Sal Stewart kept making his case Tuesday night, even as the Reds spent most of the evening chasing the Brewers.
The rookie delivered Cincinnati’s first run with a solo shot in the opening inning, then added an RBI double in the sixth off Brewers starter Brandon Sproat. Those two swings accounted for half of the Reds’ four hits against Sproat and stood out in a 7-2 loss at American Family Field in the second game of the four-game series.
The homer was Stewart’s team-leading 16th, and it also pushed him into some notable company. Before Cincinnati’s 85th game of the season, only one Reds rookie had hit more: Hall of Famer Frank Robinson, who launched 20 in 1956.
“He’s just a really good hitter. He uses the whole field,” manager Terry Francona said.
“A lot of times with young guys, they want to hit for power before they learn how to hit. He knows how to hit.
And he’s strong enough and a good enough hitter that he gets rewarded when he goes the other way.”
Stewart’s power came from the opposite field, and he didn’t sound like someone hunting for it. He said he simply got pitches he could drive.
“I just got some good pitches to hit and I hit them good,” Stewart said.
That same approach showed up again on the double. Elly De La Cruz, batting directly in front of him in the leadoff spot, doubled before Stewart followed with his own extra-base hit.
“When Sal and Elly hit the ball the other way with authority, that’s a good thing,” Francona said.
The 22-or-younger list before a team’s 85th game of the season is a short one, and Stewart’s name now sits alongside some serious Reds history. The group includes Johnny Bench, who had 28 in 1970, Robinson with 20 in 1956, Jay Bruce with 18 in 2009, and Stewart and Adam Dunn, who each had 16 in 2002.
“That’s great,” Stewart said, though he added that he doesn’t pay attention to the numbers. His focus, he said, is on helping the team win.
“We just need to keep playing hard and staying together,” he said.
While Stewart supplied the offense, Rhett Lowder took the loss after a difficult line: six runs on 11 hits and two walks in 4 2/3 innings. He struck out eight, walked one, and opened the game with a strikeout of the side, but the Brewers kept finding gaps and eventually pushed through with a steady stream of contact. Jake Bauers also homered off him in the fifth.
“They hit a couple balls really hard, but they hit a lot of singles,” Francona said. “I’m not taking away from anything they do.
They put the ball in play. They hit the ball the other way.
You’re going to get rewarded for that. And they run.
But that was still tough for Rhett. I thought he threw the ball really well.”
Lowder needed 82 pitches, 57 of them strikes, and Francona pointed to the tradeoff that comes with all that early-zone aggression.
“He threw a lot of strikes, especially early,” Francona said. “If we have someone throwing too many strikes, then good.
That’s a lot better than the other way. He didn’t throw a ton of pitches, but it still wears you down.
You’re pitching with the bases loaded and you execute a pitch, and you don’t get anything for it except runs. I’m sure it gets frustrating.”
Lowder said the fourth inning changed the night, when Milwaukee scored four times on six hits, including five straight singles.
“The inning got long for me,” he said. “They kept finding holes. I’ve got to find a way to get deeper in that game.”
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