baseball

Reds get 5 scoreless from Andrew Abbott, hold on to beat Guardians

Yahoo Sports

Cincinnati Reds starter Andrew Abbott's scoreless innings streak reached a career-high 21 2/3 before allowing a leadoff homer in the sixth.

CLEVELAND – The best news for the Cincinnati Reds to come out of their first day in Cleveland this year – other than bench coach Mike Napoli remembering the Tito Speedo – was the latest sign that Andrew Abbott has regained his career form. The 2024 All-Star didn't pitch especially deep into his start against the Guardians in the Ohio Cup series opener, but he ran off another five scoreless innings before allowing a leadoff home run in the sixth on his 90th pitch and exiting. By then, the Reds had just enough of a lead for a struggling bullpen to handle in the Reds' 7-6 victory Friday, May 15.

Rhys Hoskins' sixth-inning home run marked the first run given up this month by Abbott, whose 21 2/3 consecutive scoreless innings was a career-high, eclipsing the 17 2/3 he ran off to open his career in 2023. The season turnaround for the left-hander, who was winless with a 6. 59 ERA in his first six starts, has come when the Reds have arguably needed it most, as Brandon Williamson (shoulder) and Rhett Lowder (shoulder) joined a growing list of Cincinnati pitchers on the IL since April 30 – prompting the signing of Marlins castoff Chris Paddack (7.

63 ERA) to start Saturday's middle game of the Cleveland series. Abbott issued three walks and otherwise had enough deep counts early to need 67 pitches to get through the first three innings, but needed just six in a 1-2-3 fourth and was at 84 pitches through five. He retired 7 of 8 until the home run and scattered four hits overall.

He and Chase Burns have amounted to saviors for the banged-up rotation as recently activated Nick Lodolo battles to gain footing and the team awaits Paddack's Reds debut. Burns pitched six scoreless innings in the win the day before Abbott's effort. The value of what Burns and Abbott are doing this month was underscored by Cleveland's eighth-inning threat against a bullpen that had a five-run lead entering the inning – until issuing four walks and eventually turning it into a one-run game.