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2018 Cincinnati Reds season

The 2018 Cincinnati Reds season was the 149th season for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 16th at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.


2018 Cincinnati Reds
National League
Central
Great American Ball Park
Cincinnati, Ohio
67–95 (.414)
5th
Bob Castellini
Dick Williams, Nick Krall
Bryan Price (through April 18)Jim Riggleman (starting April 19)
Fox Sports Ohio(Thom Brennaman, Chris Welsh, George Grande, Jeff Brantley, Jim Day, Jeff Piecoro)
WLW (700 AM)Reds Radio Network(Marty Brennaman, Jeff Brantley, Jim Day, Thom Brennaman, Doug Flynn, Chris Welsh)
ESPN.comBaseball Reference
Seasons

The 2018 Cincinnati Reds season was the 149th season for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 16th at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati.

Column 1Column 2
November 2, 2017SS Zack Cozart elected free agency. Cozart signed a three-year, $38 million contract with the Los Angeles Angels on December 15, 2017.
December 27, 2017Signed RHP Jared Hughes to a two-year, $4.5 million contract.
January 12, 2018Signed OF Billy Hamilton to a one-year, $4.6 million contract, avoiding arbitration.
January 12, 2018Signed RHP Anthony DeSclafani to a one-year, $860,000 contract, avoiding arbitration.
January 12, 2018Signed RHP Michael Lorenzen to a one-year, $1.31 million contract, avoiding arbitration.
January 30, 2018Signed RHP David Hernandez to a two-year, $5 million contract.
February 6, 2018Signed 3B Eugenio Suárez to a one-year, $3.75 million contract, settling in arbitration.
February 17, 2018Signed 2B Scooter Gennett to a one-year, $5.7 million contract, settling in arbitration.
March 16, 2018Signed 3B Eugenio Suárez to a six-year, $66 million contract extension, including a club option for 2025.
TeamWLPct.GBHomeRoad
Milwaukee Brewers9667.58951‍–‍3045‍–‍37
Chicago Cubs9568.583151‍–‍3144‍–‍37
St. Louis Cardinals8874.54343‍–‍3845‍–‍36
Pittsburgh Pirates8279.5091344‍–‍3638‍–‍43
Cincinnati Reds6795.41428½37‍–‍4430‍–‍51
TeamWLPct.
Milwaukee Brewers9667.589
Los Angeles Dodgers9271.564
Atlanta Braves9072.556
TeamWLPct.GB
Chicago Cubs9568.583+4
Colorado Rockies9172.558
St. Louis Cardinals8874.543
Pittsburgh Pirates8279.5098
Arizona Diamondbacks8280.506
Washington Nationals8280.506
Philadelphia Phillies8082.49410½
New York Mets7785.47513½
San Francisco Giants7389.45117½
Cincinnati Reds6795.41423½
San Diego Padres6696.40724½
Miami Marlins6398.39127

The October 1 tiebreaker games were regular-season games that are included here.

PositionName
LFJesse Winker
3BEugenio Suárez
1BJoey Votto
2BScooter Gennett
RFScott Schebler
CTucker Barnhart
SSJosé Peraza
PHomer Bailey
CFBilly Hamilton
  • April 19: The Reds fired manager Bryan Price after a 3–15 start to the season, along with pitching coach Mack Jenkins. Price managed in Cincinnati for five seasons and finished with a record of 279 wins and 387 losses. Bench coach Jim Riggleman was named interim manager, with Double-A Pensacola pitching coach Danny Darwin joining the coaching staff. Pat Kelly, who was the manager of Triple-A Louisville, will be the bench coach.

  • April 23 – April 29: Joey Votto was named N.L. Player of the Week as he slashed .360/.543/.880 with 7 runs scored, 4 HR and 8 RBI, while drawing 9 walks.

  • May 7 – May 13: Scooter Gennett was named N.L. Player of the Week with a slash line of .591/.591/1.227, 4 HR, 10 RBI, 7 runs and 2 doubles.

  • May 8: The Reds acquired starting pitcher Matt Harvey from the New York Mets in exchange for catcher Devin Mesoraco.

  • May 10 – May 13: The Reds swept the Dodgers in a four-game series for the first time since August 1976.

  • May 21 – May 27: Scooter Gennett was named N.L. Player of the Week for the second time in the 2018 season. Gennett batted .500 (12–for-24) with 6 runs scored, 2 doubles, 3 HR and 10 RBI over six games played. Among his NL counterparts during the period, Scooter finished first in hits, slugging percentage (.958) and total bases (23); tied for first in home runs, extra–base hits (5) and RBI; second in batting average; tied for third in runs scored; and seventh in on–base percentage (.519).

  • June 2: Scooter Gennett was named N.L. Player of the Month for the month of May. Gennett batted .398 (37–for–93) with 16 runs scored, 6 doubles, 8 HR and 24 RBI over 26 games played.

  • June 21–24: The Reds swept the Cubs in a four-game series for the first time since April 1983, outscoring them 31–13 in the four games. In game 3, Anthony DeSclafani hit a grand slam, the first pitcher to do this for the Reds since Bob Purkey in 1959. In the 4th game, the Reds trailed 6–1, but managed to come back by scoring 7 runs in the 7th inning.

  • June 30: Michael Lorenzen became the second Reds pitcher to hit a grand slam this season following Anthony DeSclafani's grand slam a week earlier. The home run was Lorenzen's third in as many at-bats making him the first pitcher to homer in three-straight at-bats since Mike Hampton in 2001.

  • July 1: José Peraza hit a grand slam, allowing the Reds to match their record of 9 set in 2002.

  • July 8: Joey Votto, Scooter Gennett and Eugenio Suárez were named reserves on the National League squad for the 2018 MLB All-Star Game in Washington, D.C. This is Votto's sixth All-Star selection and the first for both Gennett and Suarez.

  • July 10: The Reds rallied from a four run deficit and scored seven runs in the 9th inning to defeat the Cleveland Indians, 7–4. The four-run comeback was the Reds' first since June 30, 2006 when Adam Dunn hit a walk-off grand slam, also against the Indians.

  • July 17: Scooter Gennett and Joey Votto both hit home runs in a 6–8 loss to the American League in the All-Star game. Gennett's home run was the first for a Red in an All-Star game since July 13, 1982 when Dave Concepción hit one.

  • July 23: The Reds were no-hit for seven innings by Cardinals rookie pitcher Daniel Poncedeleon. Poncedelon was taken out of the game in the 8th inning where Phillip Ervin broke up the no-hitter with a single off reliever Jordan Hicks. Eugenio Suárez tied the game in the 9th with a solo home run and Dilson Herrera hit a walk-off single later in the inning to give the Reds the 2–1 win.

  • July 30: The Reds acquired pitchers Lucas Sims and Matt Wisler along with outfielder Preston Tucker from the Atlanta Braves in exchange for outfielder Adam Duvall.

  • August 10: Joey Votto collected his 1,700th career hit with a single in the sixth-inning. Votto is the ninth player in franchise history to reach that level.

  • August 29: Eugenio Suárez hit his 30th home run of the season, becoming the fourth player in Reds history to hit that many home runs while primarily playing third base. He joins Tony Pérez, Todd Frazier and Deron Johnson. Pitcher Michael Lorenzen also had a pinch-hit three-run home run, his fourth home run and his third against the Brewers this season.

  • September 8: Scott Schebler hit the 10th grand slam by a Reds player this season, setting a club record.

  • September 9: Joey Votto hit his second grand slam and the 11th overall for the Reds this season, one shy of the N.L. record. The 1997 Braves and 2000 Cardinals share the N.L. record of 12. Nine different Reds players have hit grand slams this season, Scott Schebler, Adam Duvall (2), Scooter Gennett, Eugenio Suárez, Joey Votto (2), Jesse Winker, starting pitcher Anthony DeSclafani, reliever Michael Lorenzen, and José Peraza. According to STATS, the Reds are only the second team to have nine different players hit a grand slam in a season, the 2000 Cardinals had 10 players connect on a grand slam.

  • September 12: Scooter Gennett went 1–4 to bring his season average against the Dodgers to .654 with 17 hits, 2 HR and 10 RBI.

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases; BB = Walks; AVG = Batting average; SLG = Slugging average

Source:

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts

Source:

2018 Cincinnati Reds
Roster
Pitchers
34 Homer Bailey
40 Austin Brice
58 Luis Castillo
51 Kyle Crockett
28 Anthony DeSclafani
29 Brandon Finnegan
63 Dylan Floro
31 Yovani Gallardo
50 Amir Garrett
32 Matt Harvey
37 David Hernandez
48 Jared Hughes
26 Raisel Iglesias
21 Michael Lorenzen
30 Tyler Mahle
36 Keury Mella
53 Wandy Peralta
61 Kevin Quackenbush
44 Tanner Rainey
25 Cody Reed
57 Jesús Reyes
47 Sal Romano
41 Kevin Shackelford
39 Lucas Sims
62 Jackson Stephens
55 Robert Stephenson
49 Zack Weiss
41 Matt WislerCatchers
16 Tucker Barnhart
38 Curt Casali
17 Tony Cruz
17 Tim Federowicz
39 Devin Mesoraco
Infielders

 2 Alex Blandino  4 Brandon Dixon  3 Scooter Gennett 46 Philip Gosselin 15 Dilson Herrera  4 Cliff Pennington  9 José Peraza  7 Eugenio Suárez 51 Blake Trahan 19 Joey Votto | | Outfielders 63 Aristides Aquino 23 Adam Duvall 27 Phil Ervin 61 Gabriel Guerrero  6 Billy Hamilton 12 Rosell Herrera 43 Scott Schebler 12 Preston Tucker 46 Mason Williams 33 Jesse Winker | | Manager 38 Bryan Price 35 Jim Riggleman Coaches

45 Freddie Benavides (first base/infield) 52 Danny Darwin (pitching) 88 Derrin Ebert (coach) 22 Billy Hatcher (third base/outfield) 87 Dustin Hughes (bullpen catcher) 64 Tony Jaramillo (assistant hitting) 57 Mack Jenkins (pitching) 60 Pat Kelly (bench) 59 Don Long (hitting) 56 Ted Power (assistant pitching/bullpen) 35 Jim Riggleman (bench) 72 Mike Stefanski (catching) |

LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAALouisville BatsInternational LeaguePat Kelly
AAPensacola Blue WahoosSouthern LeagueJody Davis
ADaytona TortugasFlorida State LeagueRicky Gutierrez
ADayton DragonsMidwest LeagueLuis Bolivar
A-Rookie AdvancedBillings MustangsPioneer LeagueRay Martinez
A-Rookie AdvancedGreeneville RedsAppalachian LeagueGookie Dawkins
RookieAZL RedsArizona LeagueJose Nieves
RookieDSL RedsDominican Summer LeagueCristobal Rodriguez
  • Team season information and statistics from MLB, or ESPN, or Baseball Reference, or Retrosheet, or Baseball Almanac
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