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The Sandbox - Ohio The Sandbox is a collection of off-topic discussions. Humorous threads, Sports talk, and a wide variety of other topics can be found here. If it's NOT an adult-themed topic, then it belongs here.

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Old 09-28-2010, 11:08 PM   #1
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Cincinnati's Jay Bruce (32) is welcomed at home plate after hitting after his home run in the ninth inning lifted the Reds to the National League Central Division crown Tuesday night. (Al Behrman/Associated Press)





The Cincinnati Reds are headed to the playoffs for the first time in 15 years, completing the long-awaited trip with Jay Bruce's one dramatic swing.


Bruce homered on the first pitch from Tim Byrdak in the bottom of the ninth Tuesday night for a 3-2 victory over the Houston Astros that secured the NL Central title.


It was a fitting finish to the unexpected championship drive. Cincinnati has won 22 games in its last at-bat, second-most in the majors.


Left-hander Aroldis Chapman (2-2) pitched a perfect ninth, topping out at 101 mph while showing playoff opponents the nasty stuff they can expect.
Bruce latched onto the first pitch from Byrdak (2-2) and lined it over the wall in center, sending teammates sprinting to home plate to pummel him after he touched home with the title-winning run while fireworks went off overhead.


With the title, Dusty Baker joined Bill McKechnie as the only managers to lead three different NL teams to the playoffs. Baker also has made it with the Giants and Cubs.


The Reds sold 30,151 tickets for the clinching game — above-average for a cool September weeknight — and took the field almost tasting it. Second baseman Brandon Phillips said he doesn't drink and has never taken so much as a sip of champagne.


"Everybody is looking forward to seeing me do it," Phillips said. "I don't know how it's going to taste. I don't know what's going to happen."


Most Reds were novices at the sip-and-spray tradition. Four female fans in the upper deck wore shirts that, side-by-side, urged the home team to "Show Us The Bubbly."


They showed some defense when Drew Stubbs stretched above the wall in center to steal a two-run homer away from Carlos Lee in the third inning, drawing a standing ovation.


The crowd was on its feet again in the sixth, when the Reds loaded the bases with none out. Phillips tied it at 2 with an infield single to the hole at shortstop, but Bruce grounded in an inning-ending double play.
Bruce made up for it on his next swing.


The Reds celebrated their title a day after Philadelphia clinched its fourth straight NL East title — no surprise there. The Reds' recent history made them a most unexpected playoff team.


The Reds hadn't reached the postseason since 1995, when Davey Johnson took them to the NL championships series, then lost his job because owner Marge Schott didn't like him.


After that, Cincinnati lost its way.


The Reds went through three owners, five general managers and seven managers without once making it back to the postseason. They came close in 1999 under Jack McKeon, losing a playoff for the wild card to the Mets. Ken Griffey Jr. arrived the following year, raising expectations for a long run of division titles.


Instead, the bottom fell out.


Griffey was hurt often and the Reds plunged into a streak of nine straight losing seasons, their worst in a half-century. Not even the move into Great American Ball Park in 2003 made much of a difference. Junior came and went. The losing went on.


Cincinnati finished fourth last season, its second under Baker, but the franchise thought it had the makings of something and kept the roster intact.


Right call. The Reds got into the race in mid-May and didn't crack under pressure. Instead, the defending-champion Cardinals fell apart. The two teams were separated by no more than three games from mid-May to mid-August, matching each other win-for-win.


An emerging core of young players pulled it off.


First baseman Joey Votto grew into an MVP candidate this season, ranking in the top three in batting, homers and RBIs. The Reds' youth-laden lineup became the NL's most prolific, leading in batting average, runs and homers. The defense became one of the NL's best.


And Chapman put some sizzle in the stretch drive when he was called up in August and hit 105 on radar guns.
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Old 09-29-2010, 01:59 PM   #2
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Hope they don't have to play a front runner because they haven't done well with top-rated teams this year. Oh Yeah! This is the playoffs and they're all top-rated. Well, at least they made it to the playoffs.
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Old 09-29-2010, 08:27 PM   #3
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They weren't suppose to win in 1990, but they swept the big, bad As in 4 games. In a short series you can catch lightning in a bottle. I've seen good teams like the Braves fold b/c they couldn't handle the pressure.
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Old 10-01-2010, 09:11 PM   #4
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cpalmson View Post
They weren't suppose to win in 1990, but they swept the big, bad As in 4 games. In a short series you can catch lightning in a bottle. I've seen good teams like the Braves fold b/c they couldn't handle the pressure.
Shows what the pundits know. . .

The 90 team went wire to wire in the regular season, and swept all teams in the post season.

As to this team, I sort of hope they do get the Phillies and surprise the heck out of the pundits yet again. Stranger things have happened. . .this could be interesting and more importantly, a whole lotta fun!

Keep in mind, according to ESPN, if it isn't the Yankees or the Red Sox it must be minor league baseball. I think we should get to throw rancid cheese coneys at Colin Cowherd on Fountain Square if they perform well in the post season. He stills says the Reds "just pretend to play good baseball."
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