The Reds Have Completely Crashed in May

Kareem Elgazzar/The Enquirer-USA TODAY NETWORK

With his combination of power and speed, Elly De La Cruz may be the eighth wonder of the world, or merely one of baseball’s most improved players, but lately he’s been just about the only one keeping the Reds relevant. After starting the season in promising fashion, Cincinnati has now dropped seven straight series, most recently losing three out of four against the Dodgers in Los Angeles while slipping into last place in the NL Central. Thanks to an offense that’s gone missing, the Reds own a major league-worst 3-14 record in May. Yuck.

They had their chances to arrest their slide against the Dodgers. After winning 7-2 on Thursday, the Reds fell behind early 3-0 on Friday as Mookie Betts and Shohei Ohtani both homered off Frankie Montas. They clawed their way back to tie the game, and looked to build upon that when Mike Ford singled off James Paxton to open the seventh. Paxton got the hook in favor of righty Michael Grove, while Jake Fraley pinch-hit for Stuart Fairchild and Jacob Hurtubise pinch-ran for Ford. On a 1-1 count, Grove picked off Hurtubise, and he soon escaped the inning; the Dodgers responded by putting up two runs apiece against relievers Fernando Cruz and Alexis Díaz in the next two innings to pull away for a 7-3 win.

After being shut out by Walker Buehler and friends on Saturday, the Reds squandered numerous opportunities that would have allowed them to escape with a split. They left 10 runners on base in Sunday’s 10-inning loss, and while they erased a 2-0 deficit to tie the game in the seventh, De La Cruz struck out with men on second and third in both that inning and the ninth, part of a tough 0-for-5, four-strikeout day. The Reds lost when Díaz walked Will Smith with one out, forcing him to pitch to Ohtani, who singled for his first walk-off hit since September 4, 2020.

The Reds won 14 of their first 24 games to start the season, and finished April a respectable 16-14, putting them in third place behind the Brewers (18-11) and Cubs (18-12). With just five games separating the Brewers from the last-place Pirates at the time, Cincinnati was smack dab in the middle of the most tightly packed division, 2.5 games out. But the bottom soon fell out for the Reds, as they lost their final game of April to the Padres, kicking off an eight-game losing streak that included three-game sweeps by the Orioles (who held them to just two runs) and Diamondbacks (who held them to nine runs). Including a 3-7 road trip — which featured series losses to the Giants, Diamondbacks, and Dodgers — Cincinnati now has dropped 18 out of 23 to fall to 19-28 overall.

The primary culprit for the Reds’ slide is their offense, which has hit for a major league-worst 70 wRC+ in May (.212/.282/.324) and ranks third worst in the NL on the season, at 82 (.217/.294/.358). During that eight-game losing streak, the team scored just 17 runs, and it has been held to two runs or fewer in nine out of this month’s 17 games; meanwhile, it has topped five runs just twice in that span. Overall, the Reds are scoring 4.15 runs per game, which ranks 9th in the NL, but the splits, woof:

Reds’ Record and Scoring by Month
Month Games W L Win% RS/G RA/G PythWin%
Mar/Apr 30 16 14 .533 4.93 4.20 .575
May 17 3 14 .176 2.76 4.47 .301
Total 47 19 28 .404 4.15 4.30 .484

As you can see, the Reds have underperformed their Pythagenpat-projected winning percentage in both good times and bad; their four-win shortfall is tied for the majors’ highest. They’re nine games below .500 despite being outscored by just seven runs, owing largely to the fact that they’re an unfathomable 1-11 in one-run games, including Sunday’s loss. Some of that falls on the shoulders of the bullpen, which I’ll get to, but first, back to the offense.

During the spring, the Reds appeared to have quite a glut of talented infielders following the addition of free agent Jeimer Candelario, but that depth was compromised before Opening Day. Noelvi Marte drew an 80-game suspension after testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug, and then Matt McLain injured his left shoulder diving for a ball during a spring training game; just two days before the Reds’ first game, he underwent surgery to repair a torn labrum and damaged cartilage. The infield playing-time picture cleared up without those two expected contributors, but their absences also gave manager David Bell less flexibility to optimize his lineup, even after the Reds acquired Santiago Espinal from the Blue Jays,

Flash forward more than a quarter of the way through the season and the infield is such a mess beyond De La Cruz that the Reds are below replacement level at first base, second base, and — wait for it — third base. First baseman Christian Encarnacion-Strand hit just .190/.220/.293 (38 wRC+) before being sidelined by a fracture in his right wrist; he may not be back until mid-June. Candelario and Spencer Steer have shared the position in CES’ absence, with Ford starting a couple of games as well; overall, Reds first basemen have hit .220/.254/.323 (58 wRC+), a batting line that wouldn’t pass muster if it were coming from even the slickest-fielding shortstop. In the absence of both McLain and Marte, Jonathan India and Candelario have gotten the bulk of the work at second and third, respectively, with Espinal splitting time between the two positions. All have been significantly below average, with Candelario (.220/.285/.387, 86 wRC+) at least offering some punch, and India (.219/.327/.295, 81 wRC+) at least getting on base with respectable frequency thanks to a 12.9% walk rate. Espinal (.200/.254/.286, 48 wRC+) has been just dreadful.

Against that backdrop, De La Cruz has been the lone bright spot. The 22-year-old phenom has hit .256/.352/.476 for a team-high 132 wRC+ (up from last year’s 84). With nine homers and a major league-leading 30 steals, he’s on pace for 31 of the former and 103 of the latter. In case you’re wondering, the record for home runs by a player with at least 100 steals is 10 (Rickey Henderson in 1982), while last year Ronald Acuña Jr. set the record for the most steals by a player with at least 30 homers, with 73. De La Cruz has been a bit below average defensively (-1 FRV, -3 DRS, -3.4 UZR), but he’s nonetheless on pace for 6.8 WAR. As Sunday amply illustrated, he’s still strikeout-prone, but whether or not he’s making contact, he’s improved substantially relative to last season:

Elly De La Cruz’s Improvement, 2023 vs. 2024
Season BB% K% O-Swing% EV Barrel% HH% wOBA xwOBA
2023 8.2% 33.7% 35.3% 91.2 8.5% 45.9% .305 .303
2024 11.4% 32.6% 30.3% 92.8 12.4% 49.5% .365 .356

The only other position where the Reds have gotten a 100 WRC+ or better is catcher, where Tyler Stephenson has hit for a 139 wRC+ in that role, enough to offset Luke Maile’s 59. Stephenson has rebounded from last year’s sub-replacement level season (85 wRC+, -0.6 WAR) to hit .273/.352/.473 (128 wRC+) overall despite going hitless in 10 plate appearances as a pinch-hitter or DH. Encouragingly, after being 10.6 runs below average in framing last year, he’s 1.6 above average this year, with his Statcast numbers showing a similar turnaround.

As for the outfield, it’s been unproductive as well, with injuries looming large; the group as a whole has combined for an 84 wRC+ and 0.1 WAR. Coming off a 4.0-WAR, 116-wRC+ breakout season, center fielder TJ Friedl has been limited to just six games; he fractured his right wrist diving for a ball on March 16, then on May 12 he was hit by a pitch on the left thumb, breaking it as well. Lefty Will Benson and righty Fairchild have filled in, with Benson also spotting in left field when Steer plays first and in a right field share with the lefty Fraley. Steer’s 103 wRC+ (.224/.337/.373) ranks third on the team, while Fraley (93 wRC+), Fairchild (89 wRC+), and Benson (88 wRC+) have all been less productive. Cincinnati designated hitters, mainly Nick Martini, Ford, and India, have combined for an NL-worst 59 wRC+.

The offense has a few basic problems. For one, it is the league’s least productive lineup against righties, at 78 wRC+ (.212/.279/.361), with Benson and the switch-hitting De La Cruz the only regulars at 100 or better. The switch-hitting Candelario has managed just a 57 wRC+ (with a 30.6% strikeout rate) against righties, and the other lefties have failed provide enough support. But more than that, against pitchers of either hand, the Reds are not only having trouble making contact, but they’re also struggling to make high-quality contact when they do put the ball in play. Their 25.4% strikeout rate ranks second in the NL, up from last year’s 24.2%, with the overexposed Benson (39%) striking out even more frequently than De La Cruz; Stephenson, India, Steer, and Espinal are the only regulars at or below 20%. The Reds aren’t exceptionally chase happy (30.3%, sixth best in the NL), but they’re just not consistent in the zone (85.1% contact rate, 10th in the NL). All of that is compounded by their ranking dead last in the majors in average exit velocity (87.8 mph), with their 7% barrel rate and 37.2% hard-hit rate both the NL’s fourth-lowest marks.

On the other side of the ball, the Reds’ rotation has by and large pitched respectably, recording a 3.87 ERA (sixth in the NL) an 4.14 FIP (ninth). Montas has been shaky after missing nearly all of last season due to shoulder surgery, posting a 4.37 ERA and 5.50 FIP, and swingman Nick Martinez has struggled when spotting for injured starters, but Hunter Greene (3.33 ERA, 3.32 FIP) has come into his own, and Andrew Abbott and Nick Lodolo (who’s been limited to six starts by groin and calf strains) have pitched pretty well, too.

It’s the bullpen, which ranks eighth in the NL with a 4.18 ERA and 11th with a 4.02 FIP, that’s the bigger problem. Díaz, who has converted seven of nine save chances, is carrying a 7.02 ERA, and even if one overlooks his four-run implosion in a third of an inning on May 5 — a game in which the Reds had already trailed 6-0 — he’s at 4.96. The other four relievers with a leverage index of 1.0 or higher — setup men Cruz and Emilio Pagán, and middlemen Lucas Sims and the now-injured Justin Wilson — all have ERAs of 4.00 or higher, with all but Pagán above 5.00. Walks have been a real problem among this group, with Díaz (16.3%), Sims (14.8%), and Cruz (14.3%) in the stratosphere, though at least Cruz is striking out 42.9% of all hitters. Adding injury to insult here, Pagán left Sunday’s game in the ninth inning after a 1-1 pitch to Jason Heyward, complaining of triceps pain; Díaz struck out Heyward but was still on the mound in the 10th to give up the winning run.

Aside from waiting for Friedl and Encarnacion-Strand to heal quickly and the latter to improve, there’s not a whole lot for Bell to do other than continue to mix and match and hope for better results. There’s no hot prospect on the farm waiting to provide a lift. Marte won’t be eligible to return for another month, and McLain won’t be back until at least August, if at all. With their Playoff Odds already down to 6.7%, the Reds need to do a lot better if they’re going to still be relevant when their missing players return.





Brooklyn-based Jay Jaffe is a senior writer for FanGraphs, the author of The Cooperstown Casebook (Thomas Dunne Books, 2017) and the creator of the JAWS (Jaffe WAR Score) metric for Hall of Fame analysis. He founded the Futility Infielder website (2001), was a columnist for Baseball Prospectus (2005-2012) and a contributing writer for Sports Illustrated (2012-2018). He has been a recurring guest on MLB Network and a member of the BBWAA since 2011, and a Hall of Fame voter since 2021. Follow him on BlueSky @jayjaffe.bsky.social.

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sadtromboneMember since 2020
10 months ago

For those of you annoyed at the EDLC love since they don’t totally buy it (like me, to some extent) you will be happy to know that all you had to do was wait for the hot streak to end.

These are splits, and you can see that he was on fire for most of April and things have not gone so well in May.

Beginning of the season through April 26th: 187 wRC+
April 27th through May 11th: 87 wRC+
May 12th through May 19th: 36 wRC+

This last week or so has been totally brutal; in eight games, he has a negative wRC+ in five of them, and has a wRC+ of 5 in a sixth. The only thing that has saved him was a total offensive explosion on May 16th against the Dodgers where he went 4 for 5 with a double and a walk.

I’m loathe to predict things when it’s chopped up like this because you tend to see whatever you want to see (I expect people who think he’s arrived to pay more attention to April and the people who think he’s still a mess will pay more attention to May) but if you want to know why the Reds have slid so badly in May, EDLC crashing like this is part of the reason why. Although other players have performed worse in May, losing 100 points off your wRC+ is gonna sting.

youppi4pm
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

I’m loathe to predict things when it’s chopped up like this…”

And yet…

dozingoffdadMember since 2021
10 months ago
Reply to  youppi4pm

What did he predict?

Ivan_GrushenkoMember since 2016
10 months ago
Reply to  dozingoffdad

Or she

sadtromboneMember since 2020
10 months ago
Reply to  Ivan_Grushenko

regardless of my real-life gender, trombones don’t really have genders, so I accept any pronouns (since “it” seems weirdly impersonal even for a trombone)

Last edited 10 months ago by sadtrombone
sadtromboneMember since 2020
10 months ago
Reply to  dozingoffdad

I would also like to know what I predicted.

sadtromboneMember since 2020
10 months ago
Reply to  youppi4pm

And yet what? What did I predict? This is what I wrote immediately after this:

 if you want to know why the Reds have slid so badly in May, EDLC crashing like this is part of the reason why. Although other players have performed worse in May, losing 100 points off your wRC+ is gonna sting.

So what did I predict?

Smiling PolitelyMember since 2018
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Setting this aside for the moment, I watched the 4 game CIN-LAD series, and he absolutely owned the field in the first game. They clearly altered their pitching approach with him in the subsequent games, and I wonder if someone with better video/scouting skills than I could identify what they found and exposed.

It’s not unusual for young players to develop like this (or for pitchers to adjust; Mookie Betts is the classic boooooooom–adjustment–boooooooom guy for me), and I think it’s pretty clear he’s a star, but I do wonder what exactly the Dodgers (and maybe other teams) have figured out, because if you can get him to swing at bad pitches, it takes away his power and speed.

sadtromboneMember since 2020
10 months ago

Pretty much all baseball players have hot and cold streaks if you slice them up enough. You could say that EDLC was on fire in that one game and super cold another game, and you could say that for any player if you wanted to. Who hits close to their actual wRC+ in most games?

But I think there’s always going to be a bit more boom and bust with this guy because he relies on high BABIPs and baserunning to get a lot of value and those things are often very boom-and-bust.

Ivan_GrushenkoMember since 2016
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Why does high BABIP and baserunning mean higher variance? Basically any low K, low ISO player will rely upon high BABIP. Christian Yelich, Luis Arraez, Derek Jeter, Joe Mauer were all that type of hitter recently. If anything a high K, high ISO hitter like Joey Gallo, Patrick Wisdom, Chris Carter, and Miguel Sanó should be more streaky. They are/were pretty successful, but not consistent at all.

Baserunning shouldn’t be streaky at all.

Last edited 10 months ago by Ivan_Grushenko
airforce21one
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Pretty much all baseball players have hot and cold streaks if you slice them up enough

Fixed that for you

SculpinMember since 2025
10 months ago

I do wonder what exactly the Dodgers (and maybe other teams) have figured out”

Whatever it was, it doesn’t stand out in Statcast. EDLC has made his living off 4-seam fastballs both this year (.315 BA, .609 SLG) and in 2023. He muddled through on other pitch types last year, but this year his ability to hit offspeed pitches has completely collapsed, with a .107 BA and .214 SLG.

Throwing him nothing but junk that he doesn’t hit well would make a great explanation for his May swoon except for the fact that he is seeing MORE 4-seam fastballs (up from 46% to 50%) along with just a few more offspeed pitches (22% up from 20%), while seeing a big decline in breaking pitches, for no obvious reason since he doesn’t hit those very well either (.229 BA, .375 SLG).

Mitchell MooreMember since 2020
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Yeah, I was going to say Elly’s .219/.296/.313 73wRc+ for May is right in line with the team numbers for the month – he’s been part of the May crash rather than the exception.

TheGrandslamwichMember since 2024
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

No single player can carry a baseball team, and all players go through the occasional slump. Still, Cruz is fun to watch.

Original Greaser Bob
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

I don’t understand the down votes. EDLC was on a burner, and now it’s over. 73 wrc+ for May doesn’t make him “on pace for 6.8 WAR.”

DLHughey
10 months ago

Let’s be real, sadtrombone is often the voice of reason here, and the comment section hasn’t really appreciated a level headed take for awhile.

votto erotica
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

Finding yourself “annoyed at the EDLC love” is weird, and a little pathetic.

It takes a certain meanness of spirit to root against a guy like Elly, hugely talented and by all accounts a hard worker and great teammate. Who clearly draws immense joy from playing a game we also profess to love. I guess once you’ve decided a player can’t be good, and you’ve spilled lakes of digital ink stating your case, it’s not even about the player anymore. Instead it’s about you, and your need to be “right.” See? See?! I told you he was doomed. Like I said, a little pathetic.

Seems like a sucky way to live, but YMMV.

dezreMember since 2020
10 months ago
Reply to  votto erotica

Agreed with this take.

sadtromboneMember since 2020
10 months ago
Reply to  votto erotica

I’m pretty ambivalent about EDLC. I don’t dislike him but I spend a lot of time reading about him instead of other players who I think are almost as interesting.

Mostly I think he hasn’t arrived yet and that he’s unlikely to put together the sort of sustained mega-success that many people think is inevitable. There is something wrong with his hit tool that I think is going to persist a while, leaving him in the approximate 4-5 win area at his peak. Which is still a very good player, but maybe not requiring the breathless hype.

Stylistically I know some people absolutely love the players who can give you explosive highlights but I guess I’m not quite as crazy about it as some people.

youppi4pm
10 months ago
Reply to  votto erotica

In sadtrombone’s defense, he’s not mean. He’s just a contrarian.

airforce21one
10 months ago
Reply to  votto erotica

“Seems like a sucky way to live, but YMMV.”

Similar to being a Reds fan, right?

Last edited 10 months ago by airforce21one
norisk
10 months ago
Reply to  sadtrombone

wRC+ isn’t a good stat for individual games. Elly seems like he’s been thoroughly adjusted to by the league (for now) given the 6.3% jump in K rate from April to May and his much weaker contact (15/29 hits in April were singles, 10/14 in May even though his BABIP has stayed consistent)