Reds take advantage of an Astros miscue to end losing streak

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The Cincinnati Reds were due for a fortuitous break to fall in their favor, and probably overdue given the nature of the eight-game losing streak they were on.

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For the first time in more than a week, they got that break and defeated the Houston Astros 3-1 Saturday, May 9 to snap the streak.

Pierce Johnson filled in for closer Emilio Pagan and pitched a 1-2-3 ninth inning for his first save as a Red.

When the break finally arrived there was no mistaking that the moment in question could mean something significant to the struggling, suddenly-last-place Reds.

Trailing the Astros 1-0 in the fifth inning and facing the real possibility of a ninth straight loss, Astros right fielder Cam Smith simply dropped a fly ball off catcher Jose Trevino's bat. With only long shadows from the stadium's light towers and the west grandstand possibly adding to the degree of difficulty, there was nothing exceptional about what was required of Smith: The ball was about 85 mph off Trevino's bat and traveled 293 feet.

It was a lazy fly ball, and a no-doubt second out of the inning. Until it wasn't, and the doorway to Cincinnati's first win since April 30 cracked open even as Houston starter Spencer Arrighetti had dominated up to that point.

Matt McLain kicked the door down, punishing the Astros for their error. He punched two-run single into left field to put the Reds up, 2-1. Later in the inning and with the bases loaded again, Elly De La Cruz singled home another run for a 3-1 advantage.

McLain attempted to score from second base on the De La Cruz hit and was tagged out at home, but Cincinnati had inflicted enough damage offensively on a day when the pitching staff delivered on all fronts.

On the mound, Chase Burns was in the midst of another strong outing. He spent 87 pitches over six innings, allowing four hits and a lone run. The only blight on Burns' outing was a solo homer in the top of the fifth inning by Braden Shewmake.

Burns (4-1) went at least six innings for the third consecutive game, and covered a total of 19 innings over his last three starts. He allowed only three runs over that stretch, and he lowered his ERA from 2.20 at game's outset to 2.11 by the time he was lifted after the sixth inning.

Arrighetti was charged with just one earned run in his 5 2/3 innings of work. He didn't allow Cincinnati's first hit until De La Cruz singled in the fourth inning.

The Reds didn't record an extra-base hit in the contest. It wasn't glamorous but it was enough to avoid falling to .500 as the club improved to 21-19.

After Burns, Brock Burke and Graham Ashcraft posted scoreless, hitless frames in the seventh and eighth innings.

Requiring a save for the first time since the club lost closer Pagán to the injured list with a hamstring strain that expected to sideline him for at least a month, Cincinnati turned to Johnson.

Acquired in the offseason via the free-agent market, Johnson was already putting together a formidable season. The save he recorded was his first since May 13, 2025.

Pitching matchup for the series finale

The Reds will send out Opening Day starter Andrew Abbott (1-2, 5.12 ERA) for the May 10 series finale against Houston. Abbott has pitched effectively in back-to-back starts. He went six innings and allowed two runs April 30 against the Colorado Rockies prior to tossing 5 2/3 scoreless innings May 5 against the Chicago Cubs at Wrigley Field.

The Astros hadn't announced their starter as of first pitch for the May 9 game.

This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Reds, Chase Burns, end losing streak by beating Astros

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