TJ Friedl had a two-run single and scored Cincinnati’s other run, all in the fifth inning, as the Reds beat the St. Louis Cardinals 3-0 on Tuesday night.
TJ came through with a big hit,” Cincinnati manager David Bell said. “You never know if it’s going to be enough.”
The Reds’ Elly De La Cruz stole two bases after walking in the first inning, raising his MLB-leading total to 64 stolen bases. He was thrown out in the third inning when the Cardinals pitched out.
“He’s been showing that all year,” Bell said. “He had great at-bats tonight to create those opportunities on the bases. He can make things happen, but it all starts with the at-bats.”
Rhett Lowder (1-1) earned his first win in his third big-league appearance. The 22-year-old right-hander, who was a first-round pick in the 2023 draft, worked five scoreless inning and finished with three strikeouts and no walks.
“I’m glad we got out of here with the win,” Lowder said. “I lean on my ability to get the ball on the ground. I trust these guys in the field. They do a great job.”
Emilio Pagán pitched the ninth for his first save this season and 33rd of his career. He loaded the bases on two singles and a walk before striking out the next three batters — rookies Jordan Walker and Thomas Saggese and then pinch-hitter Matt Carpenter.
“It was crazy,” Pagán said. “First off all, I had a blast. It was probably the best I’ve ever pitched to get in that scenario. I felt like I was throwing the ball super well. In those spots, you just try and execute. Once I got the first strikeout, I just tried to be as nasty as possible. It was a fun way to finish it.”
Five Reds pitchers combined for the team’s sixth shutout this season.
“We didn’t have a whole lot going on the whole game,” St. Louis manager Oliver Marmol said. “We didn’t string anything together in that whole game. We had a little life there at the end potentially pulling something off, but it just wasn’t enough today.
Walker and Saggese are going to take their best shot. There are times they’re going to come through. There are times they’re going to get beat. … You take your shot there with Carpenter.”
Andre Pallante (6-8) pitched five innings, allowing three runs on six hits. He struck out six, with five walks, a balk and a wild pitch.
“It’s mentally draining, especially when you’re out there focusing so hard with runners on base I felt like every inning,” Pallanete said. “And every inning I felt like every one of them was going to steal. … I was definitely exhausted toward the end of that game.”
After stranding six runners through four innings, the Reds broke through with three runs in the fifth off Pallante.
Jonathan India walked and De La Cruz singled. A wild pitch advanced both runners. With one out, Friedl singled through the hole at shortstop, driving in both runners. Friedl’s single snapped an 0-for-8 skid. Friedl went to third on a balk and stolen base and scored on a high chopper to Pallante, who could only throw to first for an out.
Red manager David Bell was ejected in the sixth inning after De La Cruz was called out on strikes. It was Bell’s fifth ejection this season and 32nd in his career.
Brendan Donovan had three singles in four at-bats for the Cardinals.