Which Reds Bullpen Era Truly Ruled The Late Innings

Discover which era of Reds bullpen reigns supreme as Hal McCoy weighs in on the storied team's history with insights and personal anecdotes.

Hall of Fame baseball writer Hal McCoy has spent a lifetime around the game, and he’s still answering readers’ baseball questions with the same blunt edge and old-school eye. This round touches everything from Reds uniforms to bullpen history, with McCoy offering his take on the design choices, the strategy, and the people inside the game.

On the question of players wearing sunglasses perched on the bills of their caps, hiding the team logo, McCoy didn’t see a uniform problem at all. He called it a baseball uniform, not a military one, and said fans already know who they’re watching without the hat logo.

His bigger gripe was practical: the glasses are meant to protect players from the sun, so why take them off in the field only to put them back on at the plate? He also said sunglasses make it harder to see a pitched ball, adding, “I couldn’t hit with or without sunglasses.”

McCoy was just as firm when asked about the designated hitter. He said he would get rid of it in both leagues, not just the National League.

He pointed out that the American League adopted the DH in 1973 and the National League followed in 2022, but he wished the rule had never arrived at all. In his view, the DH stripped away strategy, especially the choice a manager used to make about whether to leave a pitcher in or pinch-hit for him.

He also noted that some pitchers can hit, sometimes better than regular players, while managers now often seem reduced to a camera shot of them leaning on the dugout railing and spitting sunflower seeds.

On a scoring question involving a batter, a runner on third, and a missed tag at third base before an untimely throw to first, McCoy said the official scorer gets to decide. Most scorers, he said, would award a hit.

He wouldn’t. In his eyes, it was a routine grounder that should have been turned into an out, so he would score it a fielder’s choice.

He even joked that he’d head to the clubhouse afterward and wait for the batter to yell at him and call him a “stupid numbskull who knows nothing about baseball.”

McCoy also took a swing at the Reds’ uniform rotation. He said Friday and Saturday home games are set in advance: black on Friday and red on Saturday.

On Fridays, he said, the team looks like “Johnny Cash with bats instead of guitars,” and on Saturdays they resemble stop signs. For the other home games, the starting pitcher chooses between the traditional all-white uniforms and the red tops with the large white “Reds” script.

He made clear he dislikes those as well.

When the conversation turned to Reds bullpens, McCoy was asked to choose between 1961, 1975, and 1990. He joked about leaving out this season’s group, then said 1961 was even before his time.

He also noted that bullpens were used differently back then. Between 1975 and 1990, he wouldn’t separate them.

He called both outstanding, though he acknowledged that the 1990 group had the more memorable nickname, the Nasty Boys of Norm Charlton, Rob Dibble and Randy Myers. Still, he said the 1975 back end of Clay Carroll, Pedro Borbon, Rawly Eastwick and Will McEnaney was a “close-‘em-down trio.”

McCoy explained how salaries work when a player is called up to the majors and then sent back down. He said the answer depends on the contract.

A veteran with a guaranteed deal keeps earning his major league salary even if he’s optioned to the minors. A player on a split contract, though, gets paid differently depending on where he is.

In the majors, he earns the daily share of the MLB minimum of $785,000. In the minors, he gets the daily portion of the $154,000 minor league scale.

With a 187-day regular season, McCoy said that works out to about $4,200 a day in the majors and about $825 a game in the minors. “Guess where a player prefers to be?”

On the topic of whether the Reds should lock up Sal Stewart long term the way they didn’t with Elly De La Cruz, McCoy said it takes “two to fox trot.” Both sides have to want the deal, and he pointed to De La Cruz’s agent, Scott Boras, as someone who will push for the very top dollar.

He said that’s not how the Reds operate. In both De La Cruz’s and Stewart’s cases, he said, the Reds still control them for a few more years.

He doubted Stewart would stay once he reaches free agency. The club’s best move, in McCoy’s view, is to wait until a player’s pre-free-agent season and trade him for the best possible return.

Otherwise, he said, the Reds would lose the player in free agency and get only a draft pick.

McCoy also weighed in on one of baseball’s small celebrations: the hand motion players make after a hit, the one that looks like they’re playing with a Slinky. He brushed it off as “Boys will be boys,” saying each team seems to have its own secret gestures aimed at the dugout after a double or triple.

To him, it’s basically a “Hey, look at me” move. He invoked Paul Brown’s famous advice: “Act like you’ve been there before.”

In other words, act as if second base isn’t a brand-new invention.

And when a reader asked about the best food served to writers at a ballpark, McCoy had his favorites ready. He said he loved the foot-long Dodger Dogs at Dodger Stadium and the Polish sausage sandwiches in Milwaukee.

He also recalled the last regular-season game in 1999, when the Reds had to win to force a playoff with the Mets for the wild card spot. With multiple rain delays, the game stretched to seven hours, and McCoy said he ate eight sausage sandwiches without getting a stomachache.

He was told that wasn’t a record, since one writer once ate 11 sausage sandwiches in a nine-inning game. After his own seven-hour feast, McCoy said he still went to an Italian restaurant and “didn’t hold back.”

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