Hunter Greene is set to give the Reds a jolt on Saturday, and Cincinnati will need it.
After recovering from a procedure to remove bone chips from his right elbow, Greene is scheduled to make his season debut against the Orioles at Great American Ball Park on the Fourth of July. The timing matters for a Reds club sitting in last place in the National League Central, even if it is still within reach of a .500 record with a little more than half the season gone.
The big question is simple: what kind of impact can Greene make right away, and what happens when he pairs with Chase Burns at the top of the rotation?
Greene, 26, was one of the hardest-throwing starters in the game before the elbow surgery, and the velocity hasn’t gone anywhere. His four-seamer averaged 99.5 mph last season, and during his three Minor League rehab outings - one with the Reds’ Rookie-level ACL affiliate and two with Triple-A Louisville - the pitch sat at 99 mph and reached 101.
The numbers from the rehab stint were just as encouraging. Greene worked 14 1/3 scoreless innings, allowed five hits, walked two and struck out 13. That’s the kind of tuneup a team hopes for, even if the assignment is only a final step before the majors.
Greene said he’s aiming to pick up where he left off late last season, when he posted a 2.81 ERA with 59 strikeouts and 12 walks over the final two months.
“I came in and pretty much dominated the whole entire stretch in the second half," Greene said last week. "That’s my intention coming back here again."
Burns has already done his part to keep Cincinnati afloat.
The 23-year-old right-hander, the No. 2 overall pick by the Reds in the 2024 Draft and the organization’s No. 1 prospect, has turned 17 starts into one of the most impressive rookie seasons in the league. He’s pushed himself into the early NL Cy Young conversation with Brewers flamethrower Jacob Misiorowski and Phillies ace Cristopher Sánchez, and the consistency has held up as the innings pile up.
Burns took a stumble on June 27 in Pittsburgh, giving up five runs over six innings in a loss to the Pirates, but he answered with another strong outing Thursday against Milwaukee. In a 7-2 Reds win, he held the Brewers to two runs on four hits over six innings.
His 2.8 fWAR entering Thursday was tied with Braves left-hander Chris Sale for third in the NL, trailing only Misiorowski and Sánchez.
That kind of production is exactly why the Greene-Burns combination has become so intriguing. The caution sign is workload.
Burns is closing in on 100 innings in his first full MLB season, and before this year he had thrown 109 1/3 professional innings. If Cincinnati stays in the race, how the club handles that workload down the stretch will matter.
The problem is that the Reds need more than two starters to make a real push. Outside of Burns and Andrew Abbott, who owns a 3.88 ERA, every other Cincinnati starter has an ERA above 5.00. The offense hasn’t helped much lately either, with the lineup scoring the third-fewest runs in June at 99.
So while Greene’s return gives the Reds a legitimate front-line arm back in the mix, the climb remains steep. Cincinnati enters the break six games behind the final NL Wild Card spot, which leaves the club with work to do even if the top of the rotation starts to look dangerous.
Greene and Abbott were viewed as one of the 10 best 1-2 rotation punches in baseball before the season. If Greene keeps overpowering hitters and Burns keeps pitching like this, the Reds could have an argument for one of the best tandems in the sport, behind only the Milwaukee duo of Misiorowski and Kyle Harrison.
Greene helped Cincinnati reach the playoffs last year after returning from a groin injury in early August. This time, the task is tougher.
In Other News...
Reds Suddenly Face A Brutal Deadline Decision Behind The Plate
With the trade deadline closing in, the Reds have a catcher decision hanging over the rest of their summer, and it comes at a time when Tyler Stephenson has been giving them plenty to think about. Cincinnati is 40-46, still in the thick of sorting out what this season is really worth, and Stephensons recent play has only sharpened the question of whether the club should keep leaning on him or use his value in a different way.
The complication is what comes next behind the plate. Alfredo Duno is the organizations top catching prospect, but he is still working his way through Double-A and may not be ready for the majors until sometime next season, which leaves the Reds trying to balance present-day needs against future planning. If they decide to move Stephenson, the path forward gets a lot less clear, and that is exactly why this deadline feels so tricky. [Read more 🡒]
Chase Burns Is Becoming Everything The Reds Desperately Needed
Chase Burns keeps giving the Reds exactly what they have been searching for in the middle of a push that has needed stability as much as anything else. He was effective again in Cincinnatis 7-2 win over the Brewers, and his season now looks like the kind of breakout that changes the conversation around a young starter, with a 10-1 record and a 2.40 ERA across 17 starts.
The bigger picture around him is just as encouraging for Cincinnati. ESPNs Bradford Doolittle recently slotted Burns third among National League Cy Young candidates, and for now he stands as the leader of the Reds rotation while Hunter Greene is expected back soon and Nick Lodolo works to get his form right. For a club that has spent much of the year searching for dependable pitching, Burns has become the rare arm that makes the whole group look more settled. [Read more 🡒]
