Rookie Hunter Greene was nearly perfect, allowing only a leadoff bunt single over seven shutout innings as the Cincinnati Reds blanked the visiting Arizona Diamondbacks 7-0 in a rain-shortened game Monday night.
The contest was halted in the bottom of the seventh inning.
Kyle Farmer and Tyler Stephenson each had two hits and two RBIs and Brandon Drury had two hits, including his team-leading 10th homer, as the Reds snapped a three-game losing streak.
Greene, who held the Pittsburgh Pirates hitless for 7 1/3 innings on May 15, overpowered the Diamondbacks, striking out eight and walking none for the second straight start.
Greene (3-7) also struck out eight and walked none at Boston on Wednesday. But on that night, he lost his command in the fourth inning, allowing the first five batters to reach and taking the loss in a 7-1 defeat to the Red Sox.
On Monday, Greene had no such trouble with the Diamondbacks, allowing only Daulton Varsho’s bunt single to start the game. Varsho was caught stealing as Josh Rojas struck out, starting a string of 20 straight batters retired by Greene.
The Reds scored in the first inning for their fifth straight game, coinciding with the beginning of their homestand. With one out, Drury drove a pitch from starter Madison Bumgarner (2-5) to the seats in right-center for a 1-0 Cincinnati lead.
In the first five games of their eight-game homestand, the Reds have scored a total of 11 runs in the first inning.
Joey Votto doubled after Drury’s homer, giving him 800 career extra-base hits. Following Votto’s double, Bumgarner had words with plate umpire Dan Merzel over the strike zone while angrily tossing away baseballs because he didn’t like the grip.
Bumgarner posted his sixth straight start of at least five innings but lost his fourth straight decision, allowing four runs on eight hits in five innings. The Diamondbacks lost their third straight game.
Nick Senzel singled home Alejo Lopez in the second. In the fifth, Farmer’s double to center in front of a sliding Alek Thomas, who let the ball get past him, scored Votto and Stephenson for a 4-0 Cincinnati lead.
Torrential rains began as Cincinnati was pouring it on with hits against reliever Taylor Widener in the seventh. Instead of covering the field, the umpires allowed play to continue.
With Aristides Aquino at the plate and three runs already in, the game was stopped and did not resume.
–Field Level Media