The Cincinnati Reds sit at 31-34. They suffered a 6-2 loss to the San Diego Padres. This extended their current losing streak to five games. The club struggled to find its footing on Monday night.
The Cincinnati Reds came into their series with the San Diego Padres at one of the lowest points the team has reached this season. Riding a four-game losing streak that included being swept by the St.
On the one hand, it’s a bit hyperbolic to declare that a 31-33 team playing a road series in San Diego is playing for their season. There are, after all, almost 100 games left in the 2026 regular season.
How many of the 53 Major League Baseball players not born in the United States of America with 250 or more career home runs can you name in seven minutes?
The Cincinnati Reds have fallen to 31-33 after starting the season 20-11. With Major League Baseball's Trade Deadline just over a month away, each beat writer picked a trade piece from the team they cover.
Not every all-timer has instant success at the next level. For many baseball players, it takes a few bumps in the road out of the gate before they ever reach stardom.
Many a Cincinnati Reds season has seen the club hold its own, keep its head above water, and even position itself to be one of the premier clubs in the National League Central…only for the team to head west to face their old National League West rivals and see their season implode in short order.
The Reds had at least a two-run lead in all three games over the St. Louis Cardinals this weekend. They still got swept. That is the state of this bullpen and this team.
The Cincinnati Reds got swept over the weekend by the St. Louis Cardinals and demoralizing fashion. They had at least a two-run lead in all three games of the series.
Summing up the past week of Cincinnati Reds baseball may truly be an impossible task. What does the guy sing in the Grinch song? Stink, stank, stunk. Yeah, that sums up the past week of Reds baseball.
The Cincinnati Reds currently hold a 31-33 record after a difficult series in St. Louis. Over the last 24 hours, the Cardinals swept the club. The 5-3 loss was characterized by late-inning defensive miscues.
One might look at Monday night's series opener between the visiting Cincinnati Reds and San Diego Padres as a matchup of the stoppable object against the movable force.
The only two things rarer in modern-day baseball than the four-homer game is the Triple Crown and the unassisted triple play. The former is, of course, done over an entire season, while there's a large level of lucky in the unassisted triple play.
The Cincinnati Reds had a dreadful month of May after a historic April. Any hopes of finding a balance in June is looking like wishful thinking. On Sunday, the Reds were swept by the St.
The Cincinnati Reds lost to the St. Louis Cardinals again on Sunday. Much like Saturday’s loss, the team scraped and clawed their way to the game still being tight late, only for the bullpen to fork over the game in the 8th inning.
It started well on Sunday. Matt McLain and Tyler Stephenson both homered early to give the Reds a 2-0 lead. But then the script played itself out just like it has done many times this season.
It would be pretty damn McGroovy if the Cincinnati Reds could find a way to pick themselves up off the mat and fight their way back into the 2026 season.
The Cincinnati Reds have finally brought up a reinforcement on good terms, rather than out of necessity. The last place club has seen their pitching ranks decimated by injuries, and the churn they’ve been going through in that time has seen arms brought up for stints and designated for assignment just to free up roster spots for future churn.
Through April 20, the Cincinnati Reds bullpen owned an MLB-best 2.31 ERA. Since then, a combination of injuries and inconsistency has fueled a dramatic collapse.
Eugenio Suarez hasn't had the start fans had hoped to see when he was brought back to the Reds during the 2025 offseason. Suarez's start to his Reds' reunion started off going 0-4 with three strikeouts on Opening Day.
The Cincinnati Reds hope the return of one of their young, talented pitchers will help turn around their fortunes and salvage the finale of their three-game series against the host St.
For the first time since the second game of the season, the Cincinnati Reds are below .500. Once in first place, Terry Francona’s squad is now eight games behind the National League Central-leading Milwaukee Brewers following Saturday’s 6-5 loss versus the St.
The Cincinnati Reds could be getting their ace back sooner than expected. Speaking with reporters on Saturday, manager Terry Francona said Hunter Greene (elbow) continues to progress really well and will hopefully make some starts before the All-Star break.
The Reds have successfully sent right-hander Lyon Richardson and left-hander Brandon Leibrandt through waivers unclaimed, per Mark Sheldon of MLB.com. Both pitchers were designated for assignment earlier this week.
The Reds have released right-hander Josh Staumont, according to his transactions tracker at MLB.com. It’s possible his minor league deal had a June 1st opt-out, since that’s a common date for such provisions.
The Cincinnati Reds are about to get a major boost to their starting rotation. Ahead of today's game, manager Terry Francona announced that Rhett Lowder will be activated off the injured list to start Sunday's game against the St.
It's been a tough season for Cincinnati Reds outfielder TJ Friedl. After starting the year as the Opening Day leadoff man, Friedl has struggled at the plate.
News broke on Monday that shortstop Elly De La Cruz would land on the injured list with a hamstring injury. That was the bad news. The good news? Top prospect Edwin Arroyo would join the Cincinnati Reds and is set to make his major-league debut.
The Cincinnati Reds placed two-time All-Star shortstop Elly De La Cruz on the 10-day injured list Monday with a right hamstring strain. De La Cruz, 24, exited in the fifth inning of Sunday's win against Atlanta after feeling tightness in the hamstring while running to first base.