Dayton Daily News

Reds bats go quietly in loss to the Dodgers

Cincinnati couldn’t get the bats going until it was too late Sunday in an 8-3 home loss to Los Angeles.

- By Hal McCoy Contributi­ng Writer

The Cincinnati Reds offense was as boring Sunday as the Plain Jane 1912 throwback uniforms they wore during an 8-3 loss.

The Cincinnati Reds CINCINNATI — offense was as boring Sunday afternoon as the Plain Jane 1912 throwback uniforms they wore.

The uniforms were blank on the front with nothing identifiab­le but a red wishbone ‘C’ on both sleeves.

Perhaps the Reds preferred to go incognito on this day against the Los Angeles Dodgers and pitcher Hyun-Jin Ryu as they took an 8-3 beating with a ragged performanc­e.

The Korean-born Ryu, a lefthander nicknamed The Monster (he is 6-foot-3, 255 pounds), muzzled the Reds on no runs and five hits over seven innings, lifting his record to 6-1 and dipping his ERA to 1.52.

All three games of the series nearly were shutouts, 6-0 by the Dodgers on Friday, 4-0 by the Reds on Saturday and almost 8-0 by the Dodgers on Sunday. The Reds scored three runs with two out and nobody on in the ninth, a two-run home run by Jose Peraza and a pinch-hit home run by Derek Dietrich.

Fortunatel­y for the Reds, their season series with the Dodgers is over after they lost five of the six games.

Walks were the downfall for

Reds starter Tanner Roark. He gave up two runs on only two hits over five innings, but he walked three and the first two scored.

He walked Corey Seager with one out in the first and he scored on Alex Verdugo’s double up the left center gap. He walked Joc Pederson with one out in the third and he came around on Max Muncy’s single and second baseman Peraza’s error on a scorching line drive hit by Justin Turner.

Manager David Bell decided to take down Roark for a pinch-hitter in the fifth, even though he had given up only two runs and two hits and thrown only 87 pitches.

Roark was not pleased and it certainly didn’t work as the bullpen was abused for six runs.

“I felt good overall today,” he said. “No, no I did not want to (come out). They had different plans. Everybody isn’t happy all the time, so ... on to the next one.”

About the two walks that turned into the two runs he gave up, Roark knows a pitcher pays for those and said, “Always. Always bad when you walk people.”

Roark could be seen arguing his case in the dugout to stay in the game as Bell patiently explained.

“Absolutely I’m capable of going more than five or six innings,” Roark said. “I threw 113 pitches once this year. Their thought process was to try to score some runs, so...”

Said Bell about Roark not wanting to vacate the mound, “No, he never does (want to leave). And I love that, love that about him. And it was good we were able to talk about it in the dugout to explain it. I never want him to like it or accept it.

“But I wanted to give him the thought process there,” Bell added. “It was all about trying to get back into the game (with a pinch-hitter) and score some runs.”

It stayed 2-0 until the seventh when analytics took a bite out of the Reds. With one out, right-hander Michael Lorenzen struck out Muncy and Justin Turner.

But with left hander Cody Bellinger strolling to the plate, Bell stayed with his penchant for lefty-against lefty and brought in left hander Wandy Peralta.

Bellinger is hitting .409 and right now seemingly could hit a pitching robot throwing 110 miles an hour. On Peralta’s first pitch, Bellinger launched his 17th home run over the center-field wall, a two-run shot to give him 44 RBIs and the Dodgers a 4-0 lead.

“The Bellinger home run was the difference,” Bell said. “That changed everything. We know he can hit. Wandy has been doing such a good job, but that definitely was the difference in the game.”

Peralta gave up another home run in the eighth, a solo blast by the No. 8 hitter, catcher Russell Martin, his second of the year.

Robert Stephenson put the capper on this dismal day by walking the bases loaded in the ninth and throwing a run-scoring wild pitch and a two-run double to Alex Verdugo that put the margin at 8-0.

The Reds had hits in each of the first five innings off Ryu, all singles, but none of the five advanced beyond second base. And they had zero hits after pinch-hitter Phillip Ervin’s bloop single in the fifth until Kyle Farmer led off the ninth with a single.

That led to Peraza’s twoout home run that did nothing but eliminate a shutout. Dietrich followed that with a pinch-hit home run, his 11th of the season and third pinchhit home run. It was frosting on a cake already eaten.

In addition to the loss of the game, the Reds may have lost right fielder Yasiel Puig for a few games, although he is listed as day-to-day.

In the sixth inning, with the bases loaded and two outs, Ryu lofted one down the right field line, into the stands. Puig leaped above the fencing, reached into the stands, snagged the ball, then toppled to the ground. When he hit the ground he sprained his right shoulder.

 ?? ANDY LYONS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Reds first baseman Joey Votto has words with home plate umpire Dan Bellino after striking out in the first inning Sunday against Hyun-Jin Ryu and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. Votto was 0-for-3 with a walk in an 8-3 Reds loss.
ANDY LYONS / GETTY IMAGES Reds first baseman Joey Votto has words with home plate umpire Dan Bellino after striking out in the first inning Sunday against Hyun-Jin Ryu and the Los Angeles Dodgers at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. Votto was 0-for-3 with a walk in an 8-3 Reds loss.
 ?? ANDY LYONS / GETTY IMAGES ?? Hyun-Jin Ryu held the Reds to five hits in seven scoreless innings Sunday at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. Ryu improved to 6-1 this season and lowered his ERA to a spiffy 1.52.
ANDY LYONS / GETTY IMAGES Hyun-Jin Ryu held the Reds to five hits in seven scoreless innings Sunday at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati. Ryu improved to 6-1 this season and lowered his ERA to a spiffy 1.52.

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