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C. Notes: If the Reds sell at the deadline, which players could they make available?
C. Notes: If the Reds sell at the deadline, which players could they make available?

New York Times

timea day ago

  • Business
  • New York Times

C. Notes: If the Reds sell at the deadline, which players could they make available?

With Sunday's loss to the Chicago Cubs, the Cincinnati Reds sit at 29-31 on the season in fourth place, 8 1/2 games behind the first-place Cubs, 4 1/2 games behind the second-place St. Louis Cardinals and three games behind the third-place Milwaukee Brewers. Fourth place is hardly where the expectations were for this team coming into the season, and if the Reds continue to tread water while the Cubs and Cardinals surge as June turns to July, the Reds could turn into sellers at the July 31 trade deadline. Advertisement It seems unlikely the Reds would part with their best trade chips, shortstop Elly De La Cruz or right-hander Hunter Greene, with both under team control through at least 2029 (De La Cruz through the arbitration process and Greene is signed through 2028 with a team option for 2029). The Reds seem more inclined to build around that pair than move either in the immediate future. So, that means for the most part, the Reds' trade pieces are in one of two groups — players who will be a free agent after the 2025 season and those with another year of team control through the 2026 season. Here are the Reds on expiring contracts (or with team/mutual options), with their 2025 salary in parentheses: RHP Nick Martinez ($21,050,000), LHP Taylor Rogers ($12 million, but the Giants paid half of that), RHP Emilio Pagán ($8 million), OF Austin Hays ($4 million with a mutual option), LHP Brent Suter ($2.25 million with a club option), RHP Scott Barlow ($2.5 million with a club option) and 2B/OF Garrett Hampson ($1.5 million). Of those, Martinez's versatility and performance would make him attractive to a contender looking to bolster its rotation for the homestretch with the backup plan of a trusted, experienced reliever. Bullpen arms like Rogers, Pagán, Suter and Barlow have their appeal, but would bring back less than Martinez. Hays' performance this season would make him an attractive trade candidate, but he's on his third IL stint this season, which could give a team pause. The second group would be players who have another year of team control. Extra team control helps with the return in a trade, but it also hurts the team in 2026. Reds who are scheduled for free agency following the 2026 season are IF Jeimer Candelario, RHP Brady Singer, C Tyler Stephenson, 2B Gavin Lux, OF Jake Fraley, IF Santiago Espinal and C Austin Wynns. Of those, the player who would get the most in return would be Stephenson. The Reds signed Jose Trevino to an extension through the 2027 season this spring, but that was to be the backup. In the right package, it could make sense to move Stephenson, but it would be difficult to replace him for next season. Advertisement Lux and Singer could interest teams, while Fraley, Espinal and Wynns would draw attention. Wynns is the team's third catcher, but if there is any doubt he'd be claimed on waivers, the Los Angeles Dodgers claimed former Reds catcher Chuckie Robinson last week. If Wynns were to be put on waivers, it's unlikely he'd last long. Candelario has a club option for 2027, but his performance since signing a three-year, $45 million deal would make him difficult to trade unless the Reds took on a large portion of the money remaining on his contract, which includes $12 million in 2026 and a $3 million buyout for the 2027 club option. If the Reds find themselves as buyers? Well, a lot would have to go right in the near future, and it's tough to know what the needs would be at that point (beyond bullpen help — every team needs bullpen help at the deadline.) If you're not subscribed to our wonderful baseball newsletter, The Windup, you should be. But head Winder-upper Levi Weaver asked me Thursday night to explain the Alexis Díaz deal from the Reds' perspective. Here's what ran in the newsletter: The short answer is it saves money. Díaz is making $4.5 million this year and has two years of arbitration left. With what the Reds have seen this year, the team didn't believe he could help them at the big-league level this season. That means they'd also likely non-tender him after the season. If, in their eyes, Díaz wasn't going to help them this year and wouldn't be around next year, why pay him to pitch for the Louisville Bats? He continued to struggle in Triple A, where he had walked as many batters as he'd struck out (eight) since being optioned. He no longer had value to the Reds, and this was as good of a deal as they could get for a team willing to take on the contract. For the Reds, the only downside is looking bad if he rebounds, and fear of embarrassment isn't a good reason not to make a move. Advertisement But that's not everything. While all the headlines included the fact that Díaz was a former All-Star, it should be noted that he hasn't performed at an All-Star level since the 2023 All-Star Game. Díaz went to Seattle in July of 2023 with 26 saves and a 2.04 ERA. The first half of that season, he struck out 37.4 percent of the batters he faced and walked just 11.7 percent of the batters he faced. Since then, he's put up a 4.72 ERA and a 5.52 xFIP. His strikeout rate dropped to 20.7 percent and his walk rate increased to 13.3 percent. That started from the second half of 2023, when he had an ERA of 4.61 and strikeout and walk rates of 20.3 and 13.8, respectively. It's been around the same ever since. That's just simply not worth the money. There's a chance the change of scenery and voices help Díaz and that the Reds end up looking bad. But if that happens, it probably wouldn't have happened here. Lefty Wade Miley opted out of his minor-league deal with the team Sunday and became a free agent. Miley, 38, was coming off Tommy John surgery and had made seven starts between High-A Dayton and Triple-A Louisville, going 1-2 with an 8.84 ERA. He struck out 15, walked four and hit three over 19 1/3 innings, allowing 32 hits and 19 runs. He allowed a pair of runs on six hits and three walks over five innings Friday for Louisville. As an Article XX(B) free-agent signee in winter, Miley had the opportunity to opt out on June 1 if he was not on the 40-man roster. The Reds have an open spot on their 40-man roster, but Miley had communicated his desire to start, and with no spot in the rotation, the Reds didn't put him on the 40-man, allowing him to enter free agency. Two other minor leaguers, lefty reliever Joe La Sorsa and right-hander Aaron Wilkerson, have upward mobility clauses in their minor-league deals. Teams can claim either La Sorsa or Wilkerson within 24 hours, but the Reds can block such a move by adding the selected player to the 40-man roster. If either player is unclaimed, they can remain with the Reds organization. La Sorsa, 27, has appeared in 21 games for the Bats, going 2-1 with a 3.92 ERA. He has 14 strikeouts and 14 walks in 20 2/3 innings, but batters are hitting just .181 against him, with lefties hitting .179 and right-handed hitters hitting .182. In 11 starts for Louisville, the 36-year-old Wilkerson is 4-1 with a 3.84 ERA with a 0.99 WHIP, striking out 52 batters in 58 2/3 innings while walking just nine. Advertisement The Reds went .500 on the road, winning two of three in Kansas City against the Royals and winning the series opener against the Chicago Cubs before dropping the next two. The Reds were shut out for the ninth time this season Saturday, tied with the Pittsburgh Pirates for the most shutout losses this season. No team has been shut out more than the Reds (25 times) over the past two seasons. The Reds return home to face the Milwaukee Brewers, a team they have had little success against. The Reds haven't taken a season series from the Brewers since 2020. Since 2021, the Reds are 23-45 against the Brewers and 8-25 against Milwaukee at Great American Ball Park. The Reds' last series victory over the Brewers at GABP came in May 2022. After an off day Thursday, the Arizona Diamondbacks come to GABP for three games. • 1B Christian Encarnacion-Strand (low back inflammation) has hits in six of his seven games during his rehab assignment with Louisville, going 9-for-24 with three doubles, a triple and a pair of home runs. Encarnacion-Strand was 3-for-4 with two doubles Friday and 2-for-4 with a homer Saturday. • IF Jeimer Candelario (lumbar spine strain) is expected to begin his rehab assignment Monday in the Arizona Complex League. • OF Austin Hays (left foot contusion) went on the IL this week after fouling a ball off his foot in Wednesday's game in Kansas City. • IF Cam Collier (left thumb injury) has played nine games in the Arizona Complex League, going 12-for-30 with three doubles and a home run. He's also walked as many times as he's struck out (seven). • Triple-A Louisville (24-32): IF Levi Jordan went 0-for-4 Sunday, seeing his 11-game hitting streak snapped. Jordan had exactly one hit in each of the previous 11 games. On the season, he's hitting .228/.309/.371 with three home runs. Advertisement • Double-A Chattanooga (24-23): This isn't intentionally a Chase Burns update category, and it will cease to be when he's no longer the most interesting thing on the team. But … on Saturday, Burns went six innings for the first time and didn't allow a run on two hits, a walk and four strikeouts. It was the lowest strikeout total of his professional career. In his seven Double-A starts, he's 5-1 with a 1.54 ERA and 0.77 WHIP, with 49 strikeouts and four walks over 35 innings. • High-A Dayton (17-34): In the six-game series against West Michigan last week, IF Leo Balcazar went 10-for-28 (.357) with a pair of homers and a double with just three strikeouts. On the season, the 20-year-old from Venezuela is hitting .270/.355/.402 with five homers, 37 strikeouts and 21 walks. • Class-A Daytona (22-29): C Alfredo Duno hit .284/.448/.432 in May with a homer, a triple and six doubles. Duno struck out 24 times, but earned 21 walks. He hit .227/.341/.453 in April. Duno started June out right, finishing Sunday's game with two homers while going 3-for-4 with five RBIs. He's now hitting .268/.406/.490 on the season. (Top photo of Nick Martinez: Jamie Squire / Getty Images)

Nick Martinez, Tyler Stephenson help Reds to a 7-4 win over the Royals
Nick Martinez, Tyler Stephenson help Reds to a 7-4 win over the Royals

Yahoo

time26-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Nick Martinez, Tyler Stephenson help Reds to a 7-4 win over the Royals

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Nick Martinez worked seven strong innings and Tyler Stephenson homered to lead the Cincinnati Reds to a 7-4 win over the Kansas City Royals on Monday. Martinez (3-5) allowed three singles through six shutout innings and finished seven innings allowing three runs on six hits with two strikeouts and no walks. Stephenson hit a two-run homer to left in the fifth inning, his second of the season, boosting the Reds' lead to 6-0. Stephenson had three of Cincinnati's 14 hits. Michael Lorenzen (3-6) allowed six runs on a career-high 11 hits with three walks and two strikeouts in five innings as the Royals lost for the third time in four games. Cincinnati jumped ahead 1-0 in the first on TJ Friedl's leadoff double and Austin Hays' sacrifice fly. The Reds lead the majors with 46 first-inning runs and have outscored opponents 46-21 in the first. Gavin Lux and Stephenson drove in runs with two of the Reds five singles in the third inning before Will Benson added a sacrifice fly for a 4-0 lead. Salvador Perez hit a first-pitch, two-run homer in the seventh, snapping Martinez's homerless streak at 42 2/3 innings. Nick Loftin added a sacrifice fly, cutting Kansas City's deficit to 6-3. Vinnie Pasquantino had three hits and extended his hitting streak to 10 games, including four straight with multiple hits. Maikel Garcia extended his hitting streak to 11 games. After playing shortstop for all but three innings this season, Elly De La Cruz was the designated hitter, with Garrett Hampson making his first start at short. Key moment Making his major league debut, John Rave bunted for a hit, putting runners at the corners with no outs in the seventh. Cleveland challenged the safe call at first, which was overturned and Martinez retired the next two batters, escaping the inning. Key stat Martinez needed just 67 pitches to shut out the Royals for six innings. Up next Former Royals RHP Brady Singer (5-3, 4.88) takes the mound for Cincinnati, while Kansas City did not announce a starter for Tuesday. ___ AP MLB:

Tyler Stephenson's breakout game lifts Reds over Royals
Tyler Stephenson's breakout game lifts Reds over Royals

Reuters

time26-05-2025

  • Sport
  • Reuters

Tyler Stephenson's breakout game lifts Reds over Royals

May 26 - Tyler Stephenson clubbed a two-run homer for one of his three hits, Nick Martinez pitched seven quality innings and the visiting Cincinnati Reds beat the Kansas City Royals 7-4 on Monday. Stephenson came in batting .177 but matched the personal hit total from his previous six games. He had three RBIs for the Reds, who got two hits apiece from TJ Friedl, Santiago Espinal and Garrett Hampson. Martinez (3-5) yielded six hits without a walk, and all three runs he allowed came in the seventh, including Salvador Perez's two-run homer. Cincinnati has won two of three after losing three straight. The Reds had their way with Kansas City starter Michael Lorenzen (3-6), who allowed six runs, 11 hits and three walks over five innings. It marked the first time this season a Royals starter allowed more than five runs in a contest. Cincinnati wasted no time getting on the scoreboard. Friedl opened the game with a double that made it to the right field wall and eventually came home on Austin Hays' sacrifice fly. The Reds added three more runs in the third when they banged out five hits against Lorenzen. Gavin Lux and Stephenson each delivered RBI singles and Will Benson came through with Cincinnati's second sacrifice fly to right field. Meanwhile, Martinez allowed his first baserunners in the fourth via singles to ex-Red Jonathan India and Vinnie Pasquantino. However, he avoided any damage after Perez grounded into an inning-ending 4-3 double play. In the fifth, the highlight of Stephenson's big day came when he sent Lorenzen's first-pitch sinker, with a man on, well over the left field wall. The Royals finally got to Martinez in the seventh. After Pasquantino's second single, Perez clubbed a towering homer to left field for Kansas City's first extra-base hit. Maikel Garcia then doubled and eventually scored on Nick Loftin's sacrifice fly. Espinal provided some insurance with an RBI double in the eighth. Kansas City loaded the bags in the ninth but plated only one run via Emilio Pagan's balk. The Royals have totaled 11 runs while losing three of four. --Field Level Media

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