-hunter-greene-wild-card-playoffs
 
Dodgers blast past Reds 10-5 in Game 1 of Wild Card series

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The Cincinnati Reds held back Hunter Greene during the final week of the regular season, instead gambling that the rest of their starting rotation could get the job done well enough to save him for a Game 1 start of a Wild Card series (if they got there).

Well, they got there, but when they did their ace simply wasn’t himself at all.

Greene watched Shohei Ohtani blast a 117 mph homer off him before he could record an out and eventually surrendered a trio of dingers (and 5 ER total) while lasting just 3.0 IP in his start in Game 1, and the Los Angeles Dodgers shaky bullpen eventually backed Blake Snell in a 10-5 win over the Reds on Tuesday night.

The Dodgers held leads of both 8-0 and 10-2 before the tail-end of their bullpen couldn’t find the plate in the Top of the 8th, when Cincinnati walked twice with the bases loaded as part of a 3-run rally that actually brought a batter to the plate who could’ve made it a 1-run game with a grand slam (as if that was going to happen).

On the whole, it was yet another bright lights, big city underwhelming performance by the Reds. I’d say they’ve made a habit of that, but since it only seems to happen once a generation perhaps it’s less of a ‘habit’ and more of a ‘curse.’ It wasn’t quite as bad as being no-hit by Roy Halladay in Philadelphia fifteen years ago, but the start of it against two-time Cy Young Award winner Blake Snell sure had a very similar feel.

A loss is a loss is a loss, and this one puts the Reds on the brink. Another loss tomorrow will end their season, which makes it interesting to see if Terry Francona will really trust Zack Littell and his dinger-prone ways to start tomorrow while the likes of Andrew Abbott, Nick Lodolo, and Nick Martinez are available in some capacity. Did I mention the Dodgers blasted 5 homers tonight?

Game 2 will be a similar just after 9 PM ET start like tonight, and I’d wager we’ll see a bit of panic in the Reds – at least I hope. After watching Ke’Bryan Hayes get perhaps the two biggest PA of the night on Monday (while Sal Stewart didn’t start), I can only hope there’s some semblance of urgency on their part after three decades of failing to advance so much as past the first round of the superexpanded megaplayoffs.

Was it good to see the Reds on the big stage again? It was, for a minute. Then they once again reminded us that they’re the Cincinnati Reds, and that wasn’t enjoyable at all. Maybe, just maybe, they’ll begin to shuck that shell on Wednesday in Chavez Ravine.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-recaps/48865/ohtani-teoscar-dodgers-reds-hunter-greene-score
 
Reds/Dodgers Wild Card Game 2 – Preview and Lineups

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Shohei Ohtani and Teoscar Hernandez each homered twice as the Los Angeles Dodgers mashed their way through Hunter Greene, Connor Phillips, and everyone else the Cincinnati Reds threw at them on Tuesday night, easily taking Game 1 of their Wild Card series in 10-5 fashion.

Only a mooted run at the weak part of LA’s bullpen got the Reds within sniffing distance, though the big hits ultimately eluded them as Blake Treinen closed them out. Now, less than 24 hours after Reds Country was insanely excited to actually be able to watch the Reds play on the biggest stage, we’re faced with the fact that their season could well be over by night’s end.

They’ve got to win to keep going, plain and simple.

Terry Francona has tapped Zack Littell to be his starter for Game 2, though there’s an anticipation that he’ll head to his bullpen early and often while potentially leaning on Nicks Martinez and Lodolo for big stretches, too. None of that will really matter if they can’t find a way to get their bats going against Dodgers starter Yoshinobu Yamamoto, however, as it’s likely that chasing him early and forcing their beleaguered bullpen to shoulder a large load is the best way to actually bring down this mighty Dodger club.

First pitch is set for just after 7 PM ET once again in Dodger Stadium, and ESPN will carry the contest. It’s scheduled to start roughly 3 hours after the start of the New York Yankees vs. Boston Red Sox game, however, and odds are that will run long and Reds/Dodgers will get bumped to ESPN2 for at least a little bit.

Tito tweaked his lineup a good bit for Game 2 after facing a lefty in Game 1, and the likes of Gavin Lux and Sal Stewart will get the start tonight while Miguel Andujar and Noelvi Marte head to the bench. Rest assured, you’ll see ‘em all at some point late should this one not get away from the Reds early, however.

Reds Lineup​

Gotta have it. pic.twitter.com/yHjAn0vwg8

— Cincinnati Reds (@Reds) October 1, 2025

Dodgers Lineup​

Game 2.

Tonight’s #Dodgers Wild Card Series lineup vs. Reds: pic.twitter.com/9069wUUEWS

— Los Angeles Dodgers (@Dodgers) October 1, 2025

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-previews/48871/reds-dodgers-wild-card-preview-lineups
 
Reds crash out of playoffs with loss to Dodgers

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There are many things to critique about the way the Cincinnati Reds crashed out of the playoffs in Wednesday’s loss to the Los Angeles Dodgers, but the gist is that it was via an 8-4 loss in Dodger Stadium.

They loaded the bases with nobody out early (and the heart of their order due up) and didn’t plate a single run. Austin Hays hit against RHP Yoshinobu Yamamoto despite having barely played for the last two weeks, while Will Benson sat on the bench in that big spot.

They loaded them up again, and didn’t score. Then they did it again.

Terry Francona left Zack Littell in two batters too long with Nick Lodolo warm and ready, and despite Lodolo absolutely dealing the lefty was pulled for Nick Martinez after just 14 pitches. Martinez, of course, then got shelled for 4 runs while recording a lone out in what will certainly be his final appearance for the club.

All-Star Andrew Abbott never pitched in the entire series.

While Tito rarely pulled any of the right levers this entire short series, the reality is that the Los Angeles Dodgers have been in these scenarios every year for years, and were ready. They were at home, for one, and their big-time players who always show up this time of year punched their timecards and showed right up again.

The Reds don’t have anyone like that. They won’t spend to find players like that, and the result is that they never make it deep enough in the season to let their young guys have the chance to emerge into them. It cannot be lost on you that Kiké Hernandez (LF), Miguel Rojas (2B), and Ben Rortvedt (the #9 hitter on Wednesday) combined to go 6 for 11 with 4 runs scored – and that’s precisely where Gavin Lux, were he not traded to the Reds last offseason as a big addition to Cincinnati’s roster – would have been hitting were he still there.

It’s simply not at all at the same level. In order for the the Reds to even begin to show a chance in this kind of unique, once-a-decade scenario, they not only have to thread the needle to even get on the stage, but then also have their manager thread the needle perfectly with decision after decision and see those comparative advantages play out over and over again.

It’s an impossible ask. It always was. The Los Angeles Dodgers were made for this, not the regular season, while the 2025 Cincinnati Reds spent six and a half months just trying to figure out what the hell they were anyway.

They learned a lot, those Reds, but they didn’t figure it out. Or, if they did, they figured out quickly they were not the Los Angeles Dodgers.

The end result was that the Reds played a pair of games beyond the regular season, lost them both, and finished with an overall record of 83 games won and 81 lost on their ledger. It’s a scenario much similar to the abbreviated 2020 season in which their playoff misfortunes rendered them an even .500 team after 62 total games played. This, I should reiterate, is what we’ve waited for – and waded through – as the Reds continue their neverending rebuild.

The hope is that this kind of bad-taste will energize the roster for 2026, since you can bank on the fact they won’t be throwing money at the problems. They didn’t get any gate at a home playoff game despite making the playoffs, after all. It’s disappointing, if not highlighting, and frustrating all the way around.

Goodnight, 2025 Reds season. You had your moments, your foibles, and ultimately land in the same damn folder where every season has landed for the last 30 years.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-re...dodgers-cincinnati-reds-recap-playoffs-ohtani
 
Closing the book on the 2025 Cincinnati Reds

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It was more fun following a team led by Terry Francona over the course of nearly eight months than it ever was following a team led by David Bell. It was more gregarious, more insightful, with more humor and reflection.

I’m not sure it was really a much better baseball team, though.

The Cincinnati Reds bowed out of the Wild Card round of the playoffs yesterday, the first of the twelve clubs that ‘made the playoffs’ to officially be eliminated. They won no games against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the short best-of-three series, leaving their overall record in games played in 2025 a barely above water 83-81.

That’s effectively .500 baseball, akin to how Bell’s 2020 club finished 31-31 after twice being shutout by the Atlanta Braves in that short Wild Card series.

It was a series filled with many of the same frustrations that spilled out during the course of the regular season, when the Reds simply couldn’t ever get a big hit or build any sort of momentum that could be sustained. They hung their hat for most of the year on ‘not having been swept,’ ignoring (for the most part) that they so often also failed to hang sweeps on their opponents. The year, from the first series onward, was quite literally one step forward, one step back.

That’s largely because they never could hit, a trendline that stayed straight all year long. Despite playing their home games in the bandbox that is Great American Ball Park, they finished 21st overall in collective homers (167), their team’s 92 wRC+ 24th overall. They still couldn’t play defense (21st overall by FanGraphs’ DEF), and under Francona their aggression on the base completely dried up – their 105 steals in 2025 was 102 fewer than just last year.

Under hitting coach Chris Valaika – a former Cincinnati Red himself who was with Tito during their Cleveland run – the offensive emphasis became heavily focused on hitting line drives, hitting the ball the other way, and not trying to do too much at the plate. And as I look up and down the entire roster and compare what happened in 2025 relative to previous years, it’s hard to find a single hitter who really took a step forward under this system (with perhaps the exception of Noelvi Marte, though his 2025 wasn’t nearly as good as his 2023 cup of coffee).

It was the kind of lackluster season from their position players that would’ve gone wholly unnoticed in other years, but got the spotlight put on it because the team’s starting pitching was so good that it dragged the rest of the club onto the biggest stage. Derek Johnson’s crew was, by and large, absolutely excellent, ranking 2nd overall in fWAR by SP (behind only Philadelphia) and doing so despite Hunter Greene missing two months. Andrew Abbott emerged as a cornerstone just a year after a shoulder issue that sounded scary, Nick Lodolo poured in his best season yet, we got a glimpse of what Chase Burns can be, and even Brady Singer turned things around in a brilliant second-half.

Another year into the trust the process portion of whichever epoch of the rebuild this was, and the Cincinnati Reds are already back home on the couch, however.

From a pure numbers perspective, it’s hard to believe this season will be one that gets talked about down the road with any true aplomb, even for a fanbase that’s had absolutely nothing to root for decade after decade. This was no 2010, no 2012, no division winner who flamed out in the playoffs – the Reds finished 14 games back of the 1st place Milwaukee Brewers this year and even 9 games back of the 2nd place Chicago Cubs. They didn’t run out to an early division lead and fade, they didn’t even close with a flurry of wins – this team ho-hummed its way through 6+ months of baseball and was accommodated by playoff expansion that just so happened to be barely in its way on the season’s final day.

The team’s starting pitching staff is in great shape, to its credit. Nobody among its core suffered serious injury heading into the offseason, and this winter they’ll welcome back Rhett Lowder, Brandon Williamson, and Julian Aguiar after last year’s arm problems.

There are some pieces on the offensive side, too. Elly De La Cruz struggled mightily during the second half of the year, and fixing him (or, rather, de-Valaikaing him) will be priority #1 this winter. The same can be said for Matt McLain, who looked a shell of his former self at the plate despite turning in some pretty brilliant work with his glove at 2B. TJ Friedl looked healthy, even though he stopped running, while Marte and newcomer Sal Stewart look like they might actually be able to post triple-digit OPS+ numbers on a roster that’s scared of those.

Still, it’s a roster that needs help from its front office in the worst possible way, a core than needs augmentation far better than what it was given last offseason. That ledger – including Nick Martinez’s $21.05 million Qualifying offer, the deal for Gavin Lux, signing Austin Hays despite his injury history, shipping out Fernando Cruz for Jose Trevino, bringing in Taylor Rogers – largely ended up being merely peripheral to how this roster lifted the bulk of the time, moves that nibbled around the edges of a roster that sincerely needed at least one more cornerstone instead.

The same can be said for their trade deadline moves, though at least there were some of those this year (as opposed to the disastrous 2023 deadline). Ke’Bryan Hayes brings an elite glove (and nothing else), while Miguel Andujar at least helped balance the lineup down the stretch by mashing lefties on a team that simply couldn’t do anything against them all season long.

It’s all a plan indicative of what Nick Krall has been harping on for years – that the Reds are going to need to develop their stars from within, and that they aren’t going to throw money at that (because they don’t have it). Still, the amount of coin they invested in peripheral pieces adds up quickly, and the reality is that they spent all around a core that still hasn’t been able to truly develop any of its own into stars.

Gone the week after the World Series will be Martinez, Hays, Emilio Pagan, workhorse Scott Barlow, Andujar, old friend Wade Miley, the dependable Zack Littell, and potentially Brent Suter. If you put your Krall goggles on and squint, the emergence of Stewart may push Spencer Steer back to a corner outfield spot, and that means the position-player side of the roster is at least already rounded out (if you ignore that, y’know, it all needs to be 10-20% better than it has been), and the team’s starting rotation for 2026 looks robust. A reliever here, a reliever there, and the 2026 squad almost looks ready to roll already…

…if, y’know, you simply bank on the concept that they’ll be better next year than they were this year once more.

That’s what beget 2023, what beget 2024, and what beget this recently closed 2025. No shakeups of major note, just a continued insistence on growing at a municipal bond’s pace when the rest of the sport tries to get as good as it can as quick as it can. Maybe, just maybe, they’ll get there at some point – maybe even with Francona still around as manager – but it’s hard to look at this current crop and not wonder if they’ve just about maxed out what they can do together.

I bet the Reds don’t think that, yet. So, I bet we’re going to see 95% of what we saw this year again next year, and that’s part of the legacy of this 2025 club. That’s how it goes when the only game this ownership group ever plays is the long one, ignoring the short one as if we’re all just going to be around to see that one mystical season down the road materialize if and when it ever does. 2024 was part of 2025, which will be a massive part of 2026.

So, on to 2026 we go…we wait.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/off-season/48887/cincinnati-reds-season-recap-terry-francona
 
National League Wild Card Game 2: Reds vs. Dodgers (9:08 PM EDT) – Littell vs. Yamamoto

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It’s now or never for the Redlegs as they face elimination tonight in Los Angeles. Will this playoff series end as quickly as their last, or will they live to fight another day and force a winner-take-all match-up tomorrow night? Zack Littell gets the start for the Reds as he looks to quiet a Dodgers lineup who went on a home run barrage last night. He faces Yoshinobu Yamamoto, who had a fantastic first full season with the Dodgers. He last pitched against the Reds back on July 29, where he allowed only 1 run on 4 hits in 7 innings of works. The Reds will have to do much better than that if they hope to extend their season another day. Let’s Go Reds! You’re our favorite team!

Today’s Lineups​

TJ Friedl – CFShohei Ohtani – DH
Spencer Steer – LFMookie Betts – SS
Gavin Lux – DHFreddie Freeman – 1B
Austin Hays – RFTeoscar Hernandez – RF
Sal Stewart – 1BMax Muncy – 3B
Elly De La Cruz – SSAndy Pages – CF
Tyler Stephenson – CEnrique Hernandez – LF
Ke’Bryan Hayes – 3BMiguel Rojas – 2B
Matt McLain – 2BBen Rortvedt – C
Zack Littell – RHPY. Yamamoto – RHP
[th]
REDS​
[/th]​
[th]
DODGERS​
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Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-th...eds-vs-dodgers-908-pm-edt-littell-vs-yamamoto
 
Reds to send top prospect Rhett Lowder to Arizona Fall League

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Rhett Lowder’s 2024 season couldn’t have been much more storybook. The 1st round pick of the Cincinnati Reds in the 2023 MLB Draft sat out the remainder of his draft year, but plowed through the entirety of the minor leagues in his first season as a professional only to make an instant splash with the big league club across 6 games (30.2 IP) before season’s end.

That put him squarely in the mix to be one of the team’s rotation members on Opening Day 2025, especially with the injuries to Andrew Abbott, Brandon Williamson, & Co. around him. Sadly, though, the injury bug bit him badly, too, with a forearm issue setting him back early on and later an oblique problem that effectively ended his 2025 season altogether.

All told, Lowder threw just 9.1 IP across three non-majors stops in 2025, though the word on the street is that he’s healthy enough to enter this postseason in build-up, not rehab mode. Word also confirms that will begin in Arizona Fall League play, as the Cincinnati Reds will send him to the AFL to shake off some rust as part of the Peoria Javelinas.

The Louisville Bats and MLB’s official Arizona Fall League twitter account confirmed the news on Friday.

MLB’s No. 80 prospect Rhett Lowder is #ValleyBound

Lowder is the Reds No. 5 prospect and has a 1.17 ERA in six big league outings (30.2 IP) with the club. He was drafted in the 1st round (seventh overall) in the 2023 draft.

Stay tuned to see who else is Valley Bound for the… pic.twitter.com/yCQjaaTEdp

— MLB's Arizona Fall League (@MLBazFallLeague) October 3, 2025

While the AFL is absolutely a showcase for top prospects – Cam Collier and Alfredo Duno will be playing there this year, too – it’s also become a place where clubs send young players who’ve lost tons of time to injuries and rehab to get in lost reps before the new season. Each of Matt McLain, Christian Encarnacion-Strand, and Edwin Arroyo played their last fall after lost regular seasons, for instance, though it’s hard to say their 2025 production shows it’s an obvious path to get right back on track.

Here’s hoping Rhett can get in just enough work to enter spring camp as ready to roll for 2026 as possible as the Reds, on paper at least, look to have a bonkers-good set of rotation options beside him.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/latest-news/48898/rhett-lowder-arizona-fall-league-cincinnati-reds
 
MLB Roundup – Firings, hirings, and teams actually winning playoff series

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The Wild Card round of the 2025 MLB playoffs wrapped on Thursday, a day after the Los Angeles Dodgers had already dispatched the Cincinnati Reds. All three other series went to a Game 3, and the likes of the Chicago Cubs, Detroit Tigers, and New York Yankees all advanced, with the San Diego Padres, Cleveland Guardians, and Boston Red Sox all heading to the golf courses for the winter.

That sets the stage for some pretty intriguing Division Series matchups that will begin on Saturday, October 4th.

The Cubs will head to Milwaukee to take on the Brewers in the first game on Saturday afternoon, with first pitch slated for 2:08 PM ET. It’ll be carried on TBS (and HBO Max, for whatever reason) and will feature a TBD starter on Chicago’s part opposite Freddy Peralta.

The Yankees head north of the border to take on the AL East champions in Toronto, as the Blue Jays will play host beginning at 4:08 PM ET. That game will be carried by FOX, with Kevin Gausman starting for Toronto opposite a to-be-determined New York starter.

The most star-studded matchup on the senior circuit begins at 6:38 PM ET in Philadelphia, as the Phillies play host to the Dodgers. Shohei Ohtani will make his first start of the postseason opposite breakout star Cristopher Sanchez, the lefty who just posted an MLB-best 8.0 bWAR regular season.

The nightcap will feature the Tigers on the road out west in Seattle as the Mariners try to break their own respective postseason curse. Game 1 of that series will begin at 8:38 PM ET on FS1, though starters for both clubs have yet to be named.

For the teams that have already had their seasons ended, things have been a bit more macabre.

The San Francisco Giants fired manager Bob Melvin, the Minnesota Twins axed Rocco Baldelli, both Bruce Bochy of the Texas Rangers and Ron Washington of the Los Angeles Angels were sent packing, and Brian Snitker of the Atlanta Braves got the boot, too. It’s a pretty notable exodus of long-time skippers, with each of Melvin, Bochy, Washington, and Snitker being between 63 and 72 years of age. Baldelli aside, it sure looks like front offices are leaning towards a younger changing of the guard – especially if you add in 68 year old Bud Black being canned by the Colorado Rockies earlier in the year – at the same time the Reds leaned hard into old-school Terry Francona to be their leading voice going forward.

It’s not not interesting, I think. Heck, the Nationals sacked 61 year old Dave Martinez earlier in the summer, too! That’s a lot of old guys with World Series experience out the door!

Oh, the Rockies – y’all remember that MLB franchise, right? – announced that Bill Schmidt won’t return as GM next year. It seems, at least right now, that the most insular ownership/front office in pro sports this side of Jerry Jones and the Dallas Cowboys might finally look outside their organization to bring in a new leader, something that could, in theory, revolutionize a sleeping giant of a franchise. Seriously, they’ve got a great stadium and a 10-state fanbase with no other team close to root for in a raging sports market that’s won Super Bowls, Stanley Cups, and NBA titles in the last decade – get someone who’s actually competent atop that club and it could be something sneaky special!

The New York Mets, meanwhile, aren’t making a managerial change after their absolute collapse paved the way for the Reds to get boatraced by the Dodgers this week. They are, however, firing basically their entire coaching staff in an odd twist.

But the most important news of the day comes from Arlington, as it appears Skip Schumaker is the favorite to replace Bochy as manager of the Rangers. Skip famously led the Cincinnati Reds in grit for two years before wrapping his career and getting into coaching, and he managed a horribly underfunded Miami Marlins club to a surprise Wild Card appearance before he and that miserable front office parted ways. Skip served as an advisor in the Rangers front office during 2025, so there’s probably fire to this smoke.

Skip Schumaker The Favorite To Be Rangers' Next Manager https://t.co/XSbv83nTpH pic.twitter.com/zSNrdHvfnM

— MLB Trade Rumors (@mlbtraderumors) October 3, 2025

Skip’s less-gritty former teammate, Albert Pujols, may well be the favorite to manage the Angels, but I wouldn’t put his managerial grittiness in the same book as that of Skip, let alone on the same page.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/latest-news/48892/mlb-roundup-firings-hirings-playoffs-skip-schumaker
 
MLB Playoffs – Potential Elimination Day for Wild Card teams

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The good news is that the Cincinnati Reds scored more runs yesterday than 6 of the 7 other clubs who were in action in the Wild Card round.

The bad news, of course, is that the one team that scored more than them was their opponent, and the Los Angeles Dodgers socked as many homers (5) as the Reds scored runs.

It could well be elimination day for up to four clubs on Wednesday, as each of the San Diego Padres, New York Yankees, Cleveland Guardians, and the Reds must win today to prolong their seasons.

Once again, the Guardians will host the Detroit Tigers to open the slate, with first pitch in Cleveland set for just after 1 PM ET. There’s no Tarik Skubal on the mound to face the Guardians today, either, as they’ll instead be up against Casey Mize. Tanner Bibee will get the start for the home club. You can view that one on ESPN.

Following them will be the Chicago Cubs hosting the Friars in Wrigley Field, with Andrew Kittredge making his first career postseason start in what will be a bullpen day for the Baby Bears. San Diego will counter with Dylan Cease, and first pitch on the north side is slated for just after 3:00 PM ET. That game will be carried on ABC.

The first game of the evening will feature the Boston Red Sox trying to eliminate the Yankees in Yankee Stadium, something all of New York would surely take well. Brayan Bello will go for Boston, while lefty Carlos Rodon will go for the Bronx Bombers. Rodon will throw the game’s first pitch shortly after 6:00 PM ET. This, too, will be carried on ESPN

The Reds will try to stave off the Dodgers in the nightcap once again, with Zack Littell still scheduled to start despite a) the Dodgers socking tons of homers in their homer-happy park, b) Littell being one of the most dinger-prone starters in the game this year, and b) All-Star Andrew Abbott being right there. Yoshinobu Yamamoto will toe the rubber for the Trolley Dodgers, with him throwing out the game’s initial offering at some point shortly after 9:00 PM ET. This one’s scheduled to be on ESPN, too, but given that Yankees/Red Sox will inevitably run long, odds are it will begin on ESPN2 for at least a handful of minutes before they shuffle coverage back over. My advice to you is to watch it via the ESPN app, so you can just click on the Reds/Dodgers stream and avoid having to change channels.

That’s a full slate of baseball for this fine first day of October. Hopefully, it ends up with a few more smiles around these parts than did yesterday.

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/playoffs/48867/mlb-playoffs-wild-card-elimination
 
National League Wild Card Game 1: Reds vs. Dodgers (9:08 PM EDT) – Greene vs. Snell

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For the first time since 2020, the Cincinnati Reds are playing playoff baseball. The entire series will be played in Los Angeles, so if the Reds want to play anymore home games, they’ll have to take down the Dodgers twice in the next three nights. Hunter Greene makes his first playoff start in his home town, as he looks to continue his fantastic season. He’ll face off against Blake Snell, who threw a no-hitter in his last outing against the Reds back in 2024.

Rip a couple shots of espresso and throw on some heavy metal. It’s late night Reds baseball in (almost) October!

Today’s Lineups
REDS DODGERS
TJ Friedl – CF Shohei Ohtani – DH
Noelvi Marte – RF Mookie Betts – SS
Miguel Andujar – DH Freddie Freeman – 1B
Austin Hays – LF Max Muncy – 3B
Spencer Steer – 1B Teoscar Hernandez – RF
Elly De La Cruz – SS Tommy Edman – 2B
Tyler Stephenson – C Andy Pages – CF
Ke’Bryan Hayes – 3B Enrique Hernandez – LF
Matt McLain – 2B Ben Rortvedt – C

Hunter Greene – RHP Blake Snell – LHP

Source: https://www.redreporter.com/game-th...-1-reds-vs-dodgers-908-pm-edt-greene-vs-snell
 
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