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The New Look NL Central: It Could Be The Reds' To Lose

Rookie catcher Devin Mesoraco joins a crop of maturing young Reds who could be the next dominating team in the NL Central.

Jan 25, 2012 - For the last several years, the National League Central has been dominated by the presence of two sluggers -- Prince Fielder and Albert Pujols -- who have now migrated to the American League. The teams those two played for, the Brewers and Cardinals, have been consistent contenders and combined for nine postseason appearances since Pujols' debut in 2001.

With those departures, and the still-existing possibility that the Brewers' Ryan Braun might miss 50 games of the 2012 season via suspension, the Brewers and Cardinals will have to retrench and retool to maintain their status as favorites.

St. Louis signed Carlos Beltran, who will take Pujols' place in the lineup (he'll play right field, with Lance Berkman moving to first base). But Beltran turns 35 shortly after Opening Day, and although he had a productive .300/.385/.525 season in 2011, he could enter a decline phase at any time.

The Brewers will have a tougher time replacing Fielder's bat. Mat Gamel, buried behind Fielder for several years in the Milwaukee farm system, will get a chance at first base. He hit .310/.372/.540 at Triple-A Nashville in 2011; if those numbers translate to the major leagues, and if Milwaukee can get production out of Aramis Ramirez, who turns 34 in June, they might come close to compensating for the loss of Fielder's hitting.

All of these uncertainties could make 2012 the year of the Cincinnati Reds in the NL Central. After a division title season in 2010, the Reds regressed to 79-83 in 2011, in part because Scott Rolen was hurt and non-productive and in part because much of their rotation was hurt and overall wasn't as good as it was in 2010.

They have put much faith in a return to form by Rolen, who turns 37 in April, but they will also have power-hitting catching prospect Devin Mesoraco providing offense (and, they hope, stability) behind the plate. Ryan Madson replaces the departed Francisco Cordero at closer, and they might also attempt to take Aroldis Chapman and his 100+ m.p.h. fastball and put him in the starting rotation. If he succeeds, that takes a lot of pressure off guys like Mike Leake and Johnny Cueto, who struggled at times in 2011. The Reds also picked up Sean Marshall from the Cubs; Marshall was a top setup man in 2011 and will help solidify Cincinnati's bullpen.

The Reds seem just about where the Brewers were a year or so ago -- coming off an unexpected postseason appearance in 2008, Milwaukee regressed for a time before roaring to the NL Central title in 2011. With Joey Votto and Jay Bruce seemingly in their primes, they could be the Braun and Fielder of Cincinnati.

With the Astros fielding a team of mostly kids, the Pirates going through their 20th annual retooling and the Cubs rebuilding (again), the Reds appear to be next in line to the the power at the top of the NL Central.

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Al Yellon

Editor

Al Yellon is a Cubs fan. For that, he hopes you will indulge him. He's seen Cubs failures since 1969, including the agonizingly close playoff misses in 1984 and 2003. For that, at least a bit of... Read full bio


Comments

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"...and Johnny Cueto, who struggled at times in 2011."

Wait, what?

ERA+ of 169, 1.09 WHIP, 2.31 ERA and 4.3 bWAR is struggling?

I really, really, really hope he struggles like that again this year!

Tequila and pancakes, anyone?

by Kevin Mitchell is Batman on Jan 25, 2012 11:46 AM EST reply actions  

oh, and Mat Latos...

remember him?

Tequila and pancakes, anyone?

by Kevin Mitchell is Batman on Jan 25, 2012 11:46 AM EST up reply actions  

Sure, Latos.

Just because I didn’t mention everyone on the team, doesn’t mean I don’t think the Reds are good. They are.

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by Al Yellon on Jan 25, 2012 12:44 PM EST up reply actions  

Cueto

Seven starts from 8/6 to 9/7, posted a 4.01 ERA and 1.36 WHIP.

Compared to the rest of his season, I’d say that’s “struggled at times”.

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by Al Yellon on Jan 25, 2012 12:44 PM EST up reply actions  

Just about every MLB pitcher would love for that to be their "down period"

"You know when I'm done ranting about elite power that rules the planet under a totalitarian government that uses the media in order to keep people stupid, my throat gets parched. That's why I drink Orange Drink".-Bill Hicks

by Yossarian22 on Jan 25, 2012 12:50 PM EST up reply actions  

True, I suppose.

But it was considerably worse than the rest of Cueto’s season.

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by Al Yellon on Jan 25, 2012 1:02 PM EST up reply actions  

The Reds are going all in for Votto's last two seasons

There’s going to be two exciting races this season:

1) Cards vs. Reds for the division title

2) Cubs vs. Pirates vs. Brewers vs. Houston for a .500 record

I’m guessing the Brewers will win the second race, but just barely.

Testicle-exploding shit storms, to date: T.E.S.S. '08, '09, '10, '11

by dan on Jan 25, 2012 1:03 PM EST reply actions  

The Reds better hope there isn't an injury to their top three starters; Latos, Cueto, and Leake

and they can find enough stability in their 4th and 5th spots, between Arroyo, Bailey, and Chapman to keep their offense in games. While to top of CIncinnati’s rotation is strong, there is no depth if anything happens to those guys.

"You know when I'm done ranting about elite power that rules the planet under a totalitarian government that uses the media in order to keep people stupid, my throat gets parched. That's why I drink Orange Drink".-Bill Hicks

by Yossarian22 on Jan 25, 2012 1:11 PM EST up reply actions  

1. Cardinals (93)
2. Reds (88)
3. Brewers (84)
4. Cubs (74)
5. Pirates (72)
6. Astros (66)

by Xeifrank on Jan 25, 2012 1:12 PM EST reply actions  

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