Of all the fringe teams that squeezed into the playoffs this year, the one that made me happiest might have been the Cincinnati Reds. This team has been so close to good recently, and even if this team still had some issues, the fact that they made the playoffs even for a few games against Atlanta is still pretty cool.
The big issue for this Reds team is the fact that while the pitching staff definitely showed up, the lineup was a few steps behind last year's. And you had guys like Eugenio Suarez, who were AWESOME in 2019, having more human moments, and hitting .202 despite leading the team in homers with 15 and RBIs with 38. Geno is still a great player, but he's gonna get caught up if he doesn't figure out how to strike out less.
2021 Prediction: Another 30 homer year with an ASG gig. Not sure if all of it will be with Cincinnati, though.
It's become clear that Joey Votto is officially past his prime, with a negative WAR year and some very perfunctory stats, and it's looking like he's just gonna have the Cabrera/Pujols status of continuing to play and do what he can without being very statistically impressive. Which is fine. I mean, Votto is a future Hall of Famer, he's had a ton of great seasons and everything, but...hitting .226 is new for him. Yes, he still hit 11 homers, but his contact abilities have lessened, and I can only imagine if the DH stays in the NL he'll be moved over there.
2021 Prediction: A slight upswing in average, but similar, end-of-career stats.
2021 Prediction: 30 home runs, barely any average to go with it.
2021 Prediction: A full potential, all-star, better-offensively season for Barnhart. And then the eyes of the rest of the league start watching
2021 Prediction: Most likely to succeed early next year, and most likely to be traded if the team doesn't succeed.
2021 Prediction: A low-cost signing that pays off for SF.
I have a ton more bullpen/post-Opening-Day members of this team that I'll post later tonight.
I hope Votto bounces back... but he isn't getting any younger. I just hope when he hangs up his cleats, he still has that career .300 average.
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