The 2010 Reds stood little chance of
beating the Phillies in the Division Series. The Phillies’ rotation was simply
too good.
Roy Halladay threw a no-hitter in Game 1.
The Reds made four errors and hit three batters in Game 2. Cole Hamels threw a
five-hit shutout in Game 3 – and just like that, the team with the
highest-scoring offense in the National League was eliminated. cheap jerseys free shipping
These Reds are better.
I won’t predict that they will advance past
the Division Series, not when their opponent has yet to be determined, not when
trying to forecast the baseball postseason is an exercise in futility.
But the Reds, whose magic number for
clinching the NL Central is two as they host the Dodgers this weekend
(Saturday, MLB on FOX, 4:10 p.m. ET), boast a more talented pitching staff than
their 2010 predecessors.
The 2010 team was 10th in the NL in
rotation ERA and seventh in bullpen ERA. The 2012 team ranks sixth in the
league in rotation ERA, first in bullpen ERA – and its five starters have
combined to make all but one start this season.
True, the Reds’ offense isn’t what it was
in ’10, ranking only eighth in the NL in scoring. But injuries to first baseman
Joey Votto and third baseman Scott Rolen have contributed to the lack of
production, and all of the team’s hitters are on track to be healthy for the
postseason.
Alas, the Reds have two significant
pitching concerns.
Closer Aroldis Chapman has not pitched since
Sept. 10 because of shoulder fatigue. And if ace right-hander Johnny Cueto
fails to rebound from his late-season funk, the Reds might be in a position
comparable to where they were two years ago against the Phillies.
Remember?
Righty Edinson Volquez started Game 1 after
making only 12 starts during the regular season while recovering from Tommy
John surgery and serving a 50-game suspension for violating baseball’s drug
policy.
Manager Dusty Baker reasoned that Volquez
had pitched well in his final four regular-season starts, had enjoyed success
against the Phillies the previous season, had the best chance of any Reds
starter to hold down the Phils’ left-handed hitters.
It all seemed logical enough until Volquez
took the mound and lasted only 1 2/3 innings – a problem on a night when the
other guy was throwing a no-hitter. Bronson Arroyo and Cueto pitched OK in
games 2 and 3, but to no avail.
Now Volquez is gone, and Cueto is the Reds’
clear No. 1. Only lately, he isn’t pitching like a No. 1. His results were
better Thursday, coming off three difficult starts that probably cost him the
NL Cy Young Award. But even though Cueto pitched six scoreless innings against
the Cubs, he allowed nine baserunners (one on an intentional walk) and wasn’t
especially sharp.
He has worked 203 innings, a career-high.
“I don’t think
that was the best stuff he’s ever had,” Cubs manager Dale Sveum told reporters.
“You can tell he might be getting a little tired at the end of the year or
whatever, but I’ve seen him with a lot better stuff.”
Cueto’s problem, if there is a problem,
doesn’t appear to be physical. He threw 92 to 95 mph Thursday, and his recent readings have been
among his highest of the season, according to one Reds official. The bigger
issue, the official says, is that Cueto is missing up in the zone, failing to
generate early contact off his sinker.
The Reds, at this point, aren’t inclined to
give Cueto a breather; quite the contrary, they want him to get back on a roll.
Cueto, though, likely will make abbreviated appearances in his final two
regular-season starts. And while Baker could go with someone else in Game 1 –
righties Mat Latos, Arroyo and Homer Bailey all are pitching well – it’s not
the manager’s style to demote a veteran who excelled for most of the season.
Nor should it be.
But let’s not get too far ahead of
ourselves.
The regular season is not over, and the
Reds cannot be content simply to win the NL Central. Finishing with the
league’s best record – the Reds currently trail the Nationals by a half-game -
would provide a tangible benefit in the Division Series, not to mention
home-field advantage in the NLCS. yankees
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The way things stand, the top seed in the
NL will avoid the Giants in the first round and face the wild-card winner. That
team – whether it’s the Braves, Cardinals, Brewers or Dodgers – likely will
burn its best pitcher in the one-game knockout, if not a prior tiebreaker. So,
the top seed probably will avoid seeing Kris Medlen, Kyle Lohse, Yovani
Gallardo or Josh Beckett – yes, Beckett is the Dodgers’ ace at this moment –
until at least Game 3.
The Cardinals’ rotation ERA actually is
better than the Giants’, but if Lohse can pitch only once, the group overall
will be less formidable. Even against the Giants, the Reds would not
necessarily be at a disadvantage; their rotation actually has outperformed San Francisco’s when
accounting for the differences in home ballparks. Then again, right-hander Matt
Cain and lefty Madison Bumgarner might be better than any starter the Reds
have.
Actually, I may be wrong about that – Latos
has a 2.83 ERA in his last 10 starts, Arroyo a 2.85 in his last seven, Bailey a 1.55 in his last four. A return to form by
Cueto and Chapman, and the Reds would stand a legitimate chance of winning the
World Series.
They’re better than they were in 2010.
Their first-round opponent figures to be less formidable than the Phillies were
that year. Still, the Reds arguably need Cueto more than the Nationals need
Stephen Strasburg. And Cueto, at least right now, is not the same.
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