Game Updates
The Cincinnati Reds rode a balanced offensive attack and another strong start from Brady Singer to cruise past the Los Angeles Angels 4-1 on Monday night, extending their road momentum. Singer dominated over six innings, allowing just one run on six hits while striking out four, his command keeping the Angels' lineup off balance. The Reds' bats did the rest, with Gavin Lux delivering the decisive blow—a two-run homer in the third inning that broke a 1-1 tie. Lux finished 2-for-5 with two RBIs, while Austin Hays and Noelvi Marte each contributed multi-hit performances to support Singer's effort.
Victor Mederos struggled for the Angels, surrendering three runs in five laborious innings as Cincinnati's lineup wore him down with patience and timely hitting. The Angels managed just one run despite outhitting the Reds 10-8, with Nolan Schanuel's two-hit night standing out in a quiet offensive showing. The loss drops Los Angeles further behind in the playoff hunt, while the Reds continue to build confidence as their young core—led by Lux and De La Cruz—shows flashes of its potential.
Under the lights of Anaheim on a sultry August night, the Cincinnati Reds and Los Angeles Angels will collide in a Monday-night showdown (9:38 PM ET) that promises to test two teams with divergent late-summer ambitions. The Reds, riding the momentum of their youthful core, arrive in Southern California looking to prove their postseason mettle against an Angels squad that’s fought tooth and nail to stay in the AL playoff hunt. With both clubs jockeying for position in the final stretch of the 2025 campaign, this three-game series opener carries the weight of a statement game—who’ll seize control under the pressure?
Recent form will be the story to watch: Cincinnati’s lineup, fueled by a mix of breakout bats and veteran savvy, has shown flashes of October-caliber firepower, while the Angels’ pitching staff—so often their backbone—faces a critical test against a Reds offense that thrives on patience and power. The halos of Anaheim haven’t dimmed yet, but with time running out, every pitch, every at-bat against a surging Reds team will feel like a playoff audition. Buckle up—this one’s got late-inning drama written all over it.