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词条 2010 Cincinnati Reds season
释义

  1. Offseason

  2. Regular season

     April  May  June  July  August  September  Standings  Record vs. opponents  Detailed record  Game log 

  3. Postseason

     Game Log  Series Notes  National League Division Series: vs. Philadelphia Phillies  Game 1  Game 2  Game 3 

  4. Roster

  5. Player stats

     Batting  Starters by position  Other batters  Pitching  Starting pitchers  Relief pitchers  Team Leaders/Team Rank 

  6. Awards

  7. Minor league affiliates

  8. Local television

  9. Local radio

  10. References

  11. External links

{{Use mdy dates|date=November 2013}}{{Infobox MLB yearly
| name =Cincinnati Reds
| season = 2010
| misc = National League Central Champions
| logo =
| current league = National League
| y1 = 1890
| division = Central Division
| y2 = 1994
| Uniform logo =
| ballpark = Great American Ball Park
| y4 = 2003
| city = Cincinnati, Ohio
| y5 = 1882
| record = 91–71 (.562)
| divisional place = 1st
| owners = Bob Castellini
| general managers = Walt Jocketty
| managers = Dusty Baker
| television = Fox Sports Ohio
(Thom Brennaman, Paul Keels, Chris Welsh, Jeff Brantley)
| radio = WLW (700 AM)
Cincinnati Reds Radio Network
(Marty Brennaman, Jeff Brantley, Jim Kelch)
| espntn = cin
| brtn = CIN
|}}

The Cincinnati Reds' 2010 season was the 121st season for the franchise in Major League Baseball. The Reds began their season at home against the St. Louis Cardinals on April 5, losing 6 to 11. Cincinnati was coming off a 78-84 (.481) season and fourth place in the NL Central. The Reds were managed by Dusty Baker, who was in his third season with the team. His coaches were Mark Berry (third base), Billy Hatcher (first base), Brook Jacoby (hitting), Juan Lopez (bullpen), Bryan Price (pitching), and Chris Speier (bench). For the second year in a row, Cincinnati hosted the Major League Baseball Civil Rights Game. They played St. Louis Cardinals and won 4 to 3. The majority owner of the Cincinnati Reds was Robert Castellini; the general manager was Walt Jocketty. Their home field was Great American Ball Park.

The Cincinnati Reds clinched the National League Central division and a trip to the MLB postseason on September 28 by a walk-off home run from outfielder Jay Bruce. This was the first time the Reds were in the postseason since the 1995 season. The 2010 season ended when the Reds were swept by the Philadelphia Phillies in the NLDS.

Offseason

The 2010 Cincinnati Reds offseason was marked by two key pickups. After acquiring a key player in Scott Rolen midway through the 2009 season, another veteran was added in Orlando Cabrera. In late December 2009, the Reds GM Walt Jocketty made a move to acquire Aroldis Chapman out of Cuba. With the many late season wins in the 2009 season, many picked the Reds to finish higher than they did the previous season.

Regular season

April

  • Opening Day: On opening Day 2010, the Reds were defeated by their division rival St. Louis Cardinals by a score of 6 to 11, in front of over 42,000 fans at Great American Ball Park. They lost the first series of the season 2 games to 1.
  • April 16–18: The Reds were swept in three games against the Pittsburgh Pirates at PNC Park.

May

  • May 10–12: The Reds swept the Pittsburgh Pirates three games to none, after being swept by the same team a few weeks before.
  • May 14–16: The Reds take 2 out of 3 from their division rivals, the St. Louis Cardinals. The Reds ended the month of May in first place.

June

  • June 18–20: The Reds ran into trouble during the first stop of their interleague road trip against the Seattle Mariners. They were swept in three games.
  • June 21–23: Cincinnati rebounded after the disappointing sweep in Seattle, and swept the Oakland Athletics in three games to close out the AL west coast road trip.

July

  • July 1–7: Cincinnati started the month of July strong. They took 3 out of 4 from the Chicago Cubs and 2 out of 3 from the New York Mets.
  • July 8–11: The Reds suffered four straight devastating losses to the Philadelphia Phillies. Starting Pitcher Travis Wood had a spoiled perfect game attempt during this series during the 9th inning of one of the games.
  • The All Star Game: The Reds had four all stars that went to Anaheim. They were Joey Votto, Brandon Phillips, Scott Rolen, and Arthur Rhodes. Votto received the final spot in the National League roster after winning a fan vote.

August

  • August 10–12: The Reds were swept three games to none by division rival St. Louis, and dropped out of first place. Derogatory comments about the Cardinals by Reds second baseman Brandon Phillips led to a first inning argument between Phillips and Cardinals catcher Yadier Molina, that turned into a benches-clearing brawl and the suspensions of managers Dusty Baker (Cincinnati) and Tony La Russa (St. Louis), as well as Reds starter Johnny Cueto, who injured Chris Carpenter and Jason LaRue of the Cardinals by kicking with his spikes while pinned against the backstop during the fight. It ultimately led to LaRue's retirement.
  • August 13–20: Following the Cardinal's sweep of the Reds, Cincinnati went on to win eight of their next nine games, sweeping both the Florida Marlins and the Arizona Diamondbacks and winning a three-game series against the Los Angeles Dodgers two to one. Homer Bailey returned to the Reds lineup and was the starting pitcher in the third game against the Marlins, pitching a seven inning shutout. Meanwhile, the Cardinals went on to lose six of their next seven games, giving the Reds back the control of the Central Division.

September

  • September 28: The Reds, in first place over the Cardinals by a wide margin, clinched their first division championship since the 1995 season with a dramatic walk-off home run by right fielder Jay Bruce off of Houston Astros left-handed pitcher Tim Byrdak. The first pitch sailed over the wall in center field, clenching the win. The game also featured a home run-robbing, over-the-wall catch by center fielder Drew Stubbs.

The Reds won the National League Central over second-place St. Louis Cardinals by five games.

Standings

{{2010 NL Central standings|team=CIN}}

Record vs. opponents

{{2010 NL Record vs. opponents|team=CIN}}

Detailed record

Team Home Away Total Win % Gms Left
NL East
Atlanta Braves 2–1 0–2 2–3 2|3}} 0
Florida Marlins 3–0 2–2 5–2 5|2}} 0
New York Mets 2–1 2–1 4–2 4|2}} 0
Philadelphia Phillies 2–1 0–4 2–5 2|5}} 0
Washington Nationals 2–2 2–1 4–3 4|3}} 0
11–5 6–10 17–15 17|15}}0
NL Central
Chicago Cubs 6–3 6–1 12–4 12|4}} 0
Houston Astros 4–2 6–3 10–5 10|5}} 0
Milwaukee Brewers 7–1 4–2 11–3 10|3}} 0
Pittsburgh Pirates 5–2 5–4 10–6 8|5}} 0
St. Louis Cardinals 3–6 3-6 6–12 6|12}} 0
23–12 24–16 46–28 46|28}} 0
NL West
Arizona Diamondbacks 2-2 3–0 5–2 5|2}} 0
Colorado Rockies 2–1 0–4 2–5 2|5}} 0
Los Angeles Dodgers 3–3 2–1 5–4 5|4}} 0
San Diego Padres 1–2 1–2 2–4 2|4}} 0
San Francisco Giants 2–2 1-2 3–4 3|4}} 0
10–10 7–9 17–19 17|19}} 0
American League
Cleveland Indians 2–1 2–1 4–2 4|2}} 0
Kansas City Royals 1–2 N/A 1–2 1|2}} 0
Oakland Athletics N/A 3–0 3–0 3|0}} 0
Seattle Mariners N/A 0–3 0–3 0|3}} 0
3–4 5–4 8–8 8|8}} 0
MonthGamesWonLostWin %
April 23 12 11 12|11}}
May 29 18 11 18|11}}
June 27 14 13 14|13}}
July 26 14 12 14|12}}
August 27 19 8 19|8}}
September 27 12 15 12|15}}
October 2 2 1 2|1}}
162 91 71 91|71}}
GamesWonLostWin %
Home 81 49 32 49|32}}
Away 81 42 39 42|39}}

Game log

Legend
Reds WinReds LossGame Postponed
2010 Game Log

Postseason

Game Log

Legend
Reds WinReds LossGame Postponed

Series Notes

National League Division Series: vs. Philadelphia Phillies

{{Main|2010 National League Division Series}}
Game 1

Wednesday, October 6, 2010 – 5:07 pm (ET) at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

{{Linescore|
|Road=Cincinnati|RoadAbr=CIN
|R1=0|R2=0|R3=0|R4=0|R5=0|R6=0|R7=0|R8=0|R9=0|RR= 0|RH= 0|RE=1
|Home=Philadelphia|HomeAbr=PHI
|H1=1|H2=3|H3=0|H4=0|H5=0|H6=0|H7=0|H8=0|H9=0|HR=4|HH=5|HE= 0
|WP= Halladay (1-0)|LP= Vólquez (0-1) |SV= None
|RoadHR= None |HomeHR= None
|}}

In his first career postseason start, Phillies ace Roy Halladay hurled a no-hitter, giving up only one walk (to Jay Bruce in the fifth inning). Halladay's was only the second postseason no-hitter in Major League Baseball history, and the first since Don Larsen's perfect game in the 1956 World Series.[1]

During the 2010 regular season, Halladay had thrown a perfect game on the road against the Florida Marlins on May 29. He thus became the only pitcher to throw a no-hitter or perfect game in the regular season and a no-hitter in the postseason in the same year. Halladay is also the fifth major league pitcher to throw two no-hitters in the same season, and the first since Nolan Ryan in 1973.

Game 2

Friday, October 8, 2010 – 6:07 pm (ET) at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

{{Linescore|
|Road=Cincinnati|RoadAbr=CIN
|R1=1|R2=1|R3=0|R4=1|R5=1|R6=0|R7=0|R8=0|R9=0|RR=4|RH=6|RE=4
|Home=Philadelphia|HomeAbr=PHI
|H1=0|H2=0|H3=0|H4=0|H5=2|H6=1|H7=3|H8=1|H9=X|HR=7|HH=8|HE=2
|WP=José Contreras (1–0)|LP=Aroldis Chapman (0–1)|SV=Brad Lidge (1)
|RoadHR=Brandon Phillips (1), Jay Bruce (1)|HomeHR=
|}}

On the fourth pitch he saw, Brandon Phillips hit a solo home run to lead off the first inning. This is both the first hit and first run since {{wsy|1995}} for the Reds in the postseason.[2] Laynce Nix scored another run in the top of the second inning on two throwing errors and a wild pitch.

Jay Bruce also hit a lead-off solo homer in the third inning to increase the lead to 3–0. In the top of the fifth inning, Phillips hit a lead-off double, advanced to third base on a sacrifice bunt, then scored on Joey Votto's sacrifice fly.

The Phillies mounted their attack in the bottom of the fifth inning. Pinch-hitter Domonic Brown reached first base on a fielder's choice, then the Phillies loaded the bases on two consecutive defensive errors. Chase Utley delivered a two-out RBI single to get the Phillies on board. But Arroyo struck out Ryan Howard to limit the damage at two.

The Phillies scored again in the sixth inning. Jayson Werth walked, stole second, then scored after two batters were hit by pitches and a bases-loaded walk by Reds relievers Arthur Rhodes and Logan Ondrusek.

The Reds sent flame-thrower Aroldis Chapman to the mound in the bottom of the seventh inning. He hit Chase Utley, the third time by Reds' relievers in the night, then struck out Ryan Howard. Werth hit a ground ball to Reds third baseman Scott Rolen, but Utley was called safe at second base. The next batter Jimmy Rollins hit a fly ball to right field, but the Reds right fielder Jay Bruce lost it in the lights; Reds second baseman Phillips also missed the relay catch. These two crucial errors—the third and fourth on the night—let both Utley and Werth score. Rollins scored later on Raúl Ibañez's single and Carlos Ruiz's RBI force-out. Reds reliever Nick Masset replaced Chapman and got Shane Victorino to ground out to end the inning. The Phillies took the 6–4 lead on Reds' errors into the eighth inning.

In the bottom of the eighth inning, Utley hit a one-out single then stole second. Masset intentionally walked Howard, to set up a potential double play for the next batter. However, Werth hit an RBI single to left field to score Utley.

Phillies closer Brad Lidge closed the ninth for the save.

The six combined errors tied an LDS record previously set by the Athletics and Red Sox in the 2003 ALDS.[3]

Game 3

Sunday, October 10, 2010 – 8:07 pm (ET) at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati, Ohio

{{Linescore|
|Road=Philadelphia|RoadAbr=PHI
|R1=1|R2=0|R3=0|R4=0|R5=1|R6=0|R7=0|R8=0|R9=0|RR=2|RH=8|RE=1
|Home=Cincinnati|HomeAbr=CIN
|H1=0|H2=0|H3=0|H4=0|H5=0|H6=0|H7=0|H8=0|H9=0|HR=0|HH=5|HE=2
|WP=Cole Hamels (1-0) |LP=Johnny Cueto (0-1) |SV=
|RoadHR=Chase Utley (1) |HomeHR=none
|}}

Cincinnati was again dominated by Phillies' starting pitching. Cole Hamels pitched a complete game shutout, striking out nine while allowing five hits. Plácido Polanco scored for the Phillies on Orlando Cabrera's throwing error in the top of the first innings. Chase Utley added another run to the lead by hitting a solo home run in the fifth inning.

Roster

2010 Cincinnati Reds
Roster
Pitchers
  • {{MLBplayer|61|Bronson Arroyo}}
  • {{MLBplayer|34|Homer Bailey}}
  • {{MLBplayer|45|Bill Bray}}
  • {{MLBplayer|51|Jared Burton}}
  • {{MLBplayer|54|Aroldis Chapman}}
  • {{MLBplayer|48|Francisco Cordero}}
  • {{MLBplayer|47|Johnny Cueto}}
  • {{MLBplayer|58|Enerio Del Rosario}}
  • {{MLBplayer|46|Carlos Fisher}}
  • {{MLBplayer|39|Aaron Harang}}
  • {{MLBplayer|52|Daniel Ray Herrera}}
  • {{MLBplayer|63|Sam LeCure}}
  • {{MLBplayer|44|Mike Leake}}
  • {{MLBplayer|57|Mike Lincoln}}
  • {{MLBplayer|56|Matt Maloney}}
  • {{MLBplayer|40|Nick Masset}}
  • {{MLBplayer|66|Logan Ondrusek}}
  • {{MLBplayer|33|Micah Owings}}
  • {{MLBplayer|53|Arthur Rhodes}}
  • {{MLBplayer|62|Jordan Smith}}
  • {{MLBplayer|50|Russ Springer}}
  • {{MLBplayer|36|Edinson Vólquez}}
  • {{MLBplayer|30|Travis Wood}}
Catchers
  • {{MLBplayer|29|Ryan Hanigan}}
  • {{MLBplayer|55|Ramón Hernández}}
  • {{MLBplayer|37|Corky Miller}}
Infielders
  • {{MLBplayer|77,23|Yonder Alonso}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 2|Orlando Cabrera}}
  • {{MLBplayer|43|Miguel Cairo}}
  • {{MLBplayer|64|Juan Francisco}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 7|Paul Janish}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 4|Brandon Phillips}}
  • {{MLBplayer|27|Scott Rolen}}
  • {{MLBplayer|15|Drew Sutton}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 3|Chris Valaika}}
  • {{MLBplayer|19|Joey Votto}}
Outfielders
  • {{MLBplayer| 9|Willie Bloomquist}}
  • {{MLBplayer|32|Jay Bruce}}
  • {{MLBplayer|21|Chris Dickerson}}
  • {{MLBplayer|15|Jim Edmonds}}
  • {{MLBplayer|31|Jonny Gomes}}
  • {{MLBplayer|28|Chris Heisey}}
  • {{MLBplayer|17|Laynce Nix}}
  • {{MLBplayer| 6|Drew Stubbs}}
Manager
  • {{MLBplayer|12|Dusty Baker}}
Coaches
  • {{MLBplayer|41|Mark Berry}} (third base)
  • {{MLBplayer|22|Billy Hatcher}} (first base)
  • {{MLBplayer|49|Brook Jacoby}} (hitting)
  • {{MLBplayer|59|Juan López}} (bullpen)
  • {{MLBplayer|38|Bryan Price}} (pitching)
  • {{MLBplayer|35|Chris Speier}} (bench)

Player stats

Batting

Starters by position

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In
PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
2BBrandon Phillips154624172.2761859
SSOrlando Cabrera122491129.263442
1BJoey Votto149545176.32337112
CFDrew Stubbs149512130.2542277
RFJay Bruce147507133.2782469
LFJonny Gomes147508134.2641885
3BScott Rolen132468134.2862083
CRamón Hernández9631092.297748
Stats through October 2, 2010

Other batters

Note: Pos = Position; G = Games played; AB = At Bats; H = Hits; Avg. = Batting Average; HR = Home Runs; RBI = Runs Batted In
PosPlayerGABHAvg.HRRBI
LFLaynce Nix9616548.291418
UTMiguel Cairo9019957.286428
CRyan Hanigan7020361.300540
OFChris Heisey9619944.251821
IFPaul Janish8119952.261525
3BJuan Francisco355415.27817
OFJim Edmonds8624668.2761123
SSChris Valaika183610.27812
CCorky Miller317218.25029
1BYonder Alonso21286.21403
RFWillie Bloomquist10155.33300
PBronson Arroyo346810.14718
PHomer Bailey19337.21202
PFrancisco Cordero7410.00000
PJohnny Cueto31546.11102
PCarlos Fisher1840.00000
PAaron Harang21365.13902
PMike Leake284816.33303
PSam LeCure15111.09100
PMatt Maloney631.33301
PLogan Ondrusek5940.00000
PJordan Smith3730.00000
PEdinson Vólquez12172.11800
PTravis Wood17377.18913
Stats through October 2, 2010

Pitching

Starting pitchers

G=Games Played ; IP=Innings Pitched ; W=Wins ; L=Losses ; ERA=Earned Run Average ; SO=Strikeouts ; WHIP=Walks and Hits Per Inning Pitched
PlayerGIPWLERASOWHIP
Bronson Arroyo33215.217103.881211.15
Homer Bailey19109.0434.461001.37
Johnny Cueto31185.21273.641381.28
Mike Leake24138.1844.23911.50
Edinson Vólquez1262.2434.31671.50
Travis Wood17102.2543.51861.08
Stats Through October 2, 2010

Relief pitchers

G=Games Played ; W=Wins ; L=Losses ; SV=Saves ; IP=Innings Pitched ; ERA = Earned Run Average ; SO=Strikeouts ; WHIP=Walks and Hits Per Inning Pitched.
PlayerGWLSVIPERASOWHIP
Bill Bray3502028.14.13301.09
Jared Burton30003.00.0000.00
Aroldis Chapman1422012.12.19181.05
Francisco Cordero74653967.23.89581.44
Carlos Fisher1711022.15.64211.57
Aaron Harang21670109.25.25791.57
Sam LeCure1225048.04.50371.56
Matt Maloney612017.23.57111.13
Nick Masset8244276.23.40851.27
Logan Ondrusek5950057.23.75371.20
Arthur Rhodes6844054.12.32491.01
Jordan Smith3732142.03.86261.33
Stats Through October 2, 2010

Team Leaders/Team Rank

As of 10/3/10
StatPlayerValueNL Rank
Runs
Votto
105
4th
Hits
Votto
176
6th
Doubles
Votto
35
17th
Triples
Stubbs
6
T-13th
Home Runs
Votto
37
3rd
RBI
Votto
112
3rd
Stolen Bases
Stubbs
29
8th
Batting Avg.
Votto
.323
2nd
Wins
Arroyo
17
4th
ERA (+100 IP)
Cueto
3.64
24th
Innings Pitched
Arroyo
215.2
8th
Strikeouts
Cueto
138
33rd

Awards

All-Star
  • Brandon Phillips – Reserve (1st All-Star appearance)
  • Arthur Rhodes – Pitcher (1st All-Star appearance)
  • Scott Rolen – Reserve (6th All-Star appearance)
  • Joey Votto – Reserve (1st All-Star appearance)
Hank Aaron Award
  • Joey Votto – (1st time winner)
NL Most Valuable Player Award
  • Joey Votto – (1st time winner)
Gold Glove
  • Bronson Arroyo – P (1st time winner)
  • Brandon Phillips – 2B (2nd time winner)
  • Scott Rolen – 3B (8th time winner)

Minor league affiliates

LevelTeamRecordPlaceManager
AAA Louisville Bats 79-64 1st Rick Sweet
AA Carolina Mudcats 58-79 5th David Bell
Advanced A Lynchburg Hillcats 61-77 4th Pat Kelly
A Dayton Dragons 53-75 8th Todd Benzinger
Rookie
Billings Mustangs 38-37 3rd Delino DeShields
AZL Reds 31-24 2nd Julio Garcia
DSL Reds 45-27 2nd Joel Noboa
VSL Reds 35-33 4th José Nieves

Local television

Fox Sports Ohio
  • Thom Brennaman—Play-by-Play
  • Paul Keels—Play-by-Play
  • Jeff Brantley—Color Commentary
  • Chris Welsh—Color Commentary
  • Jim Day—Reds Live
  • Jeff Piecoro—Reds Live

Local radio

Cincinnati Reds Radio Network
  • Marty Brennaman—Play-by-Play
  • Jeff Brantley—Play-by-Play
  • Jim Kelch—Play-by-Play

References

1. ^{{cite news | url = http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20101006&content_id=15455266&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=phi | title = Doctober! No-no for Halladay in playoff debut | last = Zolecki | first = Todd | date = October 6, 2010 | accessdate = October 6, 2010 | work = MLB.com| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20101009141846/http://philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com/news/article.jsp?ymd=20101006&content_id=15455266&vkey=recap&fext=.jsp&c_id=phi| archivedate= October 9, 2010 | deadurl= no}}
2. ^{{cite web | url = http://bats.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/08/live-soon-reds-at-phillies-game-2/ | title = Live Analysis: Reds at Phillies, Game 2 | first = Mike | last = Tanier | date = October 8, 2010 | accessdate = October 8, 2010 | work = The New York Times| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20101009094703/http://bats.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/10/08/live-soon-reds-at-phillies-game-2/| archivedate= October 9, 2010 | deadurl= no}}
3. ^{{cite news | url = http://espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=301008122 | title = Errors give Phillies late life, bury Reds in 2-0 hole | date = October 8, 2010 | accessdate = October 8, 2010 | agency=Associated Press| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20101010164940/http://espn.go.com/mlb/recap?gameId=301008122| archivedate= October 10, 2010 | deadurl= no}}

External links

  • Official Website
{{National League Central champions}}{{2010 MLB season by team}}{{Cincinnati Reds}}

4 : Cincinnati Reds seasons|2010 Major League Baseball season|National League Central champion seasons|2010 in sports in Ohio

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