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2019 Cincinnati Reds season

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2019 Cincinnati Reds
DivisionCentral Division
BallparkGreat American Ball Park
CityCincinnati, Ohio
Record75–87 (.463)
OwnersBob Castellini
ManagersDavid Bell
TelevisionFox Sports Ohio
(Thom Brennaman, Chris Welsh, George Grande, Jeff Brantley, Jim Day, Jeff Piecoro)
RadioWLW (700 AM)
Reds Radio Network
(Marty Brennaman, Jeff Brantley, Jim Day, Thom Brennaman, Chris Welsh, Tommy Thrall (fill - in), Doug Flynn (fill-in), Sam LeCure (fill-in), Danny Graves (fill-in),
StatsESPN.com
Baseball Reference
← 2018 Seasons 2020 →

The 2019 Cincinnati Reds season was the 150th season for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 17th at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. The Reds were eliminated from playoff contention on September 16 after a loss to the Chicago Cubs.[1]

Offseason

Coaching Staff

  • October 21, 2018: Cincinnati native and former third baseman David Bell hired as the 63rd manager in franchise history.[2] The contract spans three years with a club option for a fourth.[2]
  • November 2, 2018: Derek Johnson named pitching coach. Johnson was previously the pitching coach for the Milwaukee Brewers from 2016–2018.[3]
  • November 6, 2018: Turner Ward named hitting coach. Ward was previously the hitting coach for the Los Angeles Dodgers from 2016–2018.[4]

Trades

Signings

  • January 10, 2019: Signed backup catcher Curt Casali to a one-year, $950,000 contact, avoiding arbitration.[9]
  • January 11, 2019: Signed six players to one-year contracts, avoiding arbitration, starting pitcher Anthony DeSclafani, $2.125 million; second baseman Scooter Gennett, $9.775 million; right-handed pitcher Michael Lorenzen, $1.95 million; shortstop José Peraza, $2.775 million; outfielder Yasiel Puig, $9.7 million; starting pitcher Tanner Roark, $10 million.[10]
  • February 11, 2019: Signed free-agent reliever Zach Duke to a one-year, $2 million contract. This will be Duke's second stint with the Reds after pitching with the team during the 2013 season.[11]
  • February 13, 2019: Pitcher Alex Wood won his arbitration case over the club and will earn $9.65 million on a one-year contract in 2019.[12]

Standings

National League Central

NL Central
Team W L Pct. GB Home Road
St. Louis Cardinals 91 71 .562 50‍–‍31 41‍–‍40
Milwaukee Brewers 89 73 .549 2 49‍–‍32 40‍–‍41
Chicago Cubs 84 78 .519 7 51‍–‍30 33‍–‍48
Cincinnati Reds 75 87 .463 16 41‍–‍40 34‍–‍47
Pittsburgh Pirates 69 93 .426 22 35‍–‍46 34‍–‍47


National League Wildcard

Division Leaders
Team W L Pct.
Los Angeles Dodgers 106 56 .654
Atlanta Braves 97 65 .599
St. Louis Cardinals 91 71 .562
Wild Card teams
(Top 2 teams qualify for postseason)
Team W L Pct. GB
Washington Nationals 93 69 .574 +4
Milwaukee Brewers 89 73 .549
New York Mets 86 76 .531 3
Arizona Diamondbacks 85 77 .525 4
Chicago Cubs 84 78 .519 5
Philadelphia Phillies 81 81 .500 8
San Francisco Giants 77 85 .475 12
Cincinnati Reds 75 87 .463 14
Colorado Rockies 71 91 .438 18
San Diego Padres 70 92 .432 19
Pittsburgh Pirates 69 93 .426 20
Miami Marlins 57 105 .352 32


Record vs. opponents


Source: MLB Standings Grid – 2019
Team AZ ATL CHC CIN COL LAD MIA MIL NYM PHI PIT SD SF STL WSH AL
Arizona 4–3 2–4 3–3 9–10 8–11 3–4 2–5 2–5 4–2 6–1 11–8 10–9 3–3 4–3 14–6
Atlanta 3–4 5–2 3–4 3–3 2–4 15–4 3–3 11–8 9–10 5–2 5–2 5–2 4–2 11–8 13–7
Chicago 4–2 2–5 8–11 3–3 3–4 6–1 9–10 5–2 2–5 11–8 4–3 4–2 9–10 2–4 12–8
Cincinnati 3–3 4–3 11–8 3–3 1–5 6–1 8–11 3–4 3–4 7–12 5–2 4–3 7–12 1–5 9–11
Colorado 10–9 3–3 3–3 3–3 4–15 5–2 5–2 2–4 3–4 2–5 11–8 7–12 2–5 3–4 8–12
Los Angeles 11–8 4–2 4–3 5–1 15–4 5–1 4–3 5–2 5–2 6–0 13–6 12–7 3–4 4–3 10–10
Miami 4–3 4–15 1–6 1–6 2–5 1–5 2–5 6–13 10–9 3–3 4–2 3–3 3–4 4–15 9–11
Milwaukee 5–2 3–3 10–9 11–8 2–5 3–4 5–2 5–1 4–3 15–4 3–4 2–4 9–10 4–2 8–12
New York 5–2 8–11 2–5 4–3 4–2 2–5 13–6 1–5 7–12 5–1 3–3 3–4 2–5 12–7 15–5
Philadelphia 2–4 10–9 5–2 4–3 4–3 2–5 9–10 3–4 12–7 4–2 3–3 3–4 4–2 5–14 11–9
Pittsburgh 1–6 2–5 8–11 12–7 5–2 0–6 3–3 4–15 1–5 2–4 6–1 5–2 5–14 3–4 12–8
San Diego 8–11 2–5 3–4 2–5 8–11 6–13 2–4 4–3 3–3 3–3 1–6 9–10 4–2 4–3 11–9
San Francisco 9–10 2–5 2–4 3–4 12–7 7–12 3–3 4–2 4–3 4–3 2–5 10–9 3–4 1–5 11–9
St. Louis 3–3 2–4 10–9 12–7 5–2 4–3 4–3 10–9 5–2 2–4 14–5 2–4 4–3 5–2 9–11
Washington 3–4 8–11 4–2 5–1 4–3 3–4 15–4 2–4 7–12 14–5 4–3 3–4 5–1 2–5 14–6

Regular Season Summary

Opening Day starting lineup

Position Name
LF Jesse Winker
1B Joey Votto
RF Yasiel Puig
3B Eugenio Suárez
CF Scott Schebler
SS José Peraza
C Tucker Barnhart
2B José Iglesias
P Luis Castillo

March

  • March 28: The Reds rallied from 2–1 deficit to defeat the Pirates on Opening Day in front of a crowd of 44,049, the largest for a regular-season game in Great American Ballpark history.[13]

April

  • April 13: The Reds played for the first time in 16 years (excluding Canada) outside the United States as they played in Monterrey, Mexico against the Cardinals. The Reds won 5–2.
  • April 17: In the 8th inning, Joey Votto popped up to Dodgers first baseman Cody Bellinger in foul territory, Votto's first career pop out to first in 6,827 career plate appearances.[14]
  • April 18: Joey Votto hits his first career leadoff home run and number 271 as a member of the Cincinnati Reds, moving him into fourth place on the Reds franchise all-time home run list.[15]

May

  • May 2: Luis Castillo was named N.L. Pitcher of the Month for the month of April. In 43.1 innings, Castillo had an ERA of 1.43 and struck out 42 batters while going 3–1.[16]
  • May 3: Derek Dietrich became the first major league second baseman to hit a pair of three-run homers in the first three innings of a game since Reds Hall of Famer Joe Morgan on Aug. 19, 1974, according to STATS.[17]
  • May 5: Eugenio Suárez, Jesse Winker and Derek Dietrich hit back-to-back-to-back home runs off Giants pitcher Jeff Samardzija on three-consecutive pitches in the first inning. According to the Elias Sports Bureau, the last time a team homered on three consecutive pitches was the Dodgers on June 12, 2007, against the Mets.[18]
  • May 28: Derek Dietrich hit three home runs and had 6 RBIs in a win over the Pittsburgh Pirates. The three home runs gave Dietrich 7 home runs versus the Pirates this season and also marked his last six hits all being home runs.[19]

June

  • June 21: Derek Dietrich became the first player in the modern era (since 1900) to be hit three times by a pitch in one game according to the Elias Sports Bureau.[20]
  • June 30: Luis Castillo was named to the 2019 Major League Baseball All-Star team, the first Reds starting pitcher since 2014 to make the All-Star team. This is Castillo's first All-Star selection.[21]

July

August

  • August 10: Rookie Aristides Aquino hit three home runs against the Washington Nationals to match Trevor Story's record for most home run's in a players first 10 games with seven.[28]
  • August 12: Aristides Aquino hit his 8th home run becoming the first player to ever hit eight home runs in his first 12 career games.[29]
  • August 17: Aristides Aquino hit is 11th home run becoming the first player since 1900 to have 11 home runs in his first 17 games, according to the Elias Sport Bureau.[30]
  • August 18: Kevin Gausman threw an immaculate inning, striking out all three batters on nine pitches, the 6th such feat in Reds history. This was the second time Gausman had thrown an immaculate inning, with the first coming on April 23, 2018.[31]
  • August 28: Aristides Aquino hit his 13th home run of his career becoming the first player in the modern era to hit 13 home runs in his first 100 career plate appearances.[32]
  • August 29: Aristides Aquino hit his 14th home run in August, breaking the National League rookie record for home runs in a month set by Cody Bellinger in June 2017.[33]

September

  • September 2: Aristides Aquino hit his 15th career home run, becoming the fastest player to hit that mark in MLB history. Aqunio needed just 122 plate appearances, 13 fewer than the record set by Rhys Hoskins in 2017.[34]
  • September 3: Aristides Aquino is named the National League Player of the Month & National League Rookie of the Month for the month of August. In August, Aqunio hit .320/.391/.767 with 14 home runs, and 33 runs scored. The 14 homers tied Hall of Famer Frank Robinson (August 1962) and Greg Vaughn (September 1999) for Cincinnati's franchise record by any player -- rookie or veteran -- in a calendar month. Aquino's 14 round-trippers also set an NL record for rookies in any calendar month.[35][36]
  • September 4: Michael Lorenzen became the second player in baseball history to hit a homer, earn the win as the pitcher and play in the field in the same game when the Reds defeated the Phillies, 8–5. The other player to achieve the feat was Babe Ruth on June 13, 1921.[37]
  • September 4: The four home runs hit in the Reds 8–5 victory over the Phillies were by players who weren't in the starting lineup: Logan Morrison and Jay Bruce for the Phillies and Michael Lorenzen and José Iglesias for the Reds. It was the first time since 1900 in which four players who weren't in the starting lineup for either team entered the game and hit a home run, according to the Elias Sports Bureau.[38]
  • September 18: Eugenio Suárez hit his 48th home run of the season, the most ever by a Venezuelan player, breaking the previous mark of 47 set by Andrés Galarraga in 1996.[39]
  • September 25: Eugenio Suárez hit his 49th home run of the season, which moved him ahead of Mike Schmidt and Adrián Beltré for the modern NL record by a third baseman.[40]
  • September 26: Marty Brennaman broadcasts his final game as the voice of the Reds on radio network 700 WLW. Brennaman has been the voice of the Reds for the past 46 seasons and is just one of eight major league broadcasters to cover one team for 46 seasons.[41][42]
  • September 30: Eugenio Suárez is named the National League Player of the Month for the month of September. Suárez recorded a .337/.455/.747 slash line with 10 homers and 18 RBIs over 25 games in September. He is the second straight Reds player to win Player of the Month honors after Aristides Aquino was Player of the Month in August.[43]

Game log

Roster

2019 Cincinnati Reds
Roster
Pitchers Catchers

Infielders

Outfielders Manager

Coaches

Awards and honors

Recipient Award Date awarded Ref.
Luis Castillo National League Pitcher of the Month (April) May 2, 2019 [16]
Aristides Aquino National League Player of the Month & National League Rookie of the Month (August) September 3, 2019 [36][35]
Eugenio Suárez National League Player of the Month (September) September 30, 2019 [43]

Farm system

Level Team League Manager
AAA Louisville Bats International League Jody Davis
AA Chattanooga Lookouts Southern League Pat Kelly
A Daytona Tortugas Florida State League Ricky Gutierrez
A Dayton Dragons Midwest League Luis Bolivar
A-Rookie Advanced Billings Mustangs Pioneer League Ray Martinez
A-Rookie Advanced Greeneville Reds Appalachian League Gookie Dawkins
Rookie AZL Reds Arizona League
Rookie DSL Reds Dominican Summer League

References

  1. ^ Dorsey, Russell. "As Reds' playoff hopes end, future is tantalizing". MLB.com. Retrieved 19 September 2019.
  2. ^ a b Perry, Dayn (October 21, 2018). "Reds hire new manager, sign Cincinnati native David Bell to three-year deal". CBSSports.com. Retrieved October 21, 2018.
  3. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Reds tab Johnson as pitching coach". Reds.com. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  4. ^ "Reds Hire Turner Ward As Hitting Coach". MLB Trade Rumors.
  5. ^ Nightengale, Bobby. "Cincinnati Reds add pitcher Tanner Roark in trade with Washington Nationals". Cincinnati.com. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  6. ^ Passan, Jeff (December 21, 2018). "Dodgers trade Matt Kemp, Yasiel Puig in blockbuster deal with Reds". Yahoo Sports. Retrieved December 21, 2018.
  7. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Reds trade reliever Scott to D-backs for cash". MLB.com. Retrieved 3 January 2019.
  8. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Reds acquire Gray, extend RHP through 2022". MLB.com. MLB. Retrieved 22 January 2019.
  9. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Casali agrees on 1-year deal, avoids arbitration". MLB.com. Retrieved 11 January 2019.
  10. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Reds ink 6 arbitration-eligible players". MLB.com. Retrieved 13 January 2019.
  11. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Duke returns to Reds on one-year deal". MLB.com. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  12. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Wood wins arbitration case with Reds". MLB.com. Retrieved 13 February 2019.
  13. ^ "New-look Reds rally for 5-3 win over Pirates on Dietrich HR". ESPN.com. Retrieved 4 April 2019.
  14. ^ "Reds' Votto pops out to 1B for first time in career". ESPN.com. Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  15. ^ O'Neill, Shaun. "Votto records a career first in back-to-back ABs". MLB.com. Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  16. ^ a b Terrell, Wick. "Reds starter Luis Castillo named NL Pitcher of the Month". Reds Reporter. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  17. ^ "Giants erase 8-run deficit, beat Reds in 11 innings". ESPN.com. Associated Press. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  18. ^ Wallner, Jeff. "3 pitches, 3 HRs: Reds go back to back to back". Reds.com. Retrieved 8 May 2019.
  19. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Dietrich's last 6 hits? All HRs, after 3 vs. Bucs". MLB.com. Retrieved 29 May 2019.
  20. ^ "Reds withstand another homer by Yelich, beat Brewers 11-7". ESPN.com. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
  21. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Castillo represents Reds as first-time All-Star". Reds.com. Retrieved 1 July 2019.
  22. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Gray named NL All-Star: 'It's a surreal moment'". Reds.com. Retrieved 8 July 2019.
  23. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "On big stage, Castillo has perfect ASG debut". Reds.com. Retrieved 11 July 2019.
  24. ^ "Ervin's 6-for-6 night powers Reds in slugfest". MLB.com.
  25. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Sources: Reds land Bauer, deal Puig, Trammell". Reds.com. Retrieved 31 July 2019.
  26. ^ "Athletics add to rotation, get Roark from Reds". ESPN.com. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  27. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Reds stay busy, trade Roark and Gennett". Reds.com. Retrieved 2 August 2019.
  28. ^ Rogers, Jesse. "Reds' Aquino hits 3 HRs, has 7 in 1st 10 games". ESPN.com. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  29. ^ Matz, Eddie. "Reds rookie Aquino sets MLB mark with HR No. 8". ESPN.com. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  30. ^ "Aquino, Reds drop Cards into first-place tie with 6-1 win". ESPN.com. Associated Press. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  31. ^ Nightengale, Bobby. "Kevin Gausman tosses 6th immaculate inning in Cincinnati Reds history". Cincinnati.com. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
  32. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Aquino sets (and ties) HR records to pace Reds". Reds.com. Retrieved 29 August 2019.
  33. ^ "Aquino belts 14th of month for record in Reds' loss". ESPN.com. Retrieved 30 August 2019.
  34. ^ "Phillies vs. Reds - Game Recap - September 2, 2019". ESPN.com. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  35. ^ a b Kelly, Matt. "Alvarez, Aquino named Aug. Rookies of Month". MLB.com. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  36. ^ a b Kelly, Matt. "Bregman, Aquino named Aug. Players of Month". MLB.com. Retrieved 3 September 2019.
  37. ^ "Phillies vs. Reds - Game Recap - September 4, 2019". ESPN.com. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  38. ^ Nightengale, Bobby. "'As ready as I can be': Michael Lorenzen makes his 1st career start in center field". Cincinnati.com. Retrieved 5 September 2019.
  39. ^ "Iglesias' double in 10th leads Reds past Cubs 3-2". ESPN.com. Retrieved 19 September 2019.
  40. ^ "Surging Brewers clinch playoff berth with 9-2 win over Reds". ESPN.com. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
  41. ^ "Playoff-bound Brewers sweep Reds 5-3, close in on Cardinals". ESPN.com. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
  42. ^ Sheldon, Mark. "Brennaman signs off for last time after 46 years". Reds.com. Retrieved 27 September 2019.
  43. ^ a b Harrigan, Thomas. "Meadows, Suárez named Players of the Month". MLB.com. Retrieved 1 October 2019.