Reds end Brewers' franchise-record, 14-game winning streak on Hays' bases-loaded hit in the 10th
Milwaukee had barely pulled out the previous two games in Cincinnati for its longest streak ever within one season and the longest in the majors since the St. Louis Cardinals won 17 straight from Sept. 11 to Sept. 28, 2021.
This time, Spencer Steer's sacrifice bunt in the 10th advanced designated runner TJ Friedl to third. After intentional walks to Elly De La Cruz and Will Benson loaded the bases, Hays laced a single to down the third-base line for his second career walk-off hit.
Milwaukee, which overcame a seven-run deficit on Friday and rallied to win in 14 innings Saturday, nearly came back for another win.
William Contreras hit his 13th home run of the season, a two-run shot off Reds closer Emilio Pagan, to put Milwaukee ahead 2-1 in the ninth. But the Reds tied it when Benson reached on a fielding error by shortstop Joey Ortiz and later scored on Jose Trevino's single.
The first-place Brewers fell to 53-17 in their last 70 games.
The game was scoreless through six innings with Reds left-hander Andrew Abbott and Brewers lefty Jose Quintana allowing a combined six hits with 11 strikeouts.
Cincinnati scored the game's first run when Hays led off the seventh with a double and scored on Trevino's sacrifice fly to the wall in center.
Graham Ashcraft (7-4) earned the win for Cincinnati. Grant Anderson (2-4) took the loss.
Key moment
In the top of the 10th inning, designated runner Andrew Vaughn was thrown out at third base trying to advance on Blake Perkins' bunt.
Key stat
The Reds are the only team that has not been swept in a series this season. Their 40 series without a sweep is the longest in franchise history, eclipsing the 1970 team which went 32 straight series. It's the seventh time the Reds have won the final game of a series to avoid being swept.
Up next
Brewers RHP Freddy Peralta (14-5, 2.90) will start Monday against the Cubs at Wrigley Field. RHP Brady Singer (10-9, 4.31) will start Monday for the Reds against the Angels in Anaheim.
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Yahoo
2 hours ago
- Yahoo
Hays' walk-off single gives Reds 3-2 win, ends Brewers' 14-game streak
CINCINNATI (AP) — Austin Hays' single with the bases loaded in the 10th inning gave the Cincinnati Reds a 3-2 victory over Milwaukee on Sunday, ending the Brewers' franchise-record winning streak at 14 games. Milwaukee had barely pulled out the previous two games in Cincinnati for its longest streak ever within one season and the longest in the majors since the St. Louis Cardinals won 17 straight from Sept. 11 to Sept. 28, 2021. This time, Spencer Steer's sacrifice bunt in the 10th advanced designated runner TJ Friedl to third. After intentional walks to Elly De La Cruz and Will Benson loaded the bases, Hays laced a single to down the third-base line for his second career walk-off hit. Milwaukee, which overcame a seven-run deficit on Friday and rallied to win in 14 innings Saturday, nearly came back for another win. William Contreras hit his 13th home run of the season, a two-run shot off Reds closer Emilio Pagan, to put Milwaukee ahead 2-1 in the ninth. But the Reds tied it when Benson reached on a fielding error by shortstop Joey Ortiz and later scored on Jose Trevino's single. The first-place Brewers fell to 53-17 in their last 70 games. TWINS 8, TIGERS 1 MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Brooks Lee's first career grand slam capped a six-run third inning and Minnesota beat Detroit to avoid a four-game series sweep. Byron Buxton had a homer among his three hits and Royce Lewis also went deep for Minnesota, which won for the second time in seven games. Making his seventh career start, and first since Sept. 2, 2023 with Pittsburgh, Thomas Hatch (2-0) allowed three hits and struck out four in five innings. Lee's slam off former Twins pitcher Chris Paddack to the seats in right field — Minnesota's first slam since Carlos Correa on July 5, 2024 at Houston —made it 7-1 and highlighted a third inning that began with Buxton's 25th home run, a 388-foot shot that reached the second deck in left field. Kerry Carpenter had an RBI single for the AL Central-leading Tigers, who lost for the first time in six games. Acquired from the Twins on July 28, Paddack (4-11) allowed eight earned runs on nine hits in 5 2/3 innings and lost to Minnesota for the second time in three starts. The right-hander allowed four earned runs in four innings of a 6-3 loss Aug. 5. He's allowed at least eight runs three times this season. PHILLIES 11, NATIONALS 9 WASHINGTON (AP) — Alec Bohm hit a three-run home run in his return from the injured list, Nick Castellanos also went deep and Philadelphia defeated Washington to earn a four-game series split. Right-hander Aaron Nola also returned from the injured list to give up six runs in 2 1/3 innings for the Phillies in his first big league appearance since May 14. NL East-leading Philadelphia had dropped four of its last five games. Paul DeJong hit a three-run homer in the ninth inning for last-place Washington, which fell to 18-36 in day games. Bohm had two hits in his first game since July 18, including a fourth-inning single that chased reliever PJ Poulin (0-1). Castellanos doubled off Orlando Ribalta, and Weston Wilson followed with a two-run single to make it 8-6. Tanner Banks (5-2) pitched 1 2/3 scoreless innings. Jhoan Duran, pitching for the first time since taking a line drive off his ankle Friday, got the last two outs for his 21st save and fifth with the Phillies. Philadelphia scored an unearned run in the first and then capitalized when José Tena's relay for a potential inning-ending double play in the second sailed out of play. The Phillies collected three consecutive singles before Bohm blasted Washington starter Mitchell Parker's last pitch into the visitors' bullpen in left. Parker allowed six runs — five earned — in 1 2/3 innings. Nola retired seven of the first eight batters he faced before the next seven reached safely. His outing ended on Tena's double to tie it. MARLINS 5, RED SOX 3 BOSTON (AP) — Dane Myers and Jakob Marsee homered in Miami's three-run ninth inning and the Marlins beat Boston to end a three-game losing streak. Myers hit the second pitch from Greg Weissert (4-4) into Boston's bullpen to tie it, and Marsee sent a pitch from Steven Matz into the seats in right. Tyler Phillips (2-1) worked a scoreless inning, and Anthony Bender got the final three outs for his fourth save. Eric Wagaman also homered for the Marlins. Boston's Wilyer Abreu had a two-run homer that popped out of the glove of right fielder Myers when he crashed into the fence. The Red Sox wasted a solid start by ace Garrett Crochet. Crochet rebounded from his worst start of the season, giving up three hits, with eight strikeouts and a walk one over seven innings. He was tagged for five runs in four innings in a loss Monday at Houston. Miami's Joey Wiemer struck out swinging three times in his major league debut. RANGERS 10, BLUE JAYS 4 TORONTO (AP) — Marcus Semien homered and scored twice in his return to the lineup and Nathan Eovaldi worked seven innings and won his seventh straight decision as Texas beat Toronto to avoid a three-game sweep. Wyatt Langford and Evan Carter each hit two-run homers, and Corey Seager added a solo shot as Texas snapped a four-game skid. Rangers first baseman Jake Burger exited after six innings because of a sore left wrist. Vladimir Guerrero Jr. and Alejandro Kirk hit solo home runs, but that was all the offense the Blue Jays managed against Eovaldi (11-3). The right-hander allowed two runs and five hits with six strikeouts and no walks. Eovaldi is unbeaten since a May 22 road loss to the Yankees. Shawn Armstrong got four outs for his fourth save in seven chances. Back at second base after sitting out Saturday's loss because of a sore right wrist, Semien hit a two-run homer off right-hander José Berríos in the second. The homer was Semien's 15th. Seager chased Berríos with a one-out homer in the fifth, his 18th. Langford homered off Braydon Fisher in the sixth, his 17th. Carter connected off Louis Varland in the ninth, his fifth. Berríos (9-5) allowed a season-high 10 hits and matched a season-high by giving up six runs in 4 1/3 innings. Guerrero's sixth-inning homer was his 21st. Kirk hit his ninth in the second. George Springer hit a two-run homer off Hoby Milner in the eighth, his 19th. BRAVES 5, GUARDIANS 4 CLEVELAND (AP) — Jurickson Profar hit a go-ahead, two-run homer in the sixth inning, Atlanta won its season-best fifth straight game, rallying past Cleveland to complete a three-game sweep. With one out in the sixth, Profar pulled a 3-2 slider from Nic Enright (2-1) over the wall in right field to put the Braves ahead. Atlanta trailed 4-1 after four innings. Aaron Bummer (3-2) worked two innings of scoreless relief, and Dylan Lee, Pierce Johnson and Raisel Iglesias pitched a scoreless frame each, with Iglesias converting his 19th save. Left fielder Profar made a diving catch of a liner by Gabriel Arias for the second out in the ninth. Bo Naylor had four hits and Daniel Schneemann had a two-run triple for the Guardians, who had worked their way back into playoff contention with 11 wins in 14 games before getting swept by the Braves. CUBS 4, PIRATES 3 CHICAGO (AP) — Dansby Swanson hit a tiebreaking sacrifice fly in the eighth inning, and Chicago beat Pittsburgh in the rubber game of the weekend series. Pete Crow-Armstrong and Ian Happ each had two hits for Chicago, which had dropped four of five before a 3-1 victory Saturday. Next up is a big five-game series against major league-leading Milwaukee, beginning with a split doubleheader Monday at Wrigley Field. The Cubs are eight games back of the Brewers in the NL Central. Chicago had runners on second and third with one out in the eighth when Isaac Mattson (3-2) issued an intentional walk to Nico Hoerner. Swanson followed with a flyball to right, driving in Carson Kelly. Caleb Thielbar (3-3) got one out for the win, and Andrew Kittredge pitched a 1-2-3 ninth for his first save. Pittsburgh trailed 2-1 before Joey Bart lined a two-run double into the corner in left in the sixth. Ronny Simon's two-out single put runners on the corners, but Ben Brown escaped the jam when Spencer Horwitz bounced to second. Chicago tied it at 3 on Carson Kelly's bloop single in the bottom half, driving in Seiya Suzuki. The Cubs had the bases loaded with two down, but Swanson flied to right for the final out of the inning. ROYALS 6, WHITE SOX 2 KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Jonathan India and Adam Frazier hit two-run homers, rallying Kansas City to a victory over Chicago for a series sweep. The White Sox led 2-0 before India tied it in the seventh with his 451-foot shot, tying his longest. Run-scoring singles by Maikel Garcia and Salvador Perez gave the Royals a 4-2 lead in the eighth before Frazier's fifth homer of the season made it 6-2. White Sox starter Davis Martin allowed one hit in seven innings before Steven Wilson, Grant Taylor (0-3) and Jordan Leasure yielded six runs and seven hits in two innings. Lenyn Sosa hit his 16th home run of the season with one out in the first and Andrew Benintendi scored on Edgar Quero's RBI single in the sixth to make it 2-0. Lucas Erceg (5-3), the fourth Kansas City pitcher, earned the win with one scoreless inning. ORIOLES 12, ASTROS 0 HOUSTON (AP) — Jordan Westburg hit a three-run homer among four hits with a career-best five RBIs and Dean Kremer pitched seven sharp innings to give Baltimore a win over Houston. Kremer (9-9) allowed just three singles and struck out seven. Grant Wolfram and Corbin Martin finished the six-hitter. The Astros were shut out for the second time this series after Brandon Young came within four outs of a perfect game in Baltimore's 7-0 win Friday night. Westburg hit an opposite-field shot to right-center off Shawn Dubin in the fifth to make it 5-0. He added RBI singles in the seventh and eighth. His four hits matched a career high. Houston starter Cristian Javier (1-1) left with an illness after allowing one run in three innings. The Astros used five relievers before outfielder Chas McCormick threw a scoreless ninth in his second pitching appearance this week. The bases were loaded in the third when Jesús Sánchez robbed Gunnar Henderson of a grand slam with a leaping catch into the seats in right field. Jeremiah Jackson scored on the sacrifice fly to make it 1-0. Sánchez robbed another homer in the seventh with two on when he reached into the seats to snag a fly ball hit by Samuel Basallo, who was making his major league debut. Basallo, the Orioles' top prospect, drove in two runs with a single in Baltimore's five-run eighth. YANKEES 8, CARDINALS 4 ST. LOUIS (AP) — Cody Bellinger drove in three runs, Paul Goldschmidt had three hits against his former team and New York beat St. Louis for a series sweep. Second baseman Thomas Saggese made two errors in the Yankees' four-run ninth. He threw wildly to first, and leadoff batter José Caballero took second and then third on a passed ball. Walks to pinch-hitter Giancarlo Stanton and Aaron Judge loaded the bases. Saggese let Bellinger's grounder get by him for two runs. Judge then scored on a fielder's choice. Goldschmidt, who played for St. Louis from 2019-24, hit his second double for the final run. Luke Weaver (3-3) pitched the final 1 1/3 innings. JoJo Romero (4-5) took the loss. New York tied it at 4 in the seventh when Trent Grishman drew a leadoff walk and scored on Bellinger's sacrifice fly. Camilo Doval led off the sixth with a homer to center to put St. Louis up 4-3. The Yankees grabbed a 3-0 lead in the fourth inning on run-scoring singles by Jasson Domínguez, Ryan McMahon and Caballero. St. Louis scored two unearned runs in the fourth on a two-out double to right by Saggese. Alec Burleson drove in a run in the fifth to tie it. St. Louis manager Oliver Marmol was ejected in the seventh. It was his fifth ejection this season. Yankees coach Tanner Swanson was ejected in the fourth inning. ROCKIES 6, DIAMONDBACKS 5 DENVER (AP) — Ryan Ritter and Mickey Moniak hit two-run singles in the seventh inning and Colorado held on to beat Arizona. Major league-worst Colorado rallied late for the second consecutive game and won the final three games of four-game series. The Rockies are 35-89. Jake Woodford (0-3) gave up a leadoff single and hit the next two batters, and singles by Ritter and Moniak gave the Rockies a 5-4 lead. Braxton Fulford had an RBI double in the eighth. Anthony Molina (1-1) pitched a scoreless inning and Juan Mejia finished for his first save for Colorado. With runners on second and third in the ninth, Mejia made a leaping catch of Ketel Marte's popup and held onto the ball despite colliding with first baseman Warming Bernabel to end the game. GIANTS 7, RAYS 1 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — Dominic Smith hit a three-run single and Drew Gilbert and Tyler Fitzgerald added solo homers as San Francisco beat Tampa Bay. Smith's bases-clearing double scored Rafael Devers, Heliot Ramos and Willy Adames in the sixth inning and put the Giants ahead to stay. Gilbert hit his first MLB homer in his eighth game and added an RBI single. Fitzgerald followed Gilbert's long ball in the seventh with his fourth homer of the season. San Francisco's Logan Webb (11-9) pitched seven innings of shutout ball, allowing three hits with seven strikeouts and no walks. Tampa Bay starter Ryan Pepiot (8-10) allowed six hits and four earned runs in 5 2/3 innings, with eight strikeouts. The Rays' only run came on an infield single by Yandy Diaz that scored catcher Hunter Feduccia in the eighth innng. DODGERS 5, PADRES 4 LOS ANGELES (AP) — Mookie Betts hit a tiebreaking solo home run leading off the eighth inning after Los Angeles blew a four-run lead and the Dodgers beat San Diego to increase their NL West lead to two games. The Dodgers opened the three-game series trailing the Padres by a game but they swept their rivals, outscoring San Diego 14-6. The teams meet again starting Friday in San Diego. After walking and flying out twice, Betts went deep to left off reliever Robert Suarez (4-5) for his second homer in his last nine games, giving the Dodgers a 5-4 lead. Suarez retired the next three batters. Freddie Freeman hit a two-strike, three-run homer and Andy Pages added a solo shot off Padres starter Yu Darvish in the first, staking starter Tyler Glasnow to a 4-0 lead. Swinging a bat resembling a pencil on Players' Weekend, Pages' shot came with two outs and was the sixth homer given up by Darvish — all on the road — this season. After Alex Freeland's leadoff walk in the second, the Dodgers went down in order in the third, fourth and fifth. ANGELS 11, ATHLETICS 5 WEST SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Jo Adell hit a three-run homer in the first inning and kicked off a six-run tenth with an RBI single as the Los Angeles Angels beat the Athletics to avoid a three-game sweep. Kenley Jansen (5-2) struck out two in a scoreless ninth to give him 1,268 for his career, the fourth-most strikeouts by a reliever in major league history. In the 10th, automatic runner Mike Trout advanced to third on a passed ball, Taylor Ward walked and Adell lined a single to center against Michael Kelly (2-2) to make it 6-5. Christian Moore drove in his third run of the game with a grounder and Luis Rengifo followed with a two-run triple off Ben Bowden. Bryce Teodosio added a sacrifice fly and Zach Neto capped the scoring with a 436-foot homer to left-center, his 21st. Adell's homer in the first off Jeffrey Springs was his 26th, extending his career best. Rookie Nick Kurtz hit his 25th homer in the third inning and the A's went back-to-back when Shea Langeliers hit his 26th. Lawrence Butler's 17th homer got the A's within 5-4 in the sixth, and Luis Urías tied it with a two-out RBI single. METS 7, MARINERS 3 WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) — Mark Vientos hit a three-run homer to the delight of hundreds of cheering 12-year-olds and sent New York to a 7-3 win over Seattle in the Major League Baseball Little League Classic. Seattle catcher Cal Raleigh boosted his major league home run lead with his 47th of the season in the seventh. Little Leaguers from around the world made up the bulk of the crowd at the 2,366-seat Historic Bowman Field and some of them got to pinch-hit in a variety of roles. There were kids in the broadcast booth, playing DJ, and even public address announcer. That is, when they weren't belting out the SpongeBob lyrics or angling for selfies with Mariner Moose or Mr. Met. For the big leaguers, the annual game is a throwback of sorts to their own youth baseball days. Mets pitcher Sean Manaea traded pins. Raleigh's chest protector featured a baseball card design of teammates and coaches from when they were kids. And yes, managers for both teams held their breath as players went cardboard sledding at Lamade Stadium. The game went downhill early for the Mariners. Vientos hit a sacrifice fly off Mariners starter George Kirby (8-6) in a three-run second inning. Vientos hit his eighth homer of the year in the fifth to make it 6-1. Francisco Lindor added an RBI double later in the inning.


Chicago Tribune
5 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
3 takeaways from the weekend as the Chicago Cubs prepare for a 5-game series with the Milwaukee Brewers
The National League Central-leading Milwaukee Brewers are coming to town for a five-game set against the Chicago Cubs, starting with a doubleheader on Monday at Wrigley Field. Here's the math. A Cubs sweep puts them three games out of first place. A Brewers sweep means the Cubs would be 13 games back with 34 games left in the season. Logic would say that the results would fall in the middle and the Cubs would be somewhere between 5-10 games back. But this season, logic is not a part of the equation. Whatever happens, the Cubs know they will be in a battle against a team that won 14 of its last 15 games and had a 14-game win streak snapped in Cincinnati on Sunday. 'This series has a lot of attention and there will be a great atmosphere,' left fielder Ian Happ said after the Cubs beat the Pittsburgh Pirates 4-3 on Sunday at Wrigley Field to prevent a fourth straight series loss. 'They play fundamental baseball. They run the bases well, they play defense well. They pitch and hit. We just have to go out and play our game.' Cubs manager Craig Counsell, who managed the Brewers from 2015-23, is looking forward to doing battle with his old team. 'We're excited for the series,' he said. 'We're getting to the point where the number of games left means that the games are important and the wins are helpful.' Dansby Swanson, who was honored Sunday with a bobblehead of him and his wife, Chicago Stars standout Mallory Swanson, hit a sacrifice fly in the bottom of the eighth to bring home Carson Kelly with what turned out to be the winning run for the Cubs in front of a crowd of 38,012. Happ and Pete Crow-Armstrong each had two hits for the Cubs (70-53). Starter Javier Assad, pitching in just his second game this season after suffering an oblique injury, gave up one run on five hits in four innings. While the Cubs salvaged the Pirates series, the offense is still scuffling, scoring nine runs in three games against a last-place team one series removed from getting blown out 33-6 by the Brewers. Here are three takeaways before the big series. Some fans are thirsting for sweeping changes in a Cubs lineup that is not producing the runs and showing the power it had before the All-Star break. Counsell was partially amused and partially piqued before Sunday's game when asked by members of the media about the lineup. 'What do you guys — what do you want to do?' Counsell said. 'Why don't you tell me what you want to happen and then I'll respond to that.' Someone suggested third baseman Matt Shaw, whose 1.086 OPS since the All-Star break ranked third in the National League, should be moved from ninth to higher up in the order. 'Looking at (leadoff hitter) Michael Busch, he's a really good hitter,' Counsell said. 'He's a very productive hitter. And we want that guy to hit a lot. Yeah. 'Matt's had a nice two-week stretch where he's been productive and we tried to put him in good matchups. And we try to develop him as well.' Another suggestion was giving slumping Happ some time off in favor of rookie Owen Caissie, who was tearing it up at Triple-A Iowa. 'Ian's a really good baseball player,' Counsell said. 'Ian's had some bad luck this year, if you want to check that. And he's swung the bat pretty, pretty darn well. This is where baseball gets tough. There is not much difference between Ian's season last year and in 2023 and this year. Do you make a decision based off of that?' Caissie was called up Thursday and went 0-for-4 in one game against the Toronto Blue Jays, then sat out the first two games against Pittsburgh. He was a pinch hitter on Sunday and popped out to third. Happ, who entered the game 4-for-26 in his previous eight games, got back on track. Counsell said that Caissie will play in one of the doubleheader games against the Brewers on Monday. There was a time this season when right fielder Kyle Tucker would single or hit a home run and fans on social media would say, 'Pay the man whatever he wants!' Tucker, who came to the Cubs in an offseason trade with Houston with one year left on his contract, was speculated by some to command a $500 million price tag on his next contract. Now that he is in a slump — he hasn't homered since July 19 and hits have been hard to come by — fans are getting testy with him. On Sunday, when he didn't run out of the batter's box on a grounder to first in the sixth inning, he was loudly booed. Since the Cubs have not been in the postseason since 2020, let's have a refresher course on the playoffs. The American League and National League each get six representatives — three division champs and three wild cards. The top seed is the team with the league's best record, the second seed is the second-best division winner and the third seed is the third-best division winner. The top two seeds will get first-round byes. It's looking like the Cubs won't have to worry about that. As of Sunday, the Cubs own the top NL wild-card mark and would be the fourth seed and host the fifth seed, another wild-card team, in a best-of-three series at Wrigley Field. Playing at home and having starters Shota Imanaga, Cade Horton and Matthew Boyd doesn't sound like a bad deal right now.


Fox News
6 hours ago
- Fox News
Bengals Reportedly Listening to Trade Offers on Star DE Trey Hendrickson
As Trey Hendrickson continues his hold-in during training camp this week, the Cincinnati Bengals are listening to trade offers for the star edge rusher, NFL Media reported on Sunday. No deal is imminent, and it's unclear if Hendrickson will wind up playing elsewhere in 2025, NFL Media added in its report. Hendrickson and the Bengals were in a contract dispute for virtually the entire offseason, with Cincinnati allowing him to talk to other teams about a potential deal at one point. However, no deal came to fruition, and the Bengals and Hendrickson have failed to reach an agreement on a new deal as he enters the final year of his contract. With no contract extension coming to fruition this offseason, Hendrickson wasn't shy to share how upset he was with the team. He skipped essentially the Bengals' entire offseason program, including mandatory minicamp, before sitting out the first few days of training camp in July. Hendrickson eventually ended his holdout, returning to the Bengals on July 30. That led to some optimism that a deal could get done soon, but he hasn't practiced with the team at all. As Hendrickson is owed $16 million in the final year of his contract, the contracts for top edge rushers have grown exponentially this offseason. T.J. Watt became the latest to earn a rich deal at the position, agreeing to a three-year, $123 million ($41 million per year) deal with the Pittsburgh Steelers this offseason. Micah Parsons seems like a possibility to break that mark as well, but he's also in a contract dispute with his team and requested a trade from the Dallas Cowboys earlier in August. Hendrickson, 30, might not end up breaking Watt's record for the largest contract ever for a non-quarterback, but he has a good case of receiving a deal that would pay him at least $34 million per year, which would make him one of the five highest-paid edge rushers in the league. He has been named a Pro Bowler in all four seasons since he joined the Bengals in 2021. He has also recorded at least 14.0 sacks in three of his first four seasons in Cincinnati, including a league-high 17.5 sacks last season. Additionally, Hendrickson has also been good at generating pressure. He had 83 pressures and was second in pass rush win rate last season (24%). He has also finished in the top 10 in pass rush win rate among edge rushers in all four years he's been with the Bengals. Want great stories delivered right to your inbox? Create or log in to your FOX Sports account, and follow leagues, teams and players to receive a personalized newsletter daily!