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What Cincinnati Reds could learn

It was a tightly contested playoff series when the Cincinnati Reds were swept out of the postseason by the Atlanta Braves last October. The Reds failed to score a run across 22 innings, spoiling strong pitching performances.

Twelve months later, Atlanta is in the World Series and the Reds are watching from home after they fell seven games short in the wild-card race.  

There wasn’t a major gulf between the two clubs this year. They were separated by five wins during the regular season. Atlanta won the season series, four games to three. The Braves scored 790 runs this year, third-most in the National League, and the Reds scored 786 runs, fourth-most. The Braves had an edge with their starting rotation (3.84 ERA vs. the Reds’ 4.03) with a much wider gap between the bullpens.

Atlanta Braves catcher Kevan Smith (52) tags out Cincinnati Reds right fielder Jesse Winker (33) in the eighth inning of the MLB baseball game between Cincinnati Reds and Atlanta Braves at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Thursday, June 24, 2021.

“This is a good (Reds) team, man,” Atlanta manager Brian Snitker said after splitting a four-game series at Great American Ball Park in June. “They've done a great job here, I think. Some of their young guys, their draft picks, two of their four starters were young guys. This team is going in the right direction, I'll tell you that. It's a tough club.”

The starting pitchers Snitker referenced were Vladimir Gutierrez and Tony Santillan after they combined to allow only four runs in 12 innings. Luis Castillo and Tyler Mahle were the other two starters in that series.

So, if the two clubs have similarities, what can the Reds learn from the Braves?

Aggressiveness at the trade deadline paid off

Cincinnati Reds third baseman Eugenio Suarez (7) beats the throw to Atlanta Braves shortstop Dansby Swanson (7) as he attempts to turn a double play in the sixth inning of the MLB baseball game between Cincinnati Reds and Atlanta Braves at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Thursday, June 24, 2021.

At the July 30 trade deadline, the Reds had a 55-49 record and the Braves were 51-54. The Reds were 5½ games back in the wild-card race and the Braves were five games behind the New York Mets in their division.

The Reds shored up their bullpen, acquiring Mychal Givens, Luis Cessa and Justin Wilson in a pair of trades. The bullpen improved over the final two months, but they didn’t have the same offensive firepower after Jesse Winker went on the injured list and their starting pitching faded in the last weeks of the regular season.


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