This Reds Season May Be Pushing Terry Francona To The Brink

Terry Francona's tough season with the struggling Reds, compounded by looming labor disputes, may signal an impending end to his storied managerial career.

The Cincinnati Reds are drifting toward a season nobody in the organization wanted, and that reality could end up forcing Terry Francona into a major decision.

FanGraphs has the Reds’ playoff odds at 3.5%, and with injuries piling up and the team failing to live up to its upside, the outlook is bleak. Francona didn’t sign up for a three-year run to watch things unravel this quickly, but that’s where the season appears to be headed.

His first year in Cincinnati created real momentum. The Reds made the postseason, even if the ending was disappointing, and Elly De La Cruz kept climbing toward superstardom. It looked like Francona had found the right touch.

That hasn’t carried over to 2026. The Reds have fallen well below .500, and that kind of slide could push the front office into a sell-off before the August 3 trade deadline. If that happens, it would only add to the sense that the team is heading away from contention rather than toward it.

Francona has made no secret of how much the collapse has worn on him. He has held team meetings, vented publicly, and even said he’s lost sleep over the Reds’ struggles. For a manager who stepped away from baseball once before because of health concerns, this kind of grind has to hit hard.

There’s also the uncertainty hanging over next year. The MLB Players Association and Major League Baseball are still far apart in labor talks, and a lockout next spring remains a real possibility. If that happens, Francona could find himself in a temporary retirement anyway, and it wouldn’t be hard to imagine him deciding not to come back for a shortened, chaotic season.

If this is the end, it isn’t the ending Francona should get. A future Hall of Famer deserves better than this.

He deserves a proper sendoff, some dramatic wins, and maybe even one more miracle run like the one Cincinnati pulled off at the end of last season. He deserves to go out with a winner one last time.

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