Cincinnati Reds Press Clippings April 28, 2016 THIS DAY IN REDS HISTORY 1956-Frank Robinson hits the first of his 586 major league homers during a win, 9-1, over the Cubs MLB.COM Moscot battles through sore left shoulder vs. Mets Reds righty had surgery on non-throwing shoulder last year By Mark Sheldon / MLB.com | @m_sheldon | 12:18 AM ET NEW YORK -- Three starts into his big league career last season, Reds pitcher Jon Moscot separated his left non-throwing shoulder on a freak play in Detroit. Three starts into his 2016 season while facing the Mets, that same shoulder presented him with soreness for the first time since he had surgery to repair the separation. In a 5-2 loss to the Mets on Wednesday, Moscot didn't just battle with his shoulder but also jams of his own creation and the suddenly dangerous Neil Walker. "I went out for the fifth inning and my warmup pitches just didn't feel entirely right," Moscot said. "I'm not sure what it is, or what it was. It might just be a little tweak or something. I threw through the fifth and it went all right." Moscot, who went for X-rays after he left the game, finished five innings with three runs (one earned), four hits, four walks and two strikeouts. Reds manager Bryan Price was optimistic that Moscot would be fine. "I think it's just some scar tissue breaking up," Price said. "It's not going to be an issue. We don't see it being a problem moving forward." If it is a bigger problem than expected, the Reds have potential options. John Lamb threw eight innings Wednesday in his latest rehab start for Triple-A Louisville, with 80 of his 105 pitches going for strikes. On Thursday, Anthony DeSclafani is set to make his final rehab start for Class A Dayton before returning to the rotation. Should Moscot be OK, he'll have to hope his penchant for limiting damage will serve him well for staying in the rotation. In the first inning, a two-out error by left fielder Scott Schebler cost him two runs, including a Walker RBI single. In the second inning, following a nice double play started by Devin Mesoraco on Matt Harvey's sacrifice-bunt attempt, Moscot backed himself into a corner by walking Alejandro De Aza and David Wright. But he escaped by getting Michael Conforto to pop out on a foul ball. "I don't have a 100-mph fastball. I've got to work a little bit harder," Moscot said. "I know that I get into certain situations and I've got to step up my game. If you know me and how I pitch, that's me. I don't cave, really." Walker crushed a 2-0 sinker for a homer in the third inning, which Moscot admitted was a bad pitch. "I tried to throw a sinker down and away, it got too much plate and the guy is on fire right now," Moscot said. "I can't go 2-0 on him, that was my mistake." "But other than that, he was pretty good," Price said. "I wish I was talking about a win." Moscot escaped the fourth despite two more Reds errors and survived the scoreless fifth following a one-out walk as his shoulder bothered him. He told Price he could give him another inning, but was lifted for a pinch-hitter in the sixth. "My feeling was you've got a guy coming in complaining about his shoulder - granted it's not his throwing shoulder -- but it seemed like it was time," Price said. Reds unable to solve Mets in NY finale By Anthony DiComo and Mark Sheldon / MLB.com | 1:25 AM ET NEW YORK -- Mets historians will not easily forget what the team did in Cincinnati last September, clinching its first National League East title in nine years on Southwest Ohio turf. But that has hardly been the extent of the Mets' supremacy over the Reds in recent years. The Mets extended their dominance with an 11th straight win over the Reds on Wednesday, riding Neil Walker's Major League- leading ninth homer to a 5-2 win and a three-game sweep at Citi Field. The Mets have won six consecutive games, while Cincinnati has lost six of its last seven contests. "We're playing good baseball," Walker said. "Two sweeps in a row, we're doing pretty well. We're swinging the bats pretty well. Our pitchers are throwing the ball well. We're closing out games. It's kind of what we thought." Walker's solo shot off Reds starter Jon Moscot accounted for one-third of the support the Mets gave Matt Harvey, who improved to 2-3 with six innings of two-run ball. Harvey allowed a Zack Cozart homer and a Eugenio Suarez RBI single, but otherwise skated in and out of trouble all night. Though Moscot largely did the same, the Reds committed three errors behind him to the tune of two unearned runs. After Michael Conforto put them away with a late two-run double, the Reds fell to 1-8 on the road, losing for the 16th time in their last 18 games against the Mets. "I fell behind, 2-0. I tried to throw a sinker down and away, it got too much plate and the guy is on fire right now," Moscot said of Walker. With regular closer Jeurys Familia unavailable after three straight appearances, Addison Reed locked down the final three outs for his first save of the season, and his second as a Met. MOMENTS THAT MATTERED To the nines: When Walker's third-inning homer landed beyond the left-center-field fence, the second baseman tied Washington's Bryce Harper and Colorado's Nolan Arenado and Trevor Story for the Major League lead. His ninth home run of April also matched Dave Kingman, Carlos Delgado and John Buck for the most in the season's first month in Mets history, extending Walker's own personal career high. Harvey danger: Once again, nothing came easy for Harvey, who put multiple runners on base in three of his six innings. But Harvey made pitches when he needed to. In the first inning, after a Cozart homer, a single and a Lucas Duda error, Harvey struck out the next three batters en route to five straight whiffs. In the fifth, he induced an inning-ending double play from Devin Mesoraco to cut short a promising Reds rally. "It was big," Harvey said. "Overall, I was able to stay in my mechanics a little bit better and kind of attack the hitters like I normally would, and want to. At times I got out of it, but definitely working in the right direction." Leading it off: Cozart gave the Reds a quick 1-0 lead when he pulled Harvey's 2-1 pitch into the left-field seats for a leadoff homer. It was Cozart's second homer of the season and his fifth career leadoff homer -- his first since June 29, 2012, vs. the Giants. Cozart has also hit safely in 15 of his 16 games this season and is batting .397. Walks killing Reds: The Reds are second in the Majors in walks allowed this season, and manager Bryan Price could not hide his irritation about some key walks during the loss. In the sixth, reliever Blake Wood issued back-to-back one-out walks, with both runners scoring on Conforto's double to the wall in left field against Drew Hayes. "It's just insufferable at this time to watch it," Price said. "The big thing is we have to get healthy because we have to create options for ourselves. We have to get these guys who are on the DL off the DL. We have to create more moving pieces that are available to us, so when somebody needs to go to the Minor Leagues because they're struggling, that's what the Minor Leagues are there for. … We need to make some changes I think at this point." SOUND SMART WITH YOUR FRIENDS The Mets' 11-game winning streak against the Reds is tied for their second longest vs. any team in franchise history. The Mets beat the Pirates 15 straight times from 1986-87. REDS ROSTER MOVE After the game, the Reds optioned reliever Layne Somsen back to Triple-A Louisville to make room for the return of right fielder Jay Bruce. Somsen received his first big league callup Monday when Bruce went on three-day paternity leave, but did not get into any games. For most of the series, Cincinnati was without both Bruce and Brandon Phillips, who was out with a sore left shin and left ring finger from a Monday plate appearance. Phillips is expected back on Friday in Pittsburgh as well. "Two everyday players that hit four and five," Price said. "It doesn't help not having them. But that's baseball. Baseball is dealing with your environment, and we've got to deal with it better. Granted, we faced three really good starting pitchers. But those first two games, those were winnable games for us." WHAT'S NEXT Reds: Following a day off on Thursday, the road trip continues on Friday in Pittsburgh with the series opener vs. the Pirates at 7:05 p.m. ET. Bruce is due back from paternity leave and Dan Straily is the scheduled starting pitcher for Cincinnati. Mets: A three-game series with the Giants awaits the Mets at Citi Field following an off-day Thursday.
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages12 Page
-
File Size-