Hunter Greene Looks Like An Ace In Reds 4-0 Shutout Of Cubs

Hunter Greene's commanding 12-strikeout performance propelled the Cincinnati Reds to a decisive victory over the Chicago Cubs, setting the tone for their series opener.

Hunter Greene looked every bit the ace the Reds needed Friday night, piling up 12 strikeouts over seven shutout innings as Cincinnati blanked the Cubs 4-0 in the opener of the final homestand before the All-Star break.

After a rough season debut last time out, Greene was locked in from the jump. He opened with back-to-back strikeouts in a perfect first inning, then added three more punchouts in the second. Chicago never found a rhythm, and Cincinnati kept letting chances slip away early on offense, stranding runners in the first, third and again in the third as the game stayed scoreless.

The breakthrough finally came in the fifth. Elly De La Cruz led off the inning by launching a solo shot into the seats in left-center, giving the Reds a 1-0 lead and a little breathing room for Greene.

The right-hander responded with two more strikeouts in another shutout frame, then had to navigate a little traffic in the seventh after a single and a walk. He handled it, though, and finished the inning with two more strikeouts to reach 12 on the night.

Cincinnati then put the game away in the bottom of the seventh. De La Cruz sparked it again with a one-out triple into the right field corner and scored on a sacrifice fly. Spencer Steer kept the inning alive with an infield hit, and two pitches later JJ Bleday crushed a 417-foot two-run homer just beneath the power stacks in center to make it 4-0.

From there, the bullpen finished the job. Brock Burke took over to start the eighth and threw a shutout inning with another strikeout. Emilio Pagan handled the ninth and struck out the side to close out the win.

The Reds’ pitching staff was sharp all night, allowing just one walk while piling up 16 strikeouts. Greene’s 12-K outing was the fifth time in his career he’s reached that mark in a start, and Matt Wilkes noted that only Johnny Vander Meer (6), Mario Soto (7), and Jim Maloney (19) had more 12-strikeout games as Reds. Greene joined Jose Rijo and Gary Nolan with five such starts.

At the plate, Cincinnati finished with 13 hits. De La Cruz, Sal Stewart, Spender Steer, Tyler Stephenson, and Edwin Arroyo all had multiple hits. Both teams went 0-5 with runners in scoring position, and the difference came down to the two Reds home runs.

Saturday’s game is set for 7:10pm ET.

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