Dayton Daily News

MEMORABLE REDS WALK-OFFS

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Hal McCoy

Hall of Fame baseball writer Hal McCoy knows a thing or two about our nation’s pastime. Tap into that knowledge by sending an email to halmccoy1@hotmail.com.

Q: What is your favorite Cincinnati Reds statue and favorite non-Reds statue? — DAVE, Miamisburg/Centervill­e/Beavercree­k.

A: My favorite is the Statue of Liberty. Baseball? I love the sliding Pete Rose statue at Great American Ball Park, even though there is controvers­y for it being there. It is a three-way tie on the road — Stan Musial (St. Louis) in his batting stance, Willie Stargell (Pittsburgh) and Willie Mays (San Francisco) in his follow-through swing. Icons all.

Q: Joey Votto had a walk-off double this season. What is the best walkoff hit you’ve witnessed? — RON, Vandalia.

A: Several, actually. The most dramatic had to be

Jay Bruce’s walk-off home in 2010 against Houston to clinch the National League Central championsh­ip. And Votto was involved in one. His walk-off grand slam beat the Washington Nationals, 9-6. It was his third home run of the day.

Remember third-string catcher Hal King? Dodgers pitcher Don Sutton was one strike from a win July 1, 1973. King homered to give the Reds a 4-3 win. At the time the Reds were 12 games out of first place.

After King’s homer, they went 60-26 the rest of the way to win the National League West.

Q: Why does Reds pitcher Pedro Strop wear his hat crooked? — ROGER, Springfiel­d.

A: Most fans hate it. And some baseball people hated it. Stop said he was fined a few times when he pitched for the Texas Rangers. It has nothing to do with superstiti­on. He wore his cap that way when he was a child and never stopped. I often wonder what umpires would do if a player wore his hat backwards, the way Ken Griffey

Jr. always did during batting practice.

Q: The Chicago Cubs display a lot of emotion while the Cincinnati Reds appear lackadaisi­cal. Do you think the Reds play with any emotion? — KEITH, Brookville.

A: I’m not sure emotion determines wins or losses. It is easy to display hearty emotions like the Cubs when they are beating up on everybody. And it is tough to display much positive emotion when a team is underachie­ving the way the Reds have this season.

Q: The St. Louis Cardinals are missing a slew of games due to the pandemic, so what should be the minimum number of games played threshold in order to be eligible for the postseason? — JOHN, Richmond Heights, Mo.

A: It will be difficult for all teams to play 60 games and these are times of adjustment. MLB’s plan is to use won-lost percentage­s to determine playoff teams. Fair? Not really. A team with more wins than a team with a higher winning percentage might miss the playoffs and the howling will begin. But what else is a league to do?

Q: Are the umpires being extra generous on the strike zone this year? — BILL, Kenton.

A: The strike zone is finely defined but it seems to change year-by-year. Despite the definition, each umpire seems to have his own zone and it is up to the pitcher/ hitter to adjust.

I’ve seen it both ways this year, good for the hitter and good for the pitcher. TV shows that box, representi­ng the strike zone, but strikes are called outside the zone and balls are called inside the zone. It is the human element.

But let’s not even consider robot umpires.

Q: With a 60-game season, will the Reds’ bullpen hold up or will they look for some help? — JAY, Englewood.

A: The bullpen has shown some improvemen­t recently. Most of them have proven track records. If not, if the Reds played a bunch of seven-inning doublehead­ers the bullpen will not be in play that much with the strong rotation going five, six and even complete-game seven innings.

Q: Why don’t umpires keep their hands and arms behind them to keep from getting hurt? — GREG, Beavercree­k.

A: They need to use those hands and arms to call balls and strikes quickly. I never understood why they went away from those big balloon chest protectors that more fully covered them. Probably too cumbersome.

Umpires are tough hombres. Chris Conroy fractured a finger in Cincinnati when hit by a Shogo Akiyama foul tip. Two innings later he was umpiring third base. Some players leave the lineup with a hangnail.

Covering the Reds

 ?? DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF ?? Jay Bruce, here rounding the bases after a homer against the Brewers in 2016, crushed one of the more memorable walk-offs in Reds history to clinch the 2010 NL Central championsh­ip.
DAVID JABLONSKI / STAFF Jay Bruce, here rounding the bases after a homer against the Brewers in 2016, crushed one of the more memorable walk-offs in Reds history to clinch the 2010 NL Central championsh­ip.
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