Cincinnati
Reds
As
number 2 seeds, Reds ready for
Giants in NLDS
ST.
LOUIS -- The waiting for an
opponent is now over. The Reds know who they will face in the National
League
Division Series.
It
will be the Giants, with Game 1
of the best-of-five series beginning at 9:37 p.m. ET on Saturday at
AT&T
Park in San Francisco. Although the Reds were the first team to clinch
a
playoff spot and a division flag, they've waited 11 more days for the
bracket
to be settled.
"We
finally know where we are
going," Reds manager Dusty Baker said. "We finally know who we're
playing against and we finally know who we're scouting against. I'm
excited
about that."
The
Nationals claimed the top seed
by winning their game over the Phillies earlier Wednesday afternoon to
end with
a 98-64 record. By virtue of owning the season series over the Reds,
Washington
owned the tiebreaker no matter what Cincinnati did vs. the Cardinals on
Wednesday night.
The
Reds, who will have the second
seed and still own home-field advantage over the Giants in a 2-3
playoff
format, never stated any preference publicly about who they wanted to
face in
the NLDS -- whether it was the Giants or either of the Wild Card teams,
the
Braves and Cardinals. Now that they know, it hasn't changed.
"I
don't think any differently
than any other opponent, which is probably the right approach," first
baseman Joey Votto said. "We'll get out there, get a day of work in
like
we always do. We will focus on the things that got us here -- playing
good defense,
relying on our starting pitching and bullpen, and really competing."
In
the regular season, the Reds
went 4-3 against the Giants by winning two of three in their series at
home in
April and splitting four games at San Francisco in late June. Three of
the
seven games between the two teams were decided by one run.
"I
think you throw all of that
stuff out the door once the postseason starts," Reds left fielder Ryan
Ludwick said. "Season series, I really don't think it matters that much
once you get into postseason play. Some people are going to tighten up.
Some
people will live for the moment. The fans live and die by every pitch.
It's
just a different atmosphere."
"If
you're going to rely on
season series, I think you're going to be in trouble," Votto said.
"The playoffs can be so random. Anything can happen so quickly. I think
we're excited to go out there and play against them. They are a very
good team.
We respect them. We look forward to hopefully moving on to the next
round."
Votto
is wise to forget the regular
season vs. the Giants, as he batted .227 (5-for-22) against them this
season.
He also injured his left knee sliding into third base on June 30 at San
Francisco, which led to surgery to repair torn meniscus cartilage and
missing
six weeks on the disabled list.
Other
players that have fared well
vs. the Giants in the regular season are Jay Bruce, who went 11-for-26
(.423)
with a homer and seven RBIs; Todd Frazier was 5-for-12 (.417) with a
homer; and
Ludwick was 7-for-20 (.350) with a homer.
Cincinnati
will have Johnny Cueto
start Game 1 vs. Giants ace Matt Cain. On June 28, Cueto, who was 19-9
with a
2.78 ERA this season, was a 5-0 loser to San Francisco while giving up
three
runs and six hits over six innings. He was bested by Madison Bumgarner,
who
tossed a one-hit shutout.
Cain,
who was 16-5 with a 2.79 ERA
this season and tossed a perfect game, lost both of his starts vs.
Cincinnati
and had a 5.54 ERA. On April 24 during a 9-2 Reds win at Great American
Ball
Park, he gave up three runs over 6 1/3 innings. On June 29 in a 5-1
Cincinnati
victory, he allowed five runs and 11 hits over five innings.
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