Reds May Finally Have An Opening In Huge Brewers Series

The Cincinnati Reds hope to capitalize on a potential Brewers' bullpen vulnerability as they gear up for a pivotal series that could shift their season momentum.

The Cincinnati Reds head into Milwaukee with a rare chance to press an advantage against a division opponent that has owned the matchup in recent seasons.

That reality sits in sharp contrast to what the Reds just accomplished in Pittsburgh. Their 9-4 loss on Saturday didn’t erase the bigger picture from the weekend, because Cincinnati still took the series from the Pirates after winning Friday and Saturday. It was the Reds’ first series win over a National League Central opponent.

Now comes the tougher assignment: a four-game road series against the Brewers.

That’s been a rough place for Cincinnati to live. The Brewers have essentially controlled the rivalry over the last few years, and they added another layer to that dominance last week by winning their ninth straight series at Great American Ball Park. The Reds have had plenty of trouble against Milwaukee, but this trip might offer a window.

According to Charlie Goldsmith on his X account, the Brewers leaned heavily on their bullpen pieces during their weekend series against the Chicago Cubs. Aaron Ashby, Trevor Megill, and Abner Uribe all appeared in two of the three games, and Uribe even covered multiple innings in Sunday’s finale.

That matters because Milwaukee usually makes life miserable by throwing one of baseball’s best bullpens at opponents. If the Reds are going to break through, this is the kind of stretch where it can happen.

Of course, the offense has to do its part. Cincinnati scored 19 runs over the weekend against Pittsburgh, but Milwaukee is a different challenge entirely. In the Reds’ last series against the Brewers, they managed only six runs over three games and were shut out in Game 2.

If the Reds can only scratch out six runs in this four-game set, the outlook gets ugly fast.

For a team that has spent much of the season stumbling through one bad stretch after another, this series feels like a turning point of sorts. The Reds have a chance to capitalize, but only if they make the most of the opening in front of them.

In Other News...

The Reds Draft Regret That Keeps Looking More Brutal

The 2022 draft still looks like a pivot point for Cincinnati, especially when you line up the Reds early picks against how the board turned out. The club came away with Cam Collier, Sal Stewart and Logan Tanner, a group that at the time represented a mix of upside and organizational need, but the conversation around that class has only gotten louder as the years have passed.

Logan Tanners path has been the hardest to read, with his development stalling before he could get beyond High-A and the organization eventually shifting him from catcher to pitcher. He has yet to make that first mound appearance after landing on the 60-day injured list in March, while the arm the Reds let go elsewhere has surged into one of the most compelling starting pitchers in the league and a legitimate Cy Young threat. [Read more 🡒]

Emilio Pagan Is Suddenly At Center Of The Reds Bullpen Tension

Emilio Pagan took another step toward rejoining the Reds on his rehab assignment, working a clean inning in just nine pitches in his second outing. The right-handers brief tune-up comes at a time when Cincinnatis bullpen has been stretched in several directions, with Graham Ashcraft and Tony Santillan on the injured list and Pierce Johnson and Julian Garcia only recently back in the mix.

For a group already juggling late-inning roles and fresh arms, Pagans progress matters even more because the Reds have had to absorb other hits around the roster as well, from Eugenio Suarez leaving after being hit by a pitch to Blake Dunn going on the injured list and KeBryan Hayes continuing his rehab work. The next question is how soon the club decides it has seen enough from Pagan, and what move follows when the bullpen finally gets one more experienced option back in the door. [Read more 🡒]

Reds Let Another Winnable Game Slip As Brewers Pressure Builds

The Reds had another chance to steady themselves Sunday in Pittsburgh, but the series finale slipped away early and never really came back. Brady Singer took the ball after showing some recent promise, yet the second inning turned into another reminder of the volatility that has followed him at times this season, and Cincinnati was left chasing a 9-4 loss at PNC Park.

Tyler Callihans three-run homer put the Pirates in control, and the Reds could not answer enough to change the feel of the afternoon. A rain delay only added to the frustration, as Pittsburgh came back out and kept widening the gap, leaving Cincinnati at 39-43 and still searching for a way to stop these winnable games from getting away. [Read more 🡒]