Reds Smack Brewers 9-1

Reds starter Homer Bailey is used to seeing crooked numbers on the scoreboard when he faces the Brewers.

The right-hander entered Sunday with a 1-7 career mark and a 6.03 ERA in 13 starts against Cincinnati’s National League Central rival, including two meetings this year in which he coughed up 10 earned runs on 18 hits in 12 2/3 innings.

On Sunday, though, it was two big innings for the Reds that helped Bailey put an end to his bad luck against the Brewers, resulting in a 9-1 Cincinnati win and a four-game split at Miller Park.

“For some reason, this team’s usually done pretty well against me,” Bailey said. “Since we see these guys so many times, I’m starting to get a better feel for it.”

Bailey was comfortable on Sunday, cruising through eight innings with his only mistake coming on Khris Davis’ fifth-inning home run. He retired 12 of the first 13 batters he faced, and he finished with just that one run on three hits, while walking one and striking out eight.

The win helped the 27-year-old right-hander wash the bad taste out of his mouth from two subpar outings to start August. Despite taking a win and a no-decision against the A’s and Cubs, Bailey allowed nine earned runs on 15 hits in 11 2/3 innings his last two times out.

On Sunday, he was back to the pitcher who ended July with three consecutive quality starts.

“He had a very good slider, fastball is always good and he was strong…” Reds manager Dusty Baker said. “It was great to get [Bailey’s record] to 8-10, and hopefully we can get him to 10-10 soon.”

Cincinnati upped its own record to 70-54 and pulled to within 2 1/2 games of NL Central-leading Pirates, who fell in 16 innings to Arizona on Sunday.

Baker noted the importance of securing a series split against the Brewers and leaving Milwaukee with a 5-2 record on the road trip, compared to a possible 4-3.

“It’s a big, big difference,” Baker said. “Especially when we won the first one here, and then you’re thinking three out of four, thinking sweep. As it is, we’re happy with what we got, especially if that’s the position you’re put in.”

The offense that was ever so quiet in the Reds’ 2-0 loss on Saturday opened up in a big way Sunday with two huge innings to back Bailey. Cincinnati posted a five-run second inning and a four-run fifth inning on Brewers starter Wily Peralta and reliever Tyler Thornburg, sending 10 batters to the plate in each frame.

The nine runs are the most scored by the Reds since July 23, when they beat the Giants, 9-3, in the first game of a doubleheader.

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