Tag: Cincinnati

Gates Brown, Bill Buckner and a Closer Look at Hall of Fame Balloting

The Baseball Hall of Fame—holy ground for America’s national pastime. Within Cooperstown’s pantheon are honored 296 of the diamond’s royalty. Some are gods; some many have never heard of. A few don’t truly belong; others, having received the sport’s ultimate reward, remain under-appreciated.

Each of them was immortalized by vote, a process vulnerable to an array of human foibles. Whereas most Hall of Famers fully deserve their honor, more than a few waited for enshrinement long after their achievements warranted such recognition (sometimes for decades), or, occasionally in the case of the Veterans Committee, wormed their way in via cronyism, inflated reputation or voter incompetence.

Because (since 1958) the ballot permits—but does not require—voting to the 10th place, some very mediocre players garner votes. Often, this safeguard prohibits too many candidates from making the cut—lest the Hall grow even more overpopulated than it already is— although it occasionally detracts votes from worthy players who should make it in but wait many unnecessary years, or never make it at all.

Why the electorate felt compelled to cast votes for the pedestrian likes of Mike Jorgensen, Terry Puhl, and Eddie Miksis is a wonder. Maybe those responsible also pulled the lever for Harold Stassen…

In 1981, Gates Brown received a vote. A talented batsman who, at his retirement, stood third all-time in pinch hits, Gates enjoyed a superlative year as a sub during the Detroit Tigers championship season of 1968.

Coming off the bench and delivering key hits time and again, Brown contributed mightily to Detroit’s pennant run. A career total of 582 hits, however, stands as far from the stuff of legend as the 119-loss Tigers of 2003 did from first place. Yet Brown shared 27th spot in the voting with five other nondescript players.

This means that some voter penciled Brown as a 10th-place selection over 17 far more Hall-worthy players. If the top nine vote-getters are excluded, which any sane person—including, presumably, the voter in question—would when making Gates his final pick on the ballot, then Brown received a vote instead of later inductees Luis Aparicio, Bill Mazeroski, Orlando Cepeda and Richie Ashburn, as well as Roger Maris and Maury Wills.

Remember, electors are chosen for their expert knowledge of the game.

Poor Bill Buckner. Never mind that he won a batting crown, seven times hit .300, and came within a season and a half of the elite 3,000-hit club—his outstanding career is forever lost in the glare of a single gaffe that didn’t send the Boston Red Sox to another cursed World Series defeat (it merely enabled the hard-luck Bosox to drop the Series the next evening).

Buckner isn’t Hall of Fame material, but his numbers—including, ironically, a solid fielding record (and the penultimate mark for assists in a season by a first baseman)—exceed that of many Hall of Famers. Yet he qualified for the Baseball Writers’ Association of America (BBWAA) ballot only once, earning a paltry 10 votes, which permanently dropped him from eligibility.

Considering the ballot’s hangers-on who collect comparable numbers over multiple elections, it’s obvious that voters ignored Buckner’s 22 seasons because of one unfortunate occurrence.

Case-in-point: one-trick pony Don Larsen. Yes, that lone trick, a perfect game in the 1956 World Series, amounted to one of the most fantastic feats in baseball history. But the Hall isn’t permitted to enshrine players for a single event.

Yet Larsen received no fewer than 22 votes for 15 consecutive years. Not big numbers, but far more generous than his career totals: an 81-91 record (including a 3-21 season), a solitary 100-strikeout year, and an ERA often topping 4.00.

Even so, Larsen’s relatively hefty vote totals—entirely attributable to a spectacular moment in a lackluster 14-year career—left in the dust such terrific, if not Hall-caliber, hurlers as Jim Perry, Billy Pierce and Dave McNally.

A voter shows himself more misguided to reward a player for one triumphant effort than to punish a player for one catastrophic incident.

Such specious voting extends to Johnny Vander Meer, who was just as liable to walk a batter as strike him out. Vandy’s wildness culminated in a meer 119-121 career record—yet, thanks to his consecutive no-hitters, he polled twice as many votes in 1966 as Arky Vaughan, one of the best shortstops ever (not to mention further outdistancing Ernie Lombardi, Hal Newhouser, Billy Herman and Bob Lemon—each eminently more deserving than he).

In fact, Vander Meer, who consistently finished higher than at least half a dozen future Hall of Famers during his years of eligibility, outpaced Newhouser all eight years that they appeared together on the ballot.

Whether or not one views Newhouser as a bona fide Hall of Famer, he did win back-to-back MVPs—and nearly a third—whereas Vander Meer never finished higher than 18th in MVP polling (incidentally, the very season he tossed his no-nos—so how could writers rank Vander Meer so highly for his career when they didn’t even rank him highly for his season of glory?).

Averaging 72 votes a year, Vander Meer’s claim to fame was taken too literally by some writers.

Whether the BBWAA has always known what’s it’s doing when it comes to casting Hall of Fame ballots is debatable (it’s done a largely admirable job in recent decades). However, one can peruse the vote totals of virtually any year and drop a jaw at who scored higher than whom.

As in 1949, for example, when Pepper Martin—a scrappy hitter and, for the time, terror on the base paths—parlayed a pair of heroic World Series performances that made him a legend of the Depressed Midwest into more votes than 25 future Hall of Famers. And even though quite a few of those eventual entrants likely didn’t merit enshrinement, they undoubtedly enjoyed more laudable careers than Pepper. (Certainly Goose Goslin, Sam Rice and Zack Wheat—absolutely deserving—should have scored higher than Martin.)

But that’s the human element of the Hall of Fame, and it’s still preferable to some statistically based program like the college BCS—heaven forbid, some egghead ever devises something similar for Cooperstown…

The 2012 election likely will usher into Cooperstown several great players from among 27 candidates. And if Barry Larkin and Jack Morris, the two favorites, ascend to Baseball Heaven—or even Tim Raines and several borderline candidates—then the BBWAA surely will have done its job.

But I’ll be scanning the bottom of the ballot to see how many wayward votes went to Terry Mulholland, Brad Radke and Tony Womack

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Cincinnati Reds Acquire Mat Latos: Why the Reds Are Now NL Central Favorites

Cincinnati Reds fans have spent the past two months following exciting news reports like “Cincinnati interested in Josh Willingham,” “Reds target Gio Gonzalez” and “Reds sign Andrew Brackman.” But when the headline broke that “Reds Acquire Mat Latos,” Cincinnati fans experienced a shock to their cheese coney-filled systems.

In the trade, the Reds dealt first baseman Yonder Alonso, starting pitcher Edinson Volquez, catcher Yasmani Grandal and closer Brad Boxberger to the Padres in exchange for the 24-year-old ace starting pitcher.

Many Reds fans are reacting in anger and dismay at exactly how much the Reds had to give up to get Latos. It’s impossible to deny that Latos is a legitimate young star in the making, but Alonso, Grandal and Boxberger all have the potential to be future All-Stars.

The trade is great for the Reds in the short term, but history could view this trade in the same light as “Bartolo Colon Traded to the Expos.” In that trade, Montreal gave up Cliff Lee, Grady Sizemore, Brandon Phillips and Lee Stevens for Bartolo Colon and Tim Drew.  

Let’s focus on the short term though.

Since the World Series ended we’ve observed the following events:

Tony La Russa retires from the Cardinals
Albert Pujols signs with Anaheim
Houston Astros will leave for the AL next year
An extra playoff spot will be added in each league
Ryan Braun is on the brink of getting suspended for 50 games
Prince Fielder is on the brink of leaving Milwaukee
The Cubs haven’t improved
The Astros haven’t improved
The Pirates haven’t improved
The Reds trade for Mat Latos

 

Add all of these up and it creates a recipe for a 2012 NL Central championship for Cincinnati.

The NL Central is getting drastically weaker with the loss of Pujols, Fielder and possibly Braun. Major League Baseball is making it easier for NL Central teams to make the playoffs by adding another playoff spot and moving the Astros to the American League. Nobody except Cincinnati has actually improved.

The Reds now have a very competitive pitching staff and a lineup that is only one bat away from being the best in the National League.

Latos is a young right-hander who struck out 185 batters in 194 innings last year. His 9-14 record last season is more indicative of the Padres’ inability to generate runs than his ability as a pitcher. He’s had two solid seasons in the major leagues, and best of all he was 1-0 with a 1.13 ERA against the Cardinals last year.

The 2012 season is looking like it will be an exciting year to be a Reds fan.

One remaining question, however, is who is going to play left field?

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Cincinnati Reds: How Will Devin Mesoraco Help the Franchise?

There were high expectations by the Cincinnati Reds front office for Mesoraco in 2007 as they drafted him 15th overall in the MLB amateur draft. Coming out of Punxsutawney High School in in Pennsylvania, scouts had projected Mesoraco as a 20+ home run hitter with the skills to stay at the catcher position for the long haul. The one weakness that they saw was a long swing at times which would lead to a low batting average. 

Mesoraco’s first professional season was a disappointment. In 40 games of rookie ball, he only managed a .219 batting average and one home run over 155 plate appearances. 

As Mesoraco moved up through A and A+ ball over the next two years, the results were still disappointing. Mesoraco was battling nagging injuries over these levels and it really showed as he only hit 17 home runs in 691 plate appearances. Expectations where slowly dwindling for this once top prospect. 

It all turned around for Mesoraco in 2010 as he tore through A+ and AA ball to finish the season one step away from the show in AAA. The power potential that the scouts had spoken of was finally showing as he hit 26 home runs over the three levels while batting .302. Mesoraco improved on defense as well, upping his previous years’ percentage of players caught stealing from 30 percent in 2009 to 41 percent in 2010. All signs were looking good for the 22 year old.

 

2011 was the real litmus test for Mesoraco as he would start the season in AAA and prove he is the catcher of the future for his young, up-and-coming franchise. Mesoraco did not disappoint one bit. At the highest level of the minors he put together a spectacular season. In 499 plate appearances Mesoraco had a .289 batting average, 52 extra base hits (15 going yard) and a solid 83/52 stikeout/walk ratio. 

In September of the 2011 season, Mesoraco was placed on the Reds 40-man roster and called up to the major leagues. 

 

How Devin Mesoraco Can Affect the Cincinnati Red’s Franchise

If not for veterans Ramon Hernandez and Ryan Hanigan having solid years in 2011, Mesoraco could have gotten the call earlier in the season. It is probably for the best that he was able to have a full season in AAA to get more experience and prove that he was ready to contribute to Reds offense. 

 

Two years removed from a spectacular 2010 season where they won the NL Central with 91 wins, the Reds will be looking for a rejuvenation in 2012 to get them back to the playoffs. Mesoraco could be a key contributor in this process.

In 2011, the Re’s offensive output was down in all categories across the board. The young players on the team just simply could not put up the numbers that had led them to 91 wins the previous year. With players such as Joey Votto and Jay Bruce leading the charge, we should see a revival of offense in 2012.  

One position that played average, but not great, was the catcher position. Veteran catchers Ramon Hernandez and Ryan Hanigan split time at the crouch position and put up mediocre numbers. Hernandez finished the year with a .282 batting average and 25 extra base hits while Hanigan hit at a .267 clip and only 12 extra base hits. 

With Mesoraco’s power numbers improving and his patience at the plate getting better, we should see better numbers out of the catcher position immediately. At 23 years old, Mesoraco has the opportunity to fit right into the middle of the Reds lineup and produce. It would not be a surprise to see Mesoraco hit 15+ home runs with about a .280 average in 2012.

 

With another consistent bat to help Votto and Bruce, plus the improving efforts of other young players like Drew Stubbs, Yonder Alonso and Zack Cozart, the Reds should have a competitive team for years to come. 

Best Outcome: Mesoraco becomes a staple in the middle of the Reds lineup in his rookie year and maintains that role for years to come. He consistently puts up 20+ home runs and 75+ RBI with a solid average. Mesoraco makes two or three All-Star games and helps in an effort to lead the Reds to multiple playoffs. 

Worst Outcome: Mesoraco cannot handle major league pitching and shows a large increase in strikeouts over a full season. He is eventually removed from the catcher role when Yasmani Grandal reaches the majors. Mesoraco ends up floating around the majors as a backup player with some power.  

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Major League Baseball 2012 and Beyond: 5 Young Teams on the Rise

It’s that time of year again in Major League Baseball.

Division leaders and Wild Card hopefuls dominate the headlines as fans across the nation begin to anticipate the excitement of October pennant chases. 

September is where legends cement their place, managers justify their contracts, role players previously shrouded in obscurity make their names known, MVPs and Cy Young winners bring home their hardware, headlines are stolen and franchise-crippling collapses are immortalized. 

The most exciting month of baseball’s regular season is where the pretenders and the contenders are finally separated as W’s, X’s, Y’s and Z’s begin to finalize the standings, granting a select few ball clubs the ever-so-elusive invitation to the sport’s most exclusive dance.

Lost in the hype, however, as disgruntled fans of hopeless teams begin to switch the channel over to football are their first glances at a brighter future. 

For those of us not lucky enough to construct our hopes around the boys in New York, Milwaukee, Texas, Arizona, Detroit or Philadelphia, September call-ups are all we’ve got left to give the tail end of the schedule some measure of relevance.

This is where the old Brooklyn Dodgers mantra of “wait till next year” becomes a battle cry, because unless your favored club is within a few games of a postseason berth, the future is your last resort.

Now, that’s not to say that next year’s prospects are looking too bright in every corner of Bud Selig’s empire.

In remote ball-playing wastelands, such as Houston, Texas and Baltimore, it’s going to take years of patience and good faith before the home team can even begin to see itself on the same page as the rest of its competition.

For these five clubs, however, grim outlooks need not be applied.

With the savvy dealing, creativity and patience of their front offices alongside the steady development of their promising talent on the farm, brighter days appear to be just on the horizon, merely awaiting a fresh 162 or two.

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Cincinnati Reds: Does Ryan Hanigan Have a Future with the Team?

Since making his MLB debut in 2007, Cincinnati Reds catcher Ryan Hanigan has without a doubt been a valuable asset to the Reds organization.

As both a backup catcher and a spot starter, Hanigan has proven himself to be a clutch hitter and a solid defender behind the plate.

Many baseball fans, including me, expected to see Hanigan earn more of a full-time role with the Reds once the recent trade deadline had passed, but Cincinnati elected to hold on to veteran Ramon Hernandez and keep Hanigan in his usual on-again, off-again role.

One has to wonder, with Hernandez playing at a high level and with two hot minor league catching prospects in Devin Mesoraco and Yasmani Grandal itching to make their way up to the majors, where exactly Hanigan fits in Cincinnati’s plans for the future.

Hernandez is 35 years old and projected to become a free agent at the season’s end, but the Reds didn’t trade him when given a chance to at the deadline, and that could mean that they intend to bring him back in 2012. After all, there are several Cincinnati pitchers, including emerging star Johnny Cueto, who prefer to pitch to Hernandez due to their familiarity with his catching style. 

Whatever the Reds decide to do with Hanigan down the line, there’s no question that he will still have a future in the league. Catchers (even backups) are remarkably valuable in the MLB, and while he’s not a superstar by any means, Hanigan has shown year after year that he can hold down home plate with the best of them.

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Cincinnati Reds: Should Opening Day Be an Official Holiday?

Although baseball’s opening day is special in every city, Cincinnati’s has long been considered the creme-de-la-creme. Professional baseball’s first team is the only team to open each year at home and its fans celebrate the entire day like no other.

Sports Illustrated’s Frank Deford once said,”… the citizens celebrate with the same display of annual ardor that lapsed Christians save for Easter.”  And USA Today chimed in with, “Cincinnati has traditionally been the showcase season opener … nothing else has the glitz of the Reds and opening day. It’s sacred.”

Cincinnatians have always considered Opening Day an unofficial holiday, and now a father and son want to take away the “un,” and make it official.

For 30 years, Cincinnati architect Mike Schuster has shut his company’s doors on opening day and gone to the game.  At first it was just him—now he takes his 40 employees along. And this year, Schuster had an idea—Why not “Make if Official?”

It’s a long-time tradition for Cincinnatians of all ages to call in sick or skip school and head downtown on Opening Day to watch the Findlay Market Parade wind its way through the downtown streets and see baseball’s first professional team open the season. Schuster’s plan is to have Opening Day made an official city holiday, and this year he, his son David and about two dozen staffers were outside Great American Ballpark on Opening Day, collecting signatures for a petition that they hope will accumulate 15,000 names.

And three Reds’ Hall of Famers think it is a great idea.

Said long-time Reds radio voice Marty Brennaman, “Opening Day in this town is the most wonderful day of the year.  “If they put it on the ballot to make Opening Day an official holiday in Cincinnati,” Brennaman added, “it’ll be a slam dunk.”

Joe Morgan, this year’s Grand Marshall of the 92nd Findlay Market Parade, added, “The first game of the season was always a holiday when we were winning,” he said with a laugh. “Might as well make it a real holiday.”

Or, in the words of the late Reds skipper Sparky Anderson, “It’s a holiday—a baseball holiday!  Ain’t no other place in America got that!”

Do the citizens of Cincinnati agree?  In a recent poll on Cincinnati.com, “Make if Official” carried over 85 percent of the vote.

It would seem that if the Schusters can get “Make It Official” on this fall’s ballot, then Opening Day in Cincinnati will become what Reds’ fans have known it as all along—an official holiday.

This article originally appeared in Tom Walsh’s blog at The Ultimate Sports List.

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Mike Leake: Is His Dilemma Deeper than the Cincinnati Reds Are Saying?

Is the thrill of the Majors already gone for the Cincinnati Reds’ young phenomenon Mike Leake?  Coming up, I’ll discuss this question and the ramifications for the Reds rotation.

He’s unrelated to Kelly Leak of The Bad News Bears fame, but he’s gaining the same bad boy image Leak had in the film.  Coach Morris Buttermaker (Walter Mathau) got Leak to join the Bears from off the streets.

As the best baseball player in the area, Leak was a chain-smoking, motorcycle boy who was also a loan shark.  I’m not sure how he was young enough to play on the team, but it’s Hollywood.

Mike Leake, 23, is living in the real world, and he’s probably the best baseball player ever from his hometown of Fallbrook, California.  The comparisons to Kelly Leak should stop there.  That’s unless we find out more information on Leake than the Reds want known.

They drafted him eighth overall in 2009 out of Arizona State.  ASU’s mascot is a Sun Devil.  I’m wondering what in the devil got into Leake over the weekend.

Once they found out who he was, Macy’s employees and security personnel themselves had to be wondering what the devil the wonder kid was on.  Whether or not he was on drugs, he’s brought Lindsay Lohan-type unwanted attention to the Majors.

If Leake has a drug or alcohol problem, then that’s major—all bets are off.  Knowing their future ace is fading in real life, not just baseball, the Reds starters could likely be thrown off.

Dusty Baker is one of the best managers in the game, but his pitching staff was suspect to begin with.  Now this.  He’s got the Milwaukee Brewers, Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals hitting better than they have in years—and now this.

Just what Baker needs.  Poor Dusty.  I just hope he didn’t swallow his toothpick when he heard the news.  Can you imagine him being on the field watching his pitchers throw and wondering where Leake was?  I can.

“Where’s Leake?” Dusty could have asked.  “Oh, Mike?” the bullpen coach might have replied.  “He’s downtown getting booked for theft.”  Gulp.  There goes the toothpick. 

Baker and general manager Walt Jocketty thought Leake was mature for his age.  He sure fooled them.  That’s why they brought him up to the Majors straight from college.  That and because he’s a pretty good pitcher, and they needed all the help they could get.

Being the first player to skip the minors for the Reds since 1957, Leake was obviously pegged for super duper stardom.  His star has fallen, though.  It’s gone careening through the sky and came crashing down to earth.

Once a big league player—or anyone—has a reputation like that, then it’s very, very hard to get rid of.  Counseling and the local community service tour—even jail—could be in his future, but what he’ll also need is a public relations genius.

Tiger Woods may have committed indiscretions, but he’s done nothing illegal that’s been reported.  Bet on this:

Like Woods, Leake will get an image guru in order to get his star back on stat tracker.  The voyage of the space ship Enterprise was nothing compared to what Leake’s ride back up the public image charts will be like.

Mark my word, we’ll see him giving the customary public service announcement and the pictures of him visiting kids either in the hospital or in a poverty stricken environment—or both.

We’ll hear how he’s performed community service and had a checkup from the neck up.  All this won’t mean a thing, though, if he doesn’t perform on the field.

And I don’t mean doing wheelies in the outfield on his bike while smoking a cigarette.  He’s got to be lights out—or at least lights dimmed—in his next few starts.

If not, then he could be heading to a place he skipped—the minors.  I bet he’s dreading that.  Like Jimmy King of the Fab Five Michigan Wolverines said in their ESPN documentary: “When you mess up, you can pay for it by being erased.”

What comes around usually goes around and humanity eventually gets in where we fit in.  Leake’s fitting in by thrilling fans on the mound for much of his upstart career.  Who knows what made him steal six shirts off the rack. 

He signed for over $2 million in bonus money and is making over $400,000 in cheese—enough to probably be part owner of a Macy’s store.  We’ll all be left wondering what he was thinking.

Maybe it was the thrill of being rebellious or the rush of seeing if he’d get caught.  It could’ve been a dare from someone he knew.  If so, someone needs to be out of his circle until further notice.

Maybe the power of being a major league starting pitcher was too much for him to contain, and this is what happens to an ego gone wild.  If this is the case, then more dangerous and questionable behavior has probably already taken place.

The bigger question for the organization—whether they say it or not—is how this will affect the Reds starting rotation going forward.  But that’s nibbles and bits compared to the real problem.

It sounds like the thrill is gone for Leake, like he’s so good he’s bored.

Whatever his problem is, though, if it’s bigger than what they’re saying, then the Reds had better nip it in the bud.  Never mind their rotation, this is a young man exhibiting signs of dangerous behavior and heading him off is the thing to do.

Athletes are supposed to teach life lessons.  Leake should take advantage of his opportunity to learn before he ends up another outcast in the Majors.

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Cincinnati Reds Baseball: Rymon Hernanigan Is on Fire

I have never been a fan of platooning players in baseball. I always liked having a set lineup while giving the starter an occasional day of rest. Dusty Baker has a different idea when it comes to the Reds catching situation, and it has worked like a charm.

The combination of Ryan Hanigan and Ramon Hernandez has been more than productive both offensively and defensively. Hanigan catches Bronson Arroyo while Hernandez handles Edinson Volquez. The rest of the time, it usually depends on matchups and health.

Through the first three games of the 2011 season, the dynamic duo has put up some incredible offensive numbers. Here are the statistics (at least five at-bats), along with where they rank against the rest of Major League Baseball.

.750 AVG (1st)
1.500 SLG (2nd)
.769 OBP (1st)
3 HR (2nd)
7 RBI (2nd)
18 TB (T-1st)

 

Are you in Reds Country?

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Jim Edmonds Bashes Cincinatti Reds Doctors, Brandon Phillips in Radio Interview

Apparently, Jim Edmonds didn’t exactly have the time if his life after joining the Reds last season.

According to MLB.com’s Mark Sheldon, in an interview with a St. Louis radio station, he opened up a bit about what he thought of the Reds organization and how he regrets coming to Cincinnati. He also throws a verbal jab at Brandon Phillips.

Edmonds said, “They have a bunch of good guys…other than that one situation (fight with the Cardinals) and that one player (Phillips).”

Phillips replied via Twitter, but did not take any shots, even though he implied there were plenty to be taken.

Edmonds also whined about his foot injury.

He said, “It’s really frustrating. I don’t know the words to use towards the Cincinnati doctors.”

Give me a break.

Edmonds also said there were a few guys with chips on their shoulders and that the worst thing he did was accept the trade “for Walt.”

The worst thing Reds fans had to do was pretend to root for this jerk.

Are you in Reds Country?

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Opening Day in Cincinnati Was Unbelievable, as Usual

Few experiences can top Opening Day in Cincinnati, Ohio. The parade, sold-out stadium and increased number of media members are just a few things that cause the first baseball game of the year to sometimes take a backseat to the pageantry that surrounds it.

Not this time.

We met up with a group of friends, affectionately known as the Power Stack Pack, on Fountain Square and found a place to watch the parade before heading down to the stadium. The walk to Great American Ball Park is always filled with excitement and anticipation, but Opening Day raises those feelings to a new level.

After the pregame ceremonies, it was time to get down to business. Edinson Volquez tested the patience of every Reds fan by surrendering back-to-back home runs to start the game. Dusty Baker stuck with his starter for six innings despite allowing five runs on seven hits. Volquez turned it over to the bullpen with the Brewers holding a 5-2 lead.

Around the seventh inning, many “fans” began filing out of Great American Ball Park. Most of these people attend Opening Day and won’t be back until the playoffs, if the Reds are fortunate enough to make it.

A friend of mine commented about the people leaving early, to which I replied, “Apparently, they forgot that this team came from behind to win so many times last year.”

Trailing 6-3 and heading to the bottom of the ninth, the Reds went to work.

Brandon Phillips led off with a single. After Joey Votto walked, Scott Rolen reached on a fielder’s choice when Phillips displayed some fancy footwork to avoid a tag on his way to third base. Jay Bruce struck out before Phillips scored on a sacrifice fly by Jonny Gomes.

That brings me to my question of the day. The Reds now had Rolen on first, Votto on second, trailed by two and were down to their final out. Ramon Hernandez was coming to the plate. What happens if Hernandez hits a ball in the gap? My guess is Rolen, the tying run, either gets held at third or takes the risk of being thrown out at the plate. The point is I would have liked to see someone run for Rolen.

None of that mattered thanks to Hernandez. He launched a ball into the Milwaukee bullpen for a three-run, walk-off funkblast!

Yes, it was one game…but it was a great game.

Baseball is back.

Are you in Reds Country?

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