Bailey’s 4 FGs lift Dallas over Carolina 19-14 (Yahoo! Sports)

21 Oct
2012

Dallas Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo (9) looks for a receiver as Carolina Panthers defensive end Greg Hardy (76) pursues during the first half of an NFL football game, Sunday, Oct. 21, 2012, in Charlotte. (AP Photo/Bob Leverone)

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -- Tony Romo found a way to win a close game, something Cam Newton and the Carolina Panthers are still trying to learn.


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Fallen Kings scouts Ace Bailey, Mark Bavis, still get their day with the Stanley Cup (PHOTO)

14 Oct
2012

Mark Bavis and Garnet "Ace" Bailey were scouts for the Los Angeles Kings. They died on September 11, 2001, when their flight, United Flight 175, crashed into the South Tower of the World Trade Center.

[Also: NCAA hockey referee arrested after making bomb joke at Alaska airport]

But, as the photo below illustrates, while they may have lost their lives, they didn't lose their day with the Cup. The Stanley Cup, alongside the families of Bavis and Bailey, visited the 9/11 Memorial at Ground Zero in New York Sunday.

It's not the first time Bailey and Bavis have been honoured since the Cup win. Back in June, New York-based Kings fan Dave Krasne took a "Stanley Cup champions" hat to the memorial and laid it between the two men's names.

But a hat is one thing. A day with the Cup is something else entirely, and it's great to see that the Kings ensure the Bailey and Bavis families still got theirs.

While the Kings began a new era with their Cup win, it's great to see that they've still taken a moment to look back.

Follow Harrison Mooney on Twitter at @HarrisonMooney

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Johnny Cueto’s oblique injury throws his postseason availability into question

09 Oct
2012

The Cincinnati Reds don't have a date for Johnny Cueto's return from a mild oblique strain and any optimism that he could return for a start in this NLDS appears gone.

While the team originally thought that Cueto might be able to start Tuesday's Game 3 after exiting Game 1 after just eight pitches, that won't be the case. Homer Bailey will start against the San Francisco Giants on Tuesday as the Reds look to advance to the NLCS with a win at Great American Ballpark.

Reds manager Dusty Baker did not name a starter for Wednesday's Game 4 (if necessary) but Cueto is not currently in the running. Actually, with the team weighing an MRI or DL stay for its ace, it's worth wondering if Cueto will be in the running for any NLCS starts or beyond.

From Eye on Baseball:

"They said he's getting better, but we don't know what 'better' is," Baker said in Tuesday pregame news conference. "So it's a question, I mean, that's a volatile area. You've seen the the obliques, sometimes they hang around for a while, and 0sometimes they don't hang around for a while. We don't know the severity of it. He came in yesterday and got treatment all day long, so right now I would just be guessing to let you know how he is exactly right now. In a nutshell, we don't know."

Cueto's injury questions are a huge deal for the Reds, especially considering that their entire rotation stayed healthy the entire regular season. But if there's any such things as being able to withstand the loss of a Cy Young candidate, the Reds might actually be in that position right now. Mat Latos is coming off a stellar relief effort in Game 1, Bronson Arroyo dominated in Game 2 and Homer Bailey pitched a no-hitter at the end of the season. They need one win in three home games against a weak Giants offense.

Of course, the possibility of the NLCS brings a much better offense in either the Cardinals or Nationals. So the sooner Cueto can get healthy, the better.

Are you ready for the postseason?
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Bailey can follow no-hitter with playoff clincher (Yahoo! Sports)

08 Oct
2012

San Francisco Giants pitcher Madison Bumgarner, right, speaks to Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Homer Bailey before Game 1 of the National League division baseball series in San Francisco, Saturday, Oct. 6, 2012. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)

CINCINNATI (AP) -- Homer Bailey played catch in the sun-splashed outfield at Great American Ball Park, his usual routine the day before a start. Nothing different at all, as far as the Texan let on.


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Reds confirm Bailey as NLDS Game 3 starter – Homer Bailey | CIN

08 Oct
2012
Reds manager Dusty Baker confirmed Sunday that Homer Bailey will start Game 3 against the Giants.
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10 numbers for the NLDS: Giants vs. Reds

06 Oct
2012
by Alex Remington in Fantasy Baseball, General

With the 2012 postseason underway,  Alex Remington takes  a look at the statistics that might make a difference in each of the four first-round series. Next up is the NLDS featuring the NL West champion San Francisco Giants against the NL Central champion Cincinnati Reds. The first two games will be held at AT&T Park and the first pitch of Game 1 is scheduled for 9:37 ET on Saturday night.


2.65 The Reds' bullpen ERA, best in the majors. And it wasn't all Aroldis Chapman, either: The ERA of all Reds relievers other than Chapman was 2.88, which would have been tied for third in baseball this year, and with the Braves eliminated, it's still better than the bullpen of any other remaining playoff team. They received terrific work from rookies Tony Cingrani and J.J. Hoover, and veterans like Jonathan Broxton, Sean Marshall, and Jose Arredondo. The Reds had seven different relievers who pitched at least 30 innings with an ERA under 3.50, and Broxton was a midseason trade acquisition who gave them 22 1/3 innings of 2.82 ERA ball. If you're going to score on the Reds, score early.

* * *

3.83 Tim Lincecum's ERA in the second half. That would have been his highest ERA since his rookie year, but unfortunately, his first half was far, far worse, as he had a 6.42 ERA going into the All-Star break, and finished with an ugly 5.18 ERA on the season. The Giants won the division going away even without The Freak at full strength, but Lincecum was easily their worst starter this year, with his results surpassed not just by Matt Cain, but also by Madison Bumgarner, Ryan Vogelsong, and even Barry Zito. If Lincecum doesn't dominate in his first start, Bruce Bochy will have a difficult decision on how many nods to give Lincecum this October.

* * *

1.85 Homer Bailey's ERA in September and October. His spectacular September 28 no-hitter got all the press, but Bailey had a spectacular final month all around, with a 1.85 ERA in seven starts. It was sweet redemption for the former top prospect, who five years ago was a member of a quartet of Grade-A Reds prospects along with Joey Votto, Johnny Cueto, and Jay Bruce, and has since watched himself get overshadowed by each: Votto won the 2010 MVP, Cueto is a 2012 Cy Young candidate, and Bruce has 134 homers in the majors already. Meanwhile, at the end of August this year, Bailey had a career 35-32 record with a 4.72 ERA, and he was looking like a busted prospect. This September may have turned his career around.

* * *

3.9 According to Elias, Matt Cain is the least-supported starting pitcher active in the major leagues. Over the course of his career, he has received an average of 3.9 runs of support in his 235 regular-season starts, which is the lowest among all active pitchers with at least 150 starts. This year, Cain was easily the Giants' ace, and will likely receive some consideration for the Cy Young. His 2012 team finally obliged him with a few runs to play with, as Cain received an average of 4.6 runs in his starts this year. That's a big reason that a pitcher with a career record of 69-73 from 2005-2011 went 16-5 this year. Cain will likely receive at least two starts in every postseason series the Giants play, so if the Giants finally have started supporting him, then they'll be giving themselves an excellent chance to advance.

* * *

.421 Joey Votto's slugging percentage after returning from knee surgery on September 5. Votto missed nearly two months of the season from July to September, and he wasn't the same guy when he came back: He hit singles and drew walks, but went homerless for the entire last month of the season. The Reds didn't stop winning when he went out of the lineup, largely thanks to the stellar work of Ryan Ludwick, but it goes without saying that their lineup looks a whole lot better with a healthy Joey Votto than otherwise.

* * *

1 The number of batting titles that the National League gives out every year — but whether it goes to Melky Cabrera (the technical winner) or Buster Posey (the winner per a one-time league agreement), the highest batting average in the National League certainly belonged to a San Francisco Giant. This year is controversial, because Melky Cabrera finished the year with a .346 batting average and 501 plate appearances, just one shy of qualifying, at the time that he was busted for PED usage and forced to miss the rest of the year. Ordinarily, per baseball rules, Melky would be given credit for an extra 0-1 so that his batting average would qualify for the batting title, but the league reached an agreement with Melky to make him ineligible, so this year's victor is Buster Posey with a .336 mark.

* * *

54 The Cincinnati Reds' major-league leading total of intentional walks given to their lineup. Seventeen of those went to whoever was batting eighth, but Joey Votto, who bats third, tied for the major league lead with 18 and Jay Bruce added another 11 batting fifth. The Reds have some great hitters, but they also have an uneven lineup.

* * *

.667 The Giants' team winning percentage without Melky Cabrera. The team went 30-15 after his suspension on August 15, compared with 64-53 with him (a .547 winning percentage). With Cabrera as the Giants' best hitter, the team had a .711 OPS. After he was suspended, they boosted their overall team OPS to .757. (The pitching didn't really improve down the stretch; they had a 3.64 team ERA through August 14, and a 3.79 team ERA the rest of the year.) The Giants were a far better team down the stretch than they had been the rest of the year, fending off a Dodgers team that massively retooled at the deadline and a Diamondbacks team that was the defending division champion.

* * *

114 The Reds' stolen base attempts this year, lowest in the league and third-lowest in baseball, ahead of only the Tigers (82 attempts) and Orioles (87 attempts). Drew Stubbs and Brandon Phillies are base stealing threats, Jay Bruce stole 9 bases, and that's pretty much their entire running game. They're not exactly a team of station-to-station runners, but unless Stubbs is on the bases, stolen bases are not really a big part of their offensive game.

* * *

.939 The Giants' OPS with a man on third and less than two outs, best in the NL and the polar opposite of the Braves. The baseball equivalent of a good red zone offense matters more than ever in the postseason when every last run counts.


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Reds manager Dusty Baker returns from mini-stroke (Yahoo! Sports)

01 Oct
2012

Cincinnati Reds manager Dusty Baker laughs as he watches batting practice before a baseball game against the St. Louis Cardinals, Monday, Oct. 1, 2012, in St. Louis. Baker is back with his team after missing 11 games because of a mini-stroke, and will manage the team during the final series of the regular season. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

ST. LOUIS (AP) -- Dusty Baker missed the Cincinnati Reds' division-clinching win. He watched Homer Bailey's no-hitter on TV.


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Ben Zobrist literally uses his head to corral Dayan Viciedo’s grounder (Video)

29 Sep
2012

Friday night was quite the crazy night in Major League Baseball.

On the east coast, we had a no-hitter from Reds right-hander Homer Bailey, which established a new modern record with seven no-no's in one season and also guaranteed the Pirates wouldn't have winning season for the 20th consecutive year.

[More: Homer Bailey's no-hitter ties record]

On the west coast, Darwin Barney's 141-game errorless streak ended just three outs before he could establish a new Major League record. And in Toronto, we had a crazy play that saw Blue Jays starting pitcher Chad Jenkins' get his glove knocked off by a line drive, only for to catch the glove with the ball in it to record the out.

Like I said, it was a crazy night, and lost in all of that was another unique play by Tampa Bay Rays shortshop Ben Zobrist that saw him utilizing several parts of his upper body, including his head, to corral Dayan Viciedo's hard hit grounder and record the out.

After reviewing both plays several times (because what else is there to do on Friday night?) I don't think it would top Jenkins' play on the crazy scale, but the concentration was obviously impressive, as was the overall creativity. On a normal day, it would have stood out a lot more.

[Also: Hank Aaron on site for Chipper Jones tribute]

But since it wasn't a normal day, it didn't. And since Zobrist didn't get any help from his teammates with the bat — his first inning accounted for Tampa Bay's only run — the Rays dropped a tough one 3-1 to the White Sox.  That puts them five games back in the division and three back in the wild card, meaning they'll be forced to pull a few more tricks out of their hat to play beyond Wednesday.

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Bailey pitches no-hitter, Reds beat Pirates 1-0 (Yahoo! Sports)

29 Sep
2012

Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Homer Bailey (34) delivers during the first inning of a baseball game against the Pittsburgh Pirates in Pittsburgh Friday, Sept. 28, 2012.(AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Homer Bailey watched a high popup settle into Brandon Phillips' glove and raised both arms in triumph. With only days remaining in a major league season marked by masterful pitching performances, it was his turn to celebrate.


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Bailey pitches no-hitter, Reds beat Pirates 1-0 (Yahoo! Sports)

28 Sep
2012

Cincinnati Reds starting pitcher Homer Bailey (34) celebrates with Cincinnati Reds catcher Ryan Hanigan (29) after getting the final out of a no-hitter in a baseball game against the Pittsburgh Pirates in Pittsburgh Friday, Sept. 28, 2012. The Reds won 1-0. (AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar)

PITTSBURGH (AP) -- Homer Bailey had a certain milestone on his mind when he walked to the mound Friday night. He wound up pulling off an even bigger feat.


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