It's Tuesday, already....
If you're a Reds fan, you're walking the tightrope today. On one side is what appears to be more of the same, more of what we've seen from this team the past ten or so years. That would be poor fundamentals, starting pitching that can't get past the 5th inning and a team that's simply inadequate in the art of situational hitting. On the other side is the fact that the Reds are just 13 games into the season and only 3 1/2 games out of first place. It's a delicate balance between cynicism and hope. What side do you come down on?
I'm always a 'glass half full' kinda guy. So the side I choose is the latter. I know we've seen far too much of the same, through 13 games this season. I wonder how, despite managerial changes and coaching changes, the Reds simply can't develope decent prospects into serviceable or better Major League players. It's astounding, really. Austin Kearns was a complete bust. Adam Dunn went from being a power hitter, who also hit for average, to a power hitter who had trouble cracking the .275 ceiling. The latter day incarnates are Jay Bruce and Drew Stubbs. Bruce is baffled continuously by the breaking ball. Stubbs swings like a rusty gate.
Hitting coaches come and go, from Jim Lefebvre to Chris Chambliss to Brook Jacoby and little changes. By the way, just an aside: whose Wheaties did Dave Parker spit in? One of the most prolific and feared hitters in MLB history lives within five miles of Great American Ball Park. Why is it that the Reds won't give him a whiff of a job interview? Is it because he was caught up in the infamous Pittsburgh Pirates drug bust? How many years ago was that? All I know is this: Parker could hit better than any hitting coach the Reds have had in my memory.
Starting pitching has been a cronic problem for the Reds. Under Jim Bowden, the Reds couldn't find, draft or kidnap a decent starting pitcher, even if they had a map, compass and a picture of Cy Young. Do you remember Ty Howington, or Richie Gardner or Ryan Wagner? All first round picks who turned out to be busts. Or how about the second round pick the year the Reds drafted Wagner: Thomas Pauley. Where is that dude now? The current starting five they employ now have 13 starts so far in 2010 and none has been credited with any of the Reds five wins. That's an astounding fact. Worse, few of them have managed to take a game into the seventh inning. Johnny Cueto pitches like he's been told there's a prize for throwing the most pitches in one ballgame. By the fourth inning, consistently in his short Major League career, Cueto is approaching 80 pitches. Worse, Homer Bailey and Aaron Harang have fallen into that trap as well. That means Dusty Baker is going to his bullpen virtually every game in the 5th and 6th inning. That will kill a team quicker than any batting slump.
So I'm not ready to give up on 2010 just yet. But the day for bailing on the Reds is quickly approaching. Wait 'til next year keeps coming sooner and sooner it seems at Great American Ball Park.
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