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Thursday, Apr. 6 7:05pm ET
RBI single ends Griffey's 0-for-10 run as a Red | |||||
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RECAP
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GAME LOG
CINCINNATI (AP) -- Ken Griffey Jr. is no longer hitless in Cincinnati. Junior got his first hit for his hometown team, a run-scoring single in the first inning Thursday night, and the Reds held on for their first victory of the season, 5-1 over the Milwaukee Brewers. Michael Tucker and Aaron Boone homered and Ron Villone (1-0) made two saving defensive plays, but the loudest and longest cheer was for a soft line drive.
"I'm just trying to get adapted," said Griffey, who had faced unfamiliar NL pitchers until Thursday night. "The last time I hit in this ballpark, I was a senior in high school. That was 13 years ago." The single scored Pokey Reese from third with the Reds' first run and ended Griffey's 0-for-10 introduction to the National League. Griffey motioned for the umpires to save the ball when he got to first. That alone was noteworthy. There's a short list of commemorative baseballs that Griffey has kept: first hit; homers No. 1, 100, 200, 300, 350; his 56th homer in 1997. "I don't hold onto a whole bunch of things," he said. Junior didn't do anything else after that at the plate. With the Brewers in their Griffey shift, he grounded out twice to second baseman Ron Belliard and struck out, leaving him 1-for-14. His slump ended against a pitcher who's had trouble getting him out throughout his career. Griffey is 22-for-52 (.423) career off Navarro with three homers. Although Griffey didn't go deep off the right-hander, Tucker and Boone did as the Reds pulled ahead 5-0 and knocked Navarro out of the game after four innings. "I tried to keep the ball down today," said Navarro, who bounced a few pitches in front of the plate. "I didn't get a few calls, but there's nothing you can do. "I made a couple of mistakes. The pitch to Griffey was a good pitch, low and away." Tucker hit a solo homer in the second and Boone ended his 0-for-11 slump with a two-run shot in the fourth off a hanging slider that was right down the middle. "I hope we can get back into things being a little more normal," Boone said. "There's a little extra adrenaline at the start of the season. It's good to get those first things out of the way." Navarro, who returned to the Brewers in a four-player deal Jan. 12, gave up six hits and two walks in four innings. Villone had problems early but saved himself and some runs with a pair of nice defensive plays on comeback grounders. With runners on second and third in the first inning, Villone jumped, stretched and caught Geoff Jenkins' hard-hit grounder, then threw to first to end the inning. The same thing happened in the third inning with a runner on third and two out. This time, Villone reached and grabbed Charlie Hayes' one-hop comebacker to end the inning. "He has as good of stuff as anybody," Brewers manager Davey Lopes said. "He changed speeds and had a sneaky fastball and he's a good athlete. You can tell that by the plays he made." Villone gave up one run on seven hits in 5 2/3 innings, throwing 107 pitches. He also got an assist from Griffey, who ran down Sean Berry's fly ball at the edge of the warning track in right-center in the fifth inning, catching it with his right arm extended across his body. "It looks kind of routine after watching him in spring training," Villone said. "He puts his head down and gets there and looks natural doing it. I don't know how he does it. I wish I could."
Game notes | ALSO SEE Baseball Scoreboard Milwaukee Clubhouse Cincinnati Clubhouse RECAPS Kansas City 9 Toronto 3
Cincinnati 5
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