Sal Stewart’s rookie year keeps getting harder to ignore.
The 22-year-old has already piled up 60 RBIs before the All-Star break, making him just the third National League rookie ever to reach that number by midseason. The only two ahead of him are Pete Alonso, who had 68 RBIs in 2019, and Albert Pujols, who drove in 66 in 2001.
That’s the kind of company that turns a strong first half into something much bigger. For the Reds, Stewart has become a real force in the middle of the lineup, the sort of bat Cincinnati has leaned on all season when the pressure spikes.
He’s done it by keeping the approach simple and effective: using the whole field, staying in the strike zone, and delivering when runners are on base. That combination has pushed him toward the front of the National League Rookie of the Year race.
Reds manager Terry Francona made the comparison himself earlier this season, putting Stewart in the same conversation as one of the game’s great contact hitters.
“The really good hitters I've been around, when they're 0-for, they know they're going to hit,” Francona told MLB.com's Mark Feinsand. “Sal knows he's a good hitter; he's been a good hitter everywhere.
He uses the whole field, and when you use the whole field, you get rewarded for it. Tony Gwynn, you couldn't defend him.
Sal, when he hits the ball to right field, he can hit the ball out of the ballpark. When you do that, normally, you're doing a lot of things right.”
The numbers back up the praise. Stewart is hitting .257/.342/.471 with 36 extra-base hits and 11 stolen bases.
Thursday’s 7-2 win over the Brewers belonged to Jose Trevino, though. He delivered three hits, including a three-run home run - his first since June 8, 2025 - and also threw out a runner trying to steal.
"Credit the Trevino guy for changing the game," Murphy told MLB.com's Mark Sheldon. “He was clutch.
Every hit he got was a two-strike hit. He was great for them."
The Reds also managed to put up five runs against Misiorowski, something not many teams can claim.
“It gives us a run, which is huge,” Francona said. “That kid [Misiorowski] has got some pretty special stuff, but Sal stayed short to right field and he’s strong enough to get rewarded for it.”
Cincinnati now heads home for a three-game series against the Baltimore Orioles, beginning Friday.
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