The following is the
history of the Cincinnati
Reds of
Major League
Baseball. Originally named the
Cincinnati Red Stockings, the name
was shortened to the
Cincinnati Reds
in the 1890s.
1869-96: The Original "Red Stockings" and the Pre-NL Days

The 1869 Cincinnati Red Stockings team
photograph.
The original
Cincinnati Red
Stockings, baseball's first openly all-professional team, was
founded in
1863, and became fully professional
in
1869. The Red Stockings won 130
straight games throughout 1869 and
1870, before being defeated by the
Brooklyn Atlantics. Star players included
brothers
Harry and
George Wright,
Fred Waterman, and pitcher
Asa Brainard. The 1869 Red Stockings made an
eastern swing of 21 games and went undefeated. According to Walter
Camp, the team received a banquet and a "champion bat...this rather
remarkable testimonial was twenty-seven feet long and nine inches
in diameter." The following year, the team lost only one game. They
were defeated at the Brooklyn Athletic's Capitoline grounds park.
According to Camp, the Red Stockings lost 8–7 in 11 innings. The
game apparently served as a precursor to today's unruly crowds
because he wrote: "A crowd of ten thousand people assembled to
witness this match, and so lost their heads in the excitement as to
give the Western men a very unfair reception." [See: "Base-Ball For
The Spectator" Walter Camp, Century Magazine October, 1889.]
The Red Stockings relocated to Boston after the
1870 season. A new
Cincinnati Red Stockings team
became a charter member of the
National
League in
1876, five years after the first
Red Stockings team. The second Red Stockings team was expelled from
the league after the
1880 season, in part for
violating league rules by serving beer to fans at games, and for
their refusal to stop renting out their ballpark, the
Bank Street Grounds, on Sundays.
Following the expulsion, a third Cincinnati team of the same name
became a founding member of the
American Association, a
rival league that began play in
1882. That team
(which is the same franchise of today) played for nine seasons in
the American Association and won the Association pennant in 1882.
The pennant winning club still holds the record for the highest
winning percentage of any Reds club to date (.688). In November
1889, the Cincinnati Red Stockings and the
Brooklyn Dodgers both left the Association
for the National League. In the move, the Red Stockings dropped
"Stockings" from their name.
1890-1911: In the National League For Good
Although some dispute whether the two teams are the same, according
to
The Baseball Encyclopedia the Cincinnati Red Stockings
left the American Association in
1890 to play
in the National League. One of the main reasons had absolutely
nothing to do with the team directly—the upstart Player's League,
an early, failed attempt to break the
reserve clause in baseball. The league's
impending presence severely weakened both previously existing
leagues, and, because the National League decided to expand and the
American Association was weakening, the team decided to accept the
invitation to become members of the stronger National League. It
was also at this time that the team first shortened their nickname
from "Red Stockings" to "Reds." The Reds wandered through the
1890s signing local stars & aging
veterans. During this time, the team never finished above third
place (1897) and never closer than 10 1/2 games (1890).
At the turn of the century, the Reds had hitting stars such as
Sam Crawford and
Cy Seymour. Seymour's .377 average in 1905 was
the first individual batting crown won by a Red. In
1911,
Bob Bescher stole 81
bases which is still a team record. Like the previous decade, the
1900s were not kind to the Reds, as much of the decade was spent in
the league's
second division.
1912-32: Redland Field to the Great Depression
In 1912,
Redland
Field
(later to be known as Crosley Field
), built on the corner of Findlay and Western
Avenues on the city's west side opened for the Reds. The
Reds had actually been playing baseball on that site for the last
20 years. By the late 1910s the Reds began to come out of the
second division. The 1918 team finished 4th, and then new manager
Pat Moran led the Reds to an NL
pennant in
1919. The
1919 team had hitting stars led by
Edd
Roush and
Heinie Groh while the
pitching staff was led by
Hod Eller and
Harry "Slim" Sallee, a left-hander. The
Reds finished ahead of
John
McGraw's New York Giants,
and then won the
world
championship in 8 games over the
Chicago White Sox.
By 1920, the
"Black Sox" scandal
had brought a taint to the Reds' first championship. In the
remainder of the
1920s and early 1930s the
Reds were second division dwellers for most of those years.
Eppa Rixey,
Dolf
Luque and
Pete Donohue were
pitching stars; the offense never quite lived up to the pitching.
By 1931 the team was bankrupt, thanks to the
Great Depression, and Crosley Field was in
a state of disrepair.
1933-40: Revival of 1930s
Powel Crosley Jr., an
electronics magnate who, with his brother
Lewis M. Crosley, produced
radios,
refrigerators, and
other
household items, bought the Reds out
of bankruptcy in 1933, and hired
Larry
MacPhail to be the General Manager.
Powell Crosley Jr. had
also started WLW
radio and the Crosley Broadcasting
Corporation in Cincinnati and was doing quite well as a civic
leader. (WLW has been the Reds' radio flagship for decades.)
MacPhail began to develop the Reds'
minor league system and expanded the
Reds' base. The Reds, throughout the 1930s, became a team of
"firsts".
Crosley Field
, (formerly Redland Field), became the host of the
first night game in 1935. Johnny Vander Meer became the only
pitcher in major league history to throw back-to-back no-hitters in
1938. Thanks to Vander Meer,
Paul Derringer, and
infielder-turned-
pitcher
Bucky Walters, the Reds had a solid
pitching staff. The offense came around in the late 1930s.
Ernie Lombardi was named the National
League's Most Valuable Player in 1938,
First baseman Frank
McCormick was the 1940 NL MVP. Other position players included
Harry Craft,
Lonny
Frey,
Ival Goodman and
Lew Riggs. By 1938 the Reds, now led by manager
Bill McKechnie, were out of the
second division finishing fourth. By
1939 they
were National League champions. The Reds were swept by the
New York Yankees in four straight. In 1940,
they repeated as NL Champions, and for the first time in 21 years,
the Reds captured a World championship, beating the
Detroit Tigers 4 games to 3.
1941-69: Kluszewski, Robinson, and the Beginnings of a
Machine
World War II and age finally caught up
with the Reds. Throughout the remainder of the
1940s and the early
1950s,
Cincinnati finished mostly in the second division. In 1944,
Joe Nuxhall, (who was later to become
part of the radio broadcasting team), at age 15, pitching for the
Reds on loan from a Hamilton, Ohio Junior High School, became the
youngest person ever to play in a major league game—a record that
still stands today. Ewell "The Whip" Blackwell was the main
pitching stalwart before arm problems cut short his career.
Ted Kluszewski was the NL home run
leader in 1954. The rest of the offense was a collection of
over-the-hill players and not-ready-for-prime time youngsters.
During 1954, the Reds changed their name to the Redlegs in response
to the
Second Red Scare and the
height of the Communism movement.
In
1956, led by National League
Rookie of the Year Frank Robinson, the Reds hit 221 HR to tie
the NL record. The 1957 season brought two tough moments. The first
caught Reds fans stuffing ballot boxes by having seven Reds in the
All-Star Game. As a result, voting was banned until the 1970s.
Around this time, the Dodgers and Giants left New York in favor of
California. There were talks of moving the Reds or another National
League club to New York. The maturation of Robinson and other
players, along with increasing attendance in Cincinnati halted
those talks.
By 1961, Robinson was joined by
Vada
Pinson,
Wally Post,
Gordy Coleman and
Gene
Freese. Pitchers
Joey Jay,
Jim O'Toole, and
Bob
Purkey led the staff. The newly-renamed Reds captured the
1961 National League pennant, holding off the
Los Angeles Dodgers and the
San Francisco Giants, only to
be defeated by the perennially powerful
New York Yankees in the
World Series. The Reds had many successful
teams during the rest of the
1960s, but did
not produce any championships. They won 98 games in 1962 (paced by
Purkey's 23), but finished third. In 1964, they lost the pennant by
one game, having taken 1st place when the Phillies collapsed in
September but then losing out to the Cardinals. In that 1964
season, the beloved leader of the Reds, manager
Fred Hutchinson, died of cancer, succumbing
just weeks after the end of the 1964 season, one of baseball's most
exciting pennant races ever. The failure of the Reds to win the
1964 pennant led to owner
Bill DeWitt's
selling off key components of the team, in anticipation of
relocating the franchise. After the 1965 season he executed what
may be the most lopsided trade in baseball history, sending former
Most-Valuable Player Frank Robinson to the Baltimore Orioles for
pitchers
Milt Pappas, Jack Baldschun,
and outfielder Dick Simpson. Robinson went on to win the MVP in the
American league for 1966, win the "triple crown", and lead
Baltimore to its first ever World Series title in a four-game sweep
of the Los Angeles Dodgers. The Reds did not recover from this
trade until the rise of the "Big Red Machine" of the 1970s.
Starting in the early 1960s, the Reds' farm system began producing
a series of future stars, such as
Jim
Maloney (the Reds pitching ace of the 1960s),
Pete Rose,
Tony
Pérez,
Johnny Bench (a great
catcher and the backbone of the Reds for years to come),
Lee May,
Tommy Helms,
Bernie Carbo,
Hal
McRae,
Dave Concepción, and
Gary Nolan. The tipping
point came in 1967 with the appointment of
Bob Howsam as general manager. Howsam pulled two
key trades to complement the Reds' bats. The first brought in
outfielder
Alex Johnson who would
return to form after some years with the Phillies. The second
traded veteran
Vada Pinson to St. Louis
for the speedy
Bobby Tolan. Around this
time, the Reds avoided an all but certain move to San Diego when
the city of Cincinnati and Hamilton County agreed to build a new,
state of the art, downtown stadium on the edge of the Ohio River.
The Reds entered into a 30-year lease in exchange for the stadium
commitment keeping the franchise in its original home city. In a
series of strategic moves, Howsam nurtured the homegrown talent and
brought in key personnel, allowing the team to finally reach its
potential during the
1970s. The Reds' final
game at Crosley Field, home to more than 4,500 baseball games, were
played on
June 24,
1970,
a 5-4 victory over the San Francisco Giants. In its place, a new
stadium, and a new Reds dynasty.
How To Groom the Big Red Machine
Under Bob Howsam's administration starting in the late 1960s, the
Reds instituted a strict rule barring the team's players from
wearing mustaches, beards, and long hair. (This rule, with a
mustache exemption, is also enforced to this day by the
New York Yankees, under the ownership of
George Steinbrenner.) The clean
cut look was meant to present the team as wholesome and traditional
in an era of turmoil. Over the years, the rule was controversial,
but persisted under the ownership of
Marge
Schott. All players coming to the Reds were required to shave
and cut their hair for the next three decades or more. On at least
one occasion, in the early 1980s, when the Reds were hurting for
pitching, strict enforcement of this rule lost them the services of
star reliever
Rollie Fingers, who
would not shave his trademark handlebar moustache in order to join
the team. The Reds thus took a pass on Fingers.
[480487] When Pete Rose became player-manager
in the mid-1980s, he grew a "rat's tail," fashionable among the
youth of the time, but the rule was not officially rescinded until
1999 when the Reds traded for slugger
Greg
Vaughn who had a goatee.
The Reds' grooming rules also included guidelines for wearing the
uniform. In major league baseball, a club generally provides most
of the equipment and clothing needed for play. However, players are
required to supply their gloves and shoes themselves. Many players
take advantage of this rule by entering into sponsorship
arrangements with shoe manufacturers. Through the mid-1980s, the
Reds had a strict rule that players were to wear only plain black
shoes with no prominent logo. Reds players decried the boring color
choice as well as the denial of the opportunity to earn more money
through shoe contracts. A compromise was struck in which players
were given the opportunity to wear red shoes.
For years, club management and players throughout Major League
Baseball have been involved in a struggle over how uniform pants
and stockings are to be worn. Generally, baseball players wear a
double layer of socks—underneath, the regular socks or "sanitaries"
(traditionally plain white) and over that, a stirrup-type stocking
(traditionally bearing team colors). Some clubs, such as the Reds,
require that the pants and socks be worn so that the team colors on
the stirrup are visible. However, since the 1990s, players have
generally preferred to pull down the cuffs of their trousers all
the way to the ankle, thus covering up the colored stockings.
1970-76: The Big Red Machine
1970-71: 102 Victories and Two Big Trades
In , little known
George "Sparky"
Anderson was hired as manager, and the Reds embarked upon a
decade of excellence, with a team that came to be known as
"
The Big Red Machine".
Playing at
Crosley Field until June 30, , when the Reds
moved into brand-new Riverfront Stadium
, a 52,000 seat multi-purpose venue on the shores of
the Ohio River, the Reds began the
1970s with a bang by winning 70 of their first
100 games. Johnny Bench,
Tony Pérez,
Pete Rose,
Lee May and
Bobby Tolan were the early Red Machine
offensive leaders;
Gary
Nolan,
Jim Merritt Jim Maloney and
Jim McGlothlin led a pitching staff
which also contained veterans
Tony
Cloninger and
Clay Carroll and
youngsters
Wayne Simpson and
Don Gullett. The Reds breezed through the 1970
season, winning the NL West and captured the NL pennant by sweeping
the Pittsburgh Pirates in three games. By time the club got to the
World Series, however, the Reds
pitching staff had run out of gas and the veteran
Baltimore Orioles beat the Reds in five
games.
After the disastrous season (the second season between 1961 and
1981 during which the Reds finished with a losing record) the Reds
reloaded by trading veterans Jimmy Stewart, May, and
Tommy Helms for
Joe
Morgan,
César Gerónimo,
Jack Billingham,
Ed Armbrister, and
Denis Menke. Meanwhile,
Dave Concepción blossomed at
shortstop. 1971 was also the year a key component
of the future world championships was acquired in
George Foster from the San
Francisco Giants in a trade for shortstop
Frank Duffy.
1972-74: Enter Joe Morgan
The Reds won the NL West in a baseball first ever strike-shortened
season and defeated the
Pittsburgh
Pirates in an exciting five-game playoff series—that fifth game
in Cincinnati was the last major league game Pittsburgh's great
Roberto Clemente ever played—then
faced the
Oakland Athletics in the
World Series. Six of the seven
games were won by one run. With powerful slugger
Reggie Jackson sidelined due to an injury
incurred during Oakland's playoff series against Detroit, Ohio
native
Gene Tenace got a chance to play
in the series for manager
Dick
Williams, delivering four home runs that tied the World Series
record for homers, propelling Oakland to a dramatic seventh game
series win. This was the first World Series in which no starting
pitcher for either side pitched a complete game.
The Reds won a third NL West crown in after a dramatic second half
comeback, that saw them make up 10½ games on the Los Angeles
Dodgers after the
All-Star break.
However they lost the NL pennant to the
New York Mets in five games. In game one,
Tom Seaver faced Jack Billingham in a
classic pitching duo, with all three runs of the 2-1 margin being
scored on home runs.
John Milner
provided New York's run off Billingham, while Pete Rose tied the
game in the seventh inning off Seaver, setting the stage for a
dramatic game ending home run by Johnny Bench in the bottom of the
ninth inning. The New York series provided plenty of controversy
with the riotious behavior of Shea Stadium fans towards Pete Rose
when he and
Bud Harrelson scuffled
after a hard slide by Rose into Harrelson at second base during the
fifth inning of Game 3. A full bench-clearing fight resulted after
New York's
Wayne Garrett came over
from third base to take cheap shots at Rose. The resulting on-field
tension led to two separate incidents in which play was stopped.
The Reds trailed 9-3 and New York's manager,
Yogi Berra, and legendary outfielder
Willie Mays at the request of National League
president
Warren Giles appealed to fans
in left field to restrain themselves. The next day the series was
extended to a fifth game when Rose homered in the 12th inning to
tie the series at two games each.
The 1974 season started off with much excitement, as the Atlanta
Braves were in town to open the season with the Reds.
Hank Aaron entered opening day with 713 home
runs, one shy of tying Babe Ruth's record of 714. On a three ball
one strike count, the first pitch Aaron swung at in the 74 season
was the record tying home run off Jack Billingham. The next day the
Braves benched Aaron, hoping to save him for his record breaking
home run on their season opening homestand. The commissioner of
baseball,
Bowie Kuhn, ordered Braves
management to play Aaron the next day, where he narrowly missed the
historic home run in the fifth inning. Aaron went on to set the
record in Atlanta two nights later off
Al Downing and the Los Angeles
Dodgers. 1974 also was the debut of
Marty Brennaman, who replaced Al Michaels,
after Michaels left the Reds to broadcast for the San Francisco
Giants. However, the Reds would win 98 games in 1974, finishing
second to MVP
Steve Garvey and the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
1975-76: The Great Eight Win Back-To-Back Titles
With 1975, the Big Red Machine lineup solidified with the starting
team of
Johnny Bench (c),
Tony Perez (1b),
Joe
Morgan (2b),
Dave
Concepción (ss),
Pete Rose (3b),
Ken Griffey (rf),
César Gerónimo (cf), and
George Foster (lf). The
starting pitchers included
Don Gullett,
Fred Norman,
Gary Nolan,
Jack Billingham,
Pat
Darcy, and
Clay Kirby. However, it
was the bullpen that was the key to the Reds' pitching (and
Anderson's reputation as "
Captain Hook") with
Rawly Eastwick and
Will McEnaney as the key closers with a
combined 37 saves.
Pedro Borbon and
Clay Carroll filled in as stretchers
between the starters and the finishers. However, this was not the
lineup on Opening Day. At that time, Rose still played in left
field, Foster was not a starter, while
John Vuckovich, an off-season acquisition
from the
Milwaukee Brewers was the
starting third baseman, replacing
Dan
Driessen, who was a decent hitter, but whose defensive skills
were considered a weakness. While Vuckovich was a superb defensive
shortstop, he was a weak hitter, as was the declining
Denis Menke. In May, with the team off to a slow
start and trailing the Dodgers, Sparky Anderson made a bold move by
moving Rose to third base (a position where he had very little
experience) and inserting Foster in left field to bat cleanup. This
was the jolt that the Reds needed to propel them into first place,
with Rose proving to be reliable on defense, while adding Foster to
the outfield gave the offense some added punch. During the season,
the Reds compiled two notable streaks: (1) by winning 41 out of 50
games in one stretch, and (2) by going a month without committing
any errors on defense.
In the
1975 season, Cincinnati clinched the NL
West with 108 victories, then swept the
Pittsburgh Pirates in three games to win
the NL pennant. In the
World
Series, the
Boston Red Sox were
the opponents. After splitting the first four games, the Reds took
Game 5. After a three-day rain delay, the two teams met in Game 6,
one of the most memorable baseball games ever played and considered
by many to be the best World Series game ever. The Reds were ahead
6-3 with 5 outs left, when the Red Sox tied the game on former Red
Bernie Carbo's three-run
home run. It was Carbo's second pinch-hit three-run
homer in the series. After a few close-calls either way,
Carlton Fisk hit a dramatic 12th inning
home run off the
foul
pole in left field (which is considered to be one of the
greatest TV sports moments of all time) to give the Red Sox a 7–6
win and force a deciding Game 7. Cincinnati prevailed the next day
when Morgan's
RBI single won Game 7 and gave the Reds their
first championship in 35 years.
1976 saw a return of the same starting eight in the field. The
starting rotation was led by Gary Nolan. The remaining starters,
Don Gullet, Jack Billingham, Pat Zachary, Santo Alcola, and Fred
Norman comprised an underrated staff in which four of the six had
ERAs below 3.10. Rawley Eastwick, Pedro Borbon, and Will McEnany
shared closer duties, recording 26, 8, and 7 saves
respectively.
In , the Reds won the NL West by ten games. They went undefeated in
the postseason, sweeping the
Philadelphia Phillies (winning Game 3
in their final at-bat) to return to the
World Series. They continued to dominate
by sweeping the
Yankees in the
newly renovated Yankee Stadium, the first World Series games played
in Yankee Stadium since 1964. This was only the second ever sweep
of the proud Yankees in the World Series. In winning the Series,
the Reds became the first NL team since the 1921–22 New York Giants
to win back-to-back World Series championships.
1977-84: The End of the Machine
1977-81
Personnel changes were in the offing. Popular Tony Perez was sent
to Montreal after the 1976 season, breaking up the Big Red
Machine's starting lineup. Starting pitcher Don Gullet left via
free agency and signed with the New York Yankees. In an effort to
fill that gap, a trade with the Oakland A's for starting ace Vida
Blue was arranged during the '76–'77 off-season. However, Bowie
Kuhn, the Commissioner of Baseball at the time, vetoed this trade
in an effort to maintain the competitive balance in baseball. On
June 15, 1977, the Reds entered the trading market with a
vengeance. New York was heartbroken by the news that the Mets'
franchise pitcher
Tom Seaver was being
traded to the Reds for Pat Zachry,
Doug
Flynn, Steve Henderson, and Dan Norman. In less successful
deals, the Reds also traded Gary Nolan to the Angels for
Craig Hendrickson, Rawly Eastwick to St.
Louis for
Doug Capilla and
Mike Caldwell to Milwaukee for
Dick O'Keeffe and
Garry
Pyka, and got
Rick Auerbach from
Texas. The end of the Big Red Machine era was heralded by the
replacement of General Manager Bob Howsam with
Dick Wagner. After the 1978 season, Cincinnati
hero Pete Rose, who since 1963 had played almost every position for
the team except pitcher and catcher, signed with Philadelphia as a
free agent. In Rose's last season as a Red, he gave baseball a
thrill as he challenged
Joe Dimaggio's
56 game hitting streak, tying for the second longest streak ever at
44 games. The streak came to an end in Atlanta after striking out
in his 5th at bat in the game against Gene Garber. Rose also earned
his 3000th hit that season, on his way to becoming baseball's all
time hits leader when he rejoined the Reds in the mid 80's. The
year also witnessed the only no-hitter of pitcher Tom Seaver's
career, coming against the St. Louis Cardinals on June 16,
1978.
The later years of the 1970s brought turmoil and change. After two
consecutive runner-up seasons, Wagner fired manager Anderson. By ,
players Gullett, Nolan, Pérez, and Rose, among others, had left the
club. By 1979, the starters were Bench (c),
Dan Driessen (1b), Morgan (2b), Concepcion
(ss),
Ray Knight (3b), with Griffey,
Foster, and Geronimo again in the outfield. The pitching staff had
experienced an almost complete turnover. The ace starter was now
Tom Seaver, acquired from the
New York Mets in 1977 in a multiple-player
deal. Only Norman was left from 1975-76; the remaining starters
were
Mike La Coss,
Bill Bonham, and
Paul
Moskau. In the bullpen, only Borbon had remained.
Dave Tomlin and
Mario Soto worked mid-innings with
Tom Hume and
Doug
Bair closing.
The Reds did manage to win the 1979 NL West behind the pitching of
Tom Seaver but were dispatched in the NL
playoffs by Pittsburgh, after a controversial play in Game 2 in
which a ball hit by Pittsburgh's
Phil
Garner was caught by Cincinnati outfielder
Dave Collins but was ruled a trap, setting the
Pirates up to take a 2-1 lead. The Pirates swept the series 3 games
to 0. After the season ended, Joe Morgan returned to the Astros.
Ironically, the Reds would lose the NL West to those Astros in
1980, despite Dave Collins stealing 79 bases.
The 1981 team fielded a strong lineup, with only Concepcion,
Foster, and Griffey retaining their spots from the 1975-76 heyday.
Johnny Bench broke his ankle and so
Joe
Nolan played the majority of games behind the plate. Driessen
and Knight still played the corners, but Morgan and Geronimo had
been replaced at second base and center field by
Ron Oester and Dave Collins. Mario Soto posted a
banner year starting on the mound, even surpassing the performance
of Seaver. La Coss,
Bruce Berenyi, and
Frank Pastore rounded out the starting
rotation. Hume again led the bullpen as closer, joined by Bair,
Moskau,
Joe Price, and
Geoff Combe.
In , Cincinnati had the best overall record in baseball, but they
finished second in the division in both of the half-seasons that
were created after a mid-season players'
strike. To commemorate
this, a team photo was taken, accompanied by a banner that read
"Baseball's Best Record 1981." By , the Reds were a shell of the
original Red Machine; they lost 100 games that year. Johnny Bench
retired a year later. Outraged Reds fans proclaimed, "We Wuz
Robbed!"
The 1980s
After the heartbreak of 1981, General Manager Dick Wagner pursued
the strategy of ridding the team of pricey veterans, stars, and
proven winners, ridding the roster of catcher Nolan, third-baseman
Knight (who had adequately replaced the unreplaceable Pete Rose)
and the entire starting outfield of Griffey, Foster, and Collins.
Johnny Bench decided to give up catching entirely and was made the
starting third baseman;
Alex Trevino
became the regular starting catcher. The outfield was staffed with
Paul Householder,
César Cedeño, and the untried
Eddie Milner. The starting rotation
still featured the strong Seaver and Soto, joined by Pastore and
Bruce Berenyi, but their efforts were
wasted without a strong offensive lineup backing them. Tom Hume
still led the bullpen, but he had no support from the dismal
relieving of
Ben Hayes,
Brad "The Animal" Lesley,
Joe Price, and
Jim
Kern.
The Reds fell to the absolute bottom of the Western Division for
the next few years, losing Seaver after the 1982 season. A series
of desultory changes --
Dann
Bilardello behind the plate,
Nick
Esasky taking over after Bench's failed experiment in the hot
corner, and
Gary Redus taking over from
Cedeno. Tom Hume had pitched himself out and there was not a body
in the bullpen worth naming. Dave Concepción was the sole remaining
starter from the Big Red Machine era.
Wagner's control of the Reds ended in 1983, when Howsam, the
architect of the Big Red Machine was brought back and he began his
return by acquiring Cincinnati native
Dave
Parker from Pittsburgh. In the Reds began to move up, depending
on trades and some minor leaguers. In that season
Dave Parker,
Dave Concepción and
Tony Pérez were in Cincinnati uniforms. By
the end of 1984,
Pete Rose was hired to be
the Reds player-manager. After raising the franchise from the
grave, Howsam gave way to the administration of
Bill Bergesch, who was principally known for
holding on tightly to perennial future stars like
Kurt Stillwell,
Tracy
Jones,
Kal Daniels, and others,
refusing to risk these "crown jewels" for pitching help.
Under Bergesch, from -
89 the Reds
finished second four times. Among the highlights, Rose became the
all-time hits leader,
Tom Browning
threw a
perfect game, and
Chris Sabo was the
1988 National League Rookie of the
Year. The Reds also had a bullpen star in
John Franco, who was with the team from 1984 to
1989. In , Rose was banned from baseball by
Commissioner Bart Giamatti, who declared Rose guilty
of "conduct detrimental to baseball." Controversy also swirled
around Reds owner
Marge Schott, who was
accused several times of
ethnic and
racial slurs.
1990-2002: A World Title and the End of an Era
1990: A Wire-to-Wire World Championship Season
In 1987, General Manager Bill Bergesch was replaced by
Murray Cook, who initiated a series of deals
that would finally bring the Reds back to the championship. First,
knowing that
Barry Larkin was already
the full-time shortstop, the Reds traded
Kurt Stillwell to the
Kansas City Royals for pitcher
Danny Jackson. Jackson would respond by
winning 23 games in 1988. Next, reliever
John Franco was traded to the
New York Mets for reliever
Randy Myers. Also, another Bergesch favorite,
veteran
Dave Parker was traded to the
Oakland Athletics for young
pitcher
Jose Rijo. After the 1989 season,
another trade brought in first baseman
Hal
Morris from the
New York
Yankees. The Reds also hired former Yankee player and manager
Lou Piniella to manage the Reds.
In , the Reds under new manager
Lou
Piniella shocked baseball by leading the NL West from
wire-to-wire. They started off 33-12, winning their first 9 games,
and maintained their lead throughout the year. Led by Chris Sabo,
Barry Larkin,
Eric Davis,
Paul O'Neill and Billy
Hatcher in the field, and by
José
Rijo, Tom Browning and the "Nasty Boys" of
Rob Dibble,
Norm
Charlton and
Randy Myers on the
mound, the Reds took out the
Pirates in the
NLCS and swept the
heavily favored
Oakland Athletics
in four straight. The sweep of the Oakland Athletics extended the
Reds winning streak in the World Series to 9 consecutive games. The
World Series, however, cost the team Eric Davis, who severely
bruised a kidney diving for a fly ball in the first inning of Game
4.
1991-92: The End of the Classic Uniforms
The 1991 season was disappointing to Cincinnati, only winning 75
games. In 1992, Quinn was replaced in the front office by
Jim Bowden. Bowden would trade outfielder Eric
Davis to the Los Angeles Dodgers for pitcher
Tim Belcher. On the field, manager Lou Piniella
wanted outfielder
Paul
O'Neill to be his premier power-hitter to fill the void left by
Eric Davis after he was traded to the
Los Angeles Dodgers. Despite O'Neill's
poor performance in his new role (he only hit .246 with 14 home
runs), the Reds won 90 games in 1992. The 90 wins were good enough
for second place in the National League West as the
Atlanta Braves charged their way to the
division title and a second consecutive National League Pennant.
One of the low points of the season came when Piniella got into an
altercation with "Nasty Boy"
Rob Dibble.
That coupled with O'Neill's trade to the
New York Yankees for outfielder
Roberto Kelly put a huge damper on the Reds
season. The long term effects of the O'Neill/Kelly trade were even
worse as Kelly would only be in a Reds uniform for a few years,
while O'Neill wound up being a leader for the great New York Yankee
teams from the mid-to-late 90's. The Reds would also replace their
"Big Red Machine" era uniforms after 1992 season for a sleeveless
look, reminiscing the Reds' days in the 1960s.
1993-99: The Return of the Vests
Before 1993 season manager
Lou Piniella
was replaced by fan favorite
Tony Perez.
Perez's realm would be short lived though as he only lasted only 44
games at the helm. Perez was replaced by
Davey Johnson, who had led the
New York Mets to a World Championship in
1986. With Johnson steering the
team, the Reds made steady progress upward. In 1994, the Reds were
in the newly-created
National League Central
Division with the
Chicago Cubs,
St. Louis Cardinals,
Pittsburgh Pirates and
Houston Astros. By the time the
1994 strike hit, the Reds
were a half-game ahead of the Astros for first place in the
division.
1995 saw the Reds win the National League Central led by shortstop
and
NL MVP
Barry Larkin. After defeating the
Western Division
Champion Los Angeles Dodgers
in the first
NLDS since 1981, they
were demolished in 4 games by the
Eastern Division Champion
Atlanta Braves in the
NLCS.
That season also saw one the most bizarre if not worst moves in
team history, as eccentric team owner
Marge
Schott announced mid-season that Johnson would be gone by the
end of the year, regardless of outcome, to be replaced by former
Reds third baseman
Ray Knight. Knight,
along with his wife, professional golfer
Nancy Lopez, were personal friends of Schott's.
The team took a dive under Knight as he was unable to complete two
full seasons as manager. Ironically Knight was the starting third
baseman for the World Champion 1986 Mets; whom were managed by
Johnson.
Knight was replaced by
Jack McKeon and
by 1999 the Reds won 96 games and were contending for a playoff
spot. After the season ended the Reds found themselves tied with
the
New York Mets for the
National League Wild Card.
The Mets, led by a
brilliant pitching performance by Al
Leiter won a one-game playoff at Cinergy Field
and ended the Reds' season. The end of this
game will be remembered by many as former Reds closer
John Franco, who was traded to the Mets for
Randy Myers before the 1990 season, ran
wildy around the field celebrating the first playoff berth of his
career.
2003-Present Day: The Great American Ballpark Opens
After the
2002 season Cinergy
Field
was demolished to make way for the new Great American
Ball Park
. The demolition of the Reds' most successful
home field severed the last tie to the team's "Big Red Machine"
era.
Great American Ball Park opened in 2003, with high expectations for
a team led by local favorites, including
outfielder Ken
Griffey, Jr.,
shortstop Barry Larkin,
reliever Danny
Graves and
first baseman Sean Casey. Although attendance improved
considerably with the new ballpark, the team continued to lose.
After years of promises that the club was rebuilding toward the
opening of the new ballpark, General Manager
Jim Bowden and manager
Bob
Boone were fired on July 28. This broke up the father-son combo
of manager
Bob Boone and
third baseman Aaron
Boone. Aaron was soon traded to the
New York Yankees, where he would hit the
series-winning home run of the
2003 ALCS over the
Boston Red Sox. Following the season
Dan O'Brien was
hired as the Reds' 16th General Manager.
2004-2005
The and seasons continued the trend of big hitting, poor pitching,
and ultimately poor records for the Reds.
Ken Griffey, Jr. joined the 500-home run
club in 2004, giving Reds fans one of the few highlights of his
injury-plagued stay in Cincinnati.
Adam
Dunn emerged as formidable home run hitter, hitting a 535-foot
home run against
Jose Lima. Dunn's power
was offset by his inconsistency at times also as he broke the
single-season major league record for
strikeouts in 2004. The Reds were quickly in last
place to begin the 2005 season, costing manager
Dave Miley his job. Miley was replaced by
Jerry Narron. Like many other small
market clubs, the Reds dispatched some of their veteran players and
began entrusting their future to a young nucleus that included
Dunn,
Ryan Freel, and
Aaron Harang.
2006-Present: Enter Bob Castellini
In 2006, a new era in Reds baseball began as
Robert Castellini took over as owner,
assuming control of the team from
Carl
Lindner. Castinelli promptly fired general manager Dan O'Brien.
Wayne Krivsky, previously an assistant
General Manager with the
Minnesota
Twins, and a candidate for the job when O'Brien was hired, was
appointed as the General Manager of the Reds after a protracted
search. The first move Krivsky made was to trade young outfielder
Wily Mo Peña to the
Boston Red Sox for pitcher
Bronson Arroyo. Arroyo made his first start
in a Reds uniform on
April 5,
2006. He not only earned the win, but also led off the
third inning with his first career home run. Krivsky also gave fans
hope with mid-season trades that bolstered the "non-existent"
bullpen, trading for
Eddie Guardado
and then trading outfielder
Austin
Kearns, shortstop
Felipe López, and 2004
first-round draft pick
Ryan Wagner to
the
Washington Nationals for
relievers
Gary Majewski and
Bill Bray, shortstop
Royce Clayton, and two prospects. This move
was controversial, as not only did it seem as if the Reds did not
receive much in return for two starting position players and a
former first-round draft pick, but also it was later discovered
that the Nationals may have hidden Majewski's health
problems.
For Opening Day
2006, President
George W. Bush
threw out the ceremonial first pitch, becoming the first sitting
president to throw
out the first pitch at a Reds game.
The 2007 season was a great disappointment for the Reds when they
finished in fifth place (72-90). One of the bright spots of the
season was the emergence of young second baseman
Brandon Phillips. Despite many fans'
perception that interim manager
Pete
Mackanin might be a good fit as manager, the Reds made a bold
move toward winning and hired three-time
National League Manager of the
Year Dusty Baker to guide the Reds
in the 2008 season.
The 2008 season had high expectations since Dusty Baker usually
turned teams around during their first years (evident with the 1993
San Francisco Giants who went 103-59 after going 72-90 the previous
season, and the 2003 Chicago Cubs when they won the Central
Division after finishing under .500 in 2002). However, the Reds
would fall short by going 74-88 and finishing in fifth once again.
There were some bright spots in the season despite the bad finish.
In his first start, pitcher
Johnny
Cueto would strike out ten Arizona Diamondbacks. The next
month, rookie outfielder
Jay Bruce would
make his debut by delivering several walk-off victories for the
Reds.
References
- Palmer, Peter & Gillette, Gary, editors, The Baseball
Encyclopedia. New York: Barnes & Noble Books, 2004, pp
1370 & 1387.