The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Guardians rally in ninth, but fall to Reds in 10

- By Tom Withers

The Reds made unwanted history two days ago by not allowing a hit and losing. On May 17, they hit into five double plays, blew the lead in the ninth inning and scored the winning run without making contact.

“That’s baseball, man,” said rookie starter Connor Overton. “That was a fun game. It was wild.”

Mike Moustakas drew the third straight walk in the 10th by Cleveland reliever Nick Sandlin to force in a run, and Reds rookie reliever Alexis Díaz struck out Guardians star José Ramírez for the final out with the bases loaded as the Reds held on for a 5-4 win.

Moustakas was down to his last strike before taking three straight pitches from Sandlin (3-2) to bring in Matt Reynolds, who started the inning at second base.

Art Warren (2-1) got the win for Cincinnati despite giving up Owen Miller’s tying, two-run homer in the ninth.

And Díaz, a 25-yearold who pitched in Double-A last season, survived a nerve-wracking 10th — he walked two and threw a wild pitch that nearly let the tying run score — before handcuffin­g Ramírez for strike three and his first career save.

“His stuff is unbelievab­le,” Reds catcher Tyler Stephenson said as his teammates could be heard celebratin­g with Díaz in the showers. “He got better with Ramírez, when the moment was bigger for him. He did a great job.”

Díaz has not given up a run in 15 of his 16 appearance­s.

“He’s not fazed,” Reds manager David Bell said. “Obviously, he had a lot of adrenaline tonight, but he channeled that really well and he went after some really good hitters in a tough spot. Great stuff, but the thing that was really impressive is that he walked a couple of guys and then one of the best hitters in the game, got behind and then just made incredible pitches.”

Tyler Naquin homered for the Reds (10-26), who became the last team in the majors to reach doubledigi­t wins — after blowing a 4-2 lead in the ninth and hitting into double plays in four straight innings.

“This game is an example of you just have to keep playing,” Bell said.

Miller’s towering tworun homer into the leftfield bleachers off Warren tied it 4-4.

The Guardians had managed just four singles over the first eight innings against rookie Connor Overton and reliever Tony Santillan before Miller followed a leadoff walk to Ramírez with his fourth homer.

Miller’s heroics snatched a win from Overton.

The right-hander allowed just three singles over 7 2/3 innings in Cincinnati’s second straight stellar start. Overton allowed back-to-back hits in the third, retired 15 straight and then gave up a leadoff infield single in the eighth.

Overton got two outs but walked pinch-hitter Franmil Reyes and was pulled by Bell after a career-high 98 pitches.

“I want to go nine (innings) every time,” Overton said. “Obviously, I’m happy but there’s a lot I could have done better.”

His performanc­e came two days after Cincinnati rookie starter Hunter Greene and Warren combined to work eight nohit innings in a 1-0 loss at Pittsburgh.

 ?? RON SCHWANE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Owen Miller hits a two-run home run against the Reds during the ninth inning May 17.
RON SCHWANE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Owen Miller hits a two-run home run against the Reds during the ninth inning May 17.

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