The Cincinnati Reds left Wednesday night in Milwaukee with another familiar problem hanging over them: they’re staring at a sweep again.
Cincinnati dropped a 4-2 decision to the Brewers, falling to 39-46 and staying in dead last in the NL Central. The loss also pushed the Reds to four straight defeats, and they now find themselves in danger of being swept by Milwaukee for the second time in three series.
Andrew Abbott got the ball for the third game of the set, and the early innings quickly tilted the wrong way. A walk and a double in the first inning set up a 2-0 Brewers lead before the Reds answered in the top of the second. Noelvi Marte unloaded on a 378-foot homer to left field, a two-run blast that brought home both him and Tyler Stephenson and tied the game at 2-2.
That was about as good as it got for Cincinnati’s offense. After Marte’s homer, the bats went quiet, and the Reds never got another runner across.
Abbott did manage to steady himself after the shaky opening. He worked through the second and third innings without allowing a run, mixing in a few hits and striking out three. His final line: five innings, five hits, two earned runs, and three strikeouts.
The game turned for good in the seventh. Brock Burke came on in relief and got two quick outs, but then the Brewers put together the damage that decided it. Andrew Vaughn doubled, Garrett Mitchell followed with a triple, and a walk capped off the inning as Milwaukee moved in front 4-2.
From there, the Brewers leaned on a bullpen that has been effective all season and finished the job.
Cincinnati’s late offense never threatened. The Reds managed a single in the eighth and a double in the ninth, but neither hit led anywhere.
Now the Reds have to try to stop the slide before it gets worse. They’ll meet the Brewers again Thursday in the final game of the four-game series, then head back to Great American Ballpark to face the Baltimore Orioles.
In Other News...
Reds Cannot Afford To Get This Chase Petty Decision Wrong
With Eugenio Suarez out and Elly De La Cruz dealing with ankle concern, the Reds are already navigating the kind of injury pileup that can quickly tighten a roster. In the middle of that, Chase Petty has given Cincinnati a useful look in relief, showing enough promise to matter in the present while also reminding the club why he remains more than just a short-term bullpen arm.
The larger question is whether the Reds should keep treating Petty like a help-now reliever or use this stretch to pull him back into a starters path before the deadline reshapes the rotation. Hunter Greenes return could change how Cincinnati handles the innings ahead, especially if the front office decides to move pieces such as Brady Singer or Nick Lodolo, and Pettys next decision may say as much about the clubs long-term planning as any trade it makes this month. [Read more 🡒]
Reds Are Back In The Same Center Field Dilemma Again
The Reds are right back in search mode in center field, and TJ Friedls return from Triple-A gives them the most familiar option to sort through the mess. Friedl was recalled after being optioned in early June, a reset that followed an 18-game stint in Louisville, while Blake Dunn landed on the injured list with an elbow strain and opened up another hole in the lineup mix.
For now, Friedl looks like the leading candidate to handle center, with Dane Myers, Noelvi Marte, JJ Bleday and Matt McLain all in the picture as the staff keeps shuffling pieces around. Dunns injury also nudged Elly De La Cruz into the leadoff spot, which only adds another layer to the clubs latest lineup puzzle as it tries to stabilize the middle of the diamond. [Read more 🡒]
Reds Fans Had Every Reason To Fear This Gavin Lux Trade
When the Reds sent Mike Sirota to the Dodgers for Gavin Lux, the move was sold as a chance to get an established big leaguer while dealing from a prospect stash. It also immediately carried the kind of downside Cincinnati fans know too well with player-for-player swaps, because the club was betting on Lux stabilizing the infield and adding some needed offense while giving up a young talent with plenty of upside.
Instead, the trade has quickly tilted the wrong way for Cincinnatis side of it. Lux did not give the Reds the lift they needed, and his time in the field and at the plate never really delivered the payoff the front office was chasing before he was later flipped again for Brock Burke. Meanwhile, the loss of Sirota keeps looking more painful, which is why this deal keeps coming up as a cautionary tale every time the Reds are reminded how thin the margin can be on deadline-style roster moves. [Read more 🡒]
