Reds Bullpen Suddenly Has Another Problem Francona Can't Ignore

Despite injuries challenging the Cincinnati Reds' bullpen, strategic adjustments and emerging talent aim to solidify their game plan.

The Reds’ bullpen has been forced into survival mode, and the injury list keeps stretching the group thin.

Emilio Pagán is expected back from the hamstring injury that has sidelined him since early May, which is the kind of lift Cincinnati badly needs. But just as that return is nearing, the Reds took another hit when Tony Santillan went down with a significant oblique injury. Manager Terry Francona said there is no timetable for Santillan’s comeback, only that it will be “a while.”

“Tony was in my office, and he was more worried about us than him,” Francona said. “This guy is what you’re looking for.

It hurt. It hurt personally.

We’re going to have to figure it out as a team, and that’s not going to be easy.”

Santillan’s injury interrupted what had become a sharp turnaround. He entered June in the worst slump of his career, then found an old video clip of himself pitching and identified the adjustment he needed to make. The fix clicked, and he had settled in as the Reds’ closer before landing on the injured list on Friday, June 26.

With the ninth inning suddenly up for grabs, Francona leaned on matchups over the weekend. Left-hander Caleb Ferguson got the save on Friday and was used against a stretch of hitters that included several lefties. On Saturday, rookie Chase Petty picked up his first career save.

Petty’s work out of the bullpen has been one of the few clear bright spots. The Reds aren’t ruling out a return to starting for him, but in this smaller role he has looked more comfortable.

“I’m trusting my abilities and my repertoire and throwing strikes,” Petty said. “I’m attacking everyone I face, no matter who it is.

I’m going to keep going after these guys. I’m having a great time.”

Francona still hasn’t officially handed the closer job back to Pagán once he returns, but the veteran right-hander should give the bullpen a much-needed stabilizing force. Pagán remains a trusted arm, and his stuff has looked strong in live batting practice and during his rehab assignment.

The Reds are also getting solid work from Brock Burke, who has settled into a high-leverage role, while Pierce Johnson recently came off the injured list and gives Cincinnati another dependable veteran option.

Ashcraft is scheduled to be re-scanned on Tuesday as he begins to build back up, and Santillan still does not have a follow-up MRI scheduled.

For a bullpen that has already had plenty of highs and lows in June, the formula remains the same: keep patching holes and keep moving.

“Losing Tony is never easy, especially with the way he has been able to carry for everybody,” Ferguson said. “It’s next man up. It’s been next man up back there for like a month, it feels like.”

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