Shop Fantasy Central Golf Guide Email Travel Subscribe SI About Us Inside Game Gang

 
  U.S. SPORTS
  scoreboards
baseball S
pro football S
col. football S
pro basketball S
m. college bb S
w. college bb S
hockey S
golf plus S
tennis S
soccer S
motor sports
olympic sports
women's sports
more sports
 WORLD SPORT

EVENTS
 Sportsman of the Year
 Heisman Trophy
 Swimsuit 2001

CENTERS
 Fantasy Central
 Inside Game
 Multimedia Central
 Statitudes
 Your Turn
 Message Boards
 Email Newsletters
 Golf Guide
 Cities
 Work in Sports

CNNSI.com GROUP
 Sports Illustrated
 Life of Reilly
 Television
 SI Women
 SI for Kids
 Press Room
 TBS/TNT Sports
 CNN Languages

COMMERCE
 SI Customer Service
 SI Media Kits
 Get into College
 Sports Memorabilia
 TeamStore

Inside Baseball

Click here for more on this story

Posted: Wednesday July 05, 2000 05:10 PM

This week's topics:
Fading Reds | Voting Irregularities


Fading Reds  

Cincinnati's springtime pennant optimism has turned sour in summer

By Stephen Cannella

Sports Illustrated

Shortly after the Cardinals thumped the Reds 12-3 last Thursday, the mood in the Cincinnati clubhouse was gloomy. The Reds, 8 1/2 games back in the National League Central when first-place St. Louis came to town four days earlier, had been looking at the series as a chance to close ground on the front-runners. Instead, the Cardinals escaped with a split, leaving the Reds in dire straits as they embarked on a 13-game stretch during which they would face the Diamondbacks, Cardinals, Indians and Rockies. "It was a missed opportunity," said Cincinnati manager Jack McKeon. "On the other hand we showed the Cardinals we can play with them. We held our own."

  Click for larger image Instead of becoming runaway winners with Griffey, Cincinnati is falling out of the playoff chase. Jim Gund
Such was the state of the Reds, who held a half-game lead over St. Louis on June 5 but at week's end had lost 16 of their next 24. They were grasping for moral victories in a rapidly deteriorating season. Compare that attitude to the one on display in spring training when the Reds, losers to the Mets last October in a one-game playoff for the National League wild card, were talking like champions. After the off-season acquisitions of Ken Griffey Jr. and Dante Bichette, shortstop Barry Larkin guaranteed a division title and general manager Jim Bowden strutted around like a proud papa. "You can take a positive out of this if you want," Larkin said after Thursday's loss, "but the reality is, we gained no ground."

Things didn't improve over the weekend, when the Reds won two of their first three games in Arizona but still failed to improve in the standings. The reasons for Cincinnati's funk are myriad. The starting rotation, as expected, has been weak; lefthander Denny Neagle (7-2, 3.78 ERA through Sunday) was the only seasonlong starter with an ERA under 5.00. The shaky bullpen (its 4.37 ERA was over a run higher than last year's) has failed to make up for the starters' shortcomings.

The biggest reason for the Reds' struggles, however, was that the cast of young players who had surprisingly strong seasons a year ago has not picked up where it left off. First baseman Sean Casey, 26, who hit a team-high .332 and knocked in 99 runs in 1999, began this season on the disabled list after breaking his right thumb in spring training. Eager to return to the lineup, he came back in late April without taking a minor league rehab assignment and has failed to regain his stroke; through Sunday he was hitting .247 with only four homers and 20 RBIs. Second baseman Pokey Reese, 27, has been in a six-week slump that dropped his average from .328 on May 14 to .269; his on-base percentage had sunk to .337, and he was dropped last week from the leadoff spot to eighth in the order. Last year's Rookie of the Year, righthanded reliever Scott Williamson, 24, had a respectable 3.21 ERA and six saves in eight chances but has been alarmingly wild; he was tied for the major league lead with 13 wild pitches and had walked an average of 7.1 batters per nine innings. In his last 13 outings Williamson had allowed 13 runs in 16 innings.

"Even when Junior was struggling, we managed to be in first place," says catcher Eddie Taubensee, referring to Griffey's slow start that had him hitting .209 two months into the season. Griffey reversed field with a torrid June (.304, 12 home runs) and was fourth in the league with 26 dingers at week's end. "Now it's the rest of us who feel we should be doing better," adds Taubensee, who last year had career highs of .311, 21 homers and 87 RBIs but had knocked in only 18 this season.

The Reds' woes extend into the clubhouse as well. McKeon, last year's National League Manager of the Year, was ripped publicly by Williamson after the righthander was brought in on June 17 to face the Padres' lefthand-hitting Tony Gwynn. Williamson gave up a hit to Gwynn and allowed two inherited runners to score. The next day third base coach Ron Oester chastised Williamson in front of the team for having blamed McKeon. After that series in San Diego, which concluded a 1-8 road trip, the players held two meetings in three days to make sure nobody had given up on the season. "This season has been a very, very negative experience," says Larkin. He also says the team misses the leadership provided last year by outfielder Greg Vaughn, who signed as a free agent with the Devil Rays. "This club lacks someone who can challenge guys in the clubhouse, get in their faces."

One challenge for the Reds is to decide if they'll be buyers or sellers as the July 31 trading deadline approaches. Bowden says that for now he's working overtime to acquire a starting pitcher and that few players on the roster should be considered untouchable if a deal will improve the team. "Watching those other teams in the playoffs last year was tough," says outfielder Dmitri Young. "We were so close."

That might be as close as the Reds get for a while.

Back to the top

Voting Irregularities:  
Correcting the All-Star Errors

By and large the fans' picks of All-Star Game starters were smart ones -- witness Jermaine Dye, who was the second-leading vote-getter among American League outfielders despite playing for the small-market Royals -- and the game has always been more popularity contest than meritocracy, anyway. Still, a few of the people's choices were poor ones. Some players who should have been elected will be at Turner Field on July 11 (managers' choices of reserves were to be announced on Wednesday), but they deserve better than a late-inning at bat in the game's showcase. Based on their first-half performances, these five players should have the honor of an All-Star start.

AL second base.
Fans' choice: Roberto Alomar, Indians.
SI's pick: Ray Durham, White Sox.
Alomar hasn't been himself in the first half, hitting .274 and making two more errors (eight) than he did all last season. Durham's defense has been nothing to brag about either -- his 10 errors were second most among the league's second basemen, after Chuck Knoblauch's 15 -- but he's made up for it as the spark plug of Chicago's dream season. He was third in the league with 63 runs and had more homers (12) and RBIs (44) than anyone in the American League at his position.

AL third base.
Fans' choice: Cal Ripken Jr., Orioles.
SI's pick: Troy Glaus, Angels.
It's clear that Ripken's back can't stand up to a full season's grind anymore, so fans will have to break their habit of automatically voting for him. They should have practiced this year. Ripken, who's on the DL with an inflamed lower back, has slumped most of the season and was hitting .239 at week's end. Meanwhile, Glaus has blossomed into the league's best offensive third baseman. His 23 homers were third most in the league.

NL outfield.
Fans' choices: Ken Griffey Jr., Reds; Barry Bonds, Giants; Sammy Sosa, Cubs.
SI's picks: Bonds; Jim Edmonds, Cardinals; Vladimir Guerrero, Expos.
Picking against Junior and Sammy, two of the game's biggest draws, is a bit like cutting Luciano Pavarotti and Plácido Domingo out of the Three Tenors. That said, Edmonds and Guerrero have had better all-around years. An early MVP candidate, Edmonds has been terrific on defense and was in the league's top 10 at week's end in batting average (.339), homers (22), runs (74), walks (57) and on-base percentage (.453). Guerrero has cooled a bit after bashing eight homers and striking out only four times in April, but he was still third in the league in hitting (.365) and sixth in RBIs (68).

AL outfield.
Fans' choices: Dye, Royals; Bernie Williams, Yankees; Manny Ramirez, Indians.
SI's picks: Dye; Williams; Darin Erstad, Angels.
Coming off a season in which he hit just .253, Erstad started hot and hasn't slowed down. Second in the league in hitting (.371), his major-league-best 130 hits were only 18 fewer than he had all last year. He was also second among AL outfielders with seven assists.

Issue date: July 10, 2000

For more Inside Baseball see this week's issue of Sports Illustrated, on newsstands Wednesday, July 5. Click here to subscribe to SI.

 
Related information
Stories
Inside Motor Sports
Inside the NBA
Inside Tennis
SI Online: Current Issue and Archives
Multimedia
Visit Multimedia Central for the latest audio and video
Search our site Watch CNN/SI 24 hours a day

Sports Illustrated and CNN have combined to form a 24 hour sports news and information channel. To receive CNN/SI at your home call your cable operator or DirecTV.


CNNSI Copyright © 2001
CNN/Sports Illustrated
An AOL Time Warner Company.
All Rights Reserved.

Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.