5 Familiar Reds Suddenly Have Everything To Prove This Second Half

As the Reds face an uncertain future, several players must step up in the second half to secure their spots on next year's roster.

The Cincinnati Reds are heading into the second half with little margin for error, and for a few players on the roster, the next 67 games could shape what comes next in a big way.

At 43-52, Cincinnati’s postseason hopes have faded enough that the club looks more like a deadline seller than a contender. That doesn’t mean the final stretch is meaningless. It means the pressure shifts inward, toward the players who need to prove they still belong in the plans for 2027.

Some of these names are fighting for jobs. Others are fighting for trust. A few are fighting both.

TJ Friedl sits at the top of that list. Last season’s breakout has turned into a rough 2026, and he went into the Midsummer Classic hitting just .181/.258/.243.

Friedl is still viewed as one of the team’s leaders and the heart and soul of the clubhouse, but the production has not matched the reputation. Cincinnati already optioned him to the minors once this season, and with Dane Myers and Blake Dunn on the mend, another demotion is on the table if he doesn’t turn things around.

A non-tender this offseason is also in play.

Matt McLain is right there with him in terms of disappointment. The Reds put him on the IL just before the All-Star break with a calf strain, but the injury only added to a season that had already gone sideways.

He hasn’t looked like the player fans remember from his rookie year in 2023, or the version he showed in spring training. Even before the calf issue, he was splitting time with rookie infielder Edwin Arroyo, and that arrangement may not disappear just because McLain is healthy again.

Arroyo has flashed, but he’s hit just .240/.280/.290 since his promotion. If McLain can’t reclaim the keystone, his winter could get uncomfortable fast, especially with a raise due through arbitration.

Noelvi Marte’s move to the outfield has not solved anything. The Reds shifted him off third base in the middle of last season after he struggled there, but the outfield experiment has brought its own problems.

Marte has the athleticism and arm to handle the position, yet the finer points of the job have not come together. At the plate, the issues are even clearer: he entered the break hitting .195 with a 64 wRC+ and a 25.5% strikeout rate.

Héctor Rodríguez is waiting for a shot, and Marte could be the player squeezed out if the opportunity comes.

Nick Lodolo’s situation is different, but no less uneasy. He starts the second half on the injured list with the same blister issue that has haunted him before.

Rhett Lowder is set to rejoin the rotation, though the Reds know both Lowder and Chase Burns are on innings limits and may have to be shut down later. Lodolo’s talent has never been the question; availability has.

Injuries have shaped his career so far, and the organization has a tough call ahead on a left-hander who is too gifted to ignore and too unreliable to fully count on.

Ke’Bryan Hayes rounds out the list, and his case is the least dramatic in one sense and still worth watching closely. He missed several weeks with a lumbar spine injury before being activated just before the All-Star break.

Before landing on the IL, the two-time Gold Glove Award-winner was among the worst hitters in the majors. Hayes did tweak his swing while away and had some productive at-bats during a brief rehab assignment, but that alone won’t erase a career-long offensive track record that includes a .676 OPS over six-plus seasons with the Pittsburgh Pirates before last summer’s trade.

His contract runs through 2029, so a cut is unlikely, but if the defense slips too - he has been worth 0 OAA this season after leading all third basemen with 21 OAA in 2025 - Cincinnati could still decide to move on after 2026.

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The Yankees look like one of those clubs, with Austin Wells scuffling badly at the plate and New York said to be exploring right-handed-hitting options behind the dish. Some of the other catchers they have checked on may not be available, which is where the Reds' situation gets intriguing, since a deal could hinge on whether Cincinnati likes the kind of prospect package New York would be willing to put together. [Read more 🡒]

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Terry Francona Just Gave Reds Fans Needed Hope On Key Injuries

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Dane Myers also came off the injured list, giving the club a fresh option as it tries to steady itself coming out of the break. The bigger question now is how quickly the injured group can turn those small steps into real returns, especially with no firm timetable yet on the pitchers and McLain still just approaching his next on-field milestone. [Read more 🡒]