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Detroit Tigers, Wenceel Pérez rally with 5 runs in 8th for 5-3 win over Cincinnati Reds

CINCINNATI — For seven innings, the Detroit Tigers failed to advance a runner into scoring position against Cincinnati Reds right-hander Hunter Greene, the No. 2 overall pick in the 2017 draft who has a 3.45 ERA in 18 starts in his third MLB season.

One batter reached safely in five of Greene's seven scoreless innings, but nobody moved up to second base.

Everything changed in the eighth inning.

"Well, Greene was out," manager A.J. Hinch said. "We saw enough of him. I don't know what his best is, but he was really good. We had a really hard time with him."

Wenceel Perez of the Detroit Tigers hits a tying home run in the eighth inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, July 6, 2024.
Wenceel Perez of the Detroit Tigers hits a tying home run in the eighth inning against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, July 6, 2024.

WELCOME BACK: Parker Meadows returns to Tigers after swing adjustment in Triple-A Toledo

The Tigers battled from behind for Saturday's 5-3 win over the Reds in the second of three games in the series at Great American Ball Park, sparked by Parker Meadows' double off right-handed reliever Fernando Cruz in the eighth inning.

It turned into a five-run inning.

"Cruz is not easy, but just the change is something different," Hinch said, "and we were able to get a good pitch to hit with Parker, and off we go."

With the win, the Tigers (41-48) have won consecutive games for the first time since the beginning of June, when they won three in a row from June 2-4. The Tigers went more than a month without back-to-back wins.

A Tiger reached second base for the first time Saturday when Meadows — in his second game since getting recalled from Triple-A Toledo — lined Cruz's splitter into the right-field corner with one out in the eighth.

Once that happened, Hinch juggled his pinch-hitters. Zach McKinstry stood in the on-deck circle while Meadows was at the plate, but when Meadows doubled, Wenceel Pérez grabbed a bat and walked to the batter's box.

The decision from Hinch paid off.

"There were different situations based on what Parker did that we were looking at," Hinch said, "and then we had the chance with a runner in scoring position. We went with Wenceel."

Pérez, a switch-hitter batting from the left side, crushed a middle-middle cutter from Cruz for a two-run home run — his second homer in four games and his fifth homer in 69 games this season — to tie the game, 2-2.

The homer from Pérez traveled 411 feet to right-center field.

"That fired me up," Pérez said. "Those are the moments we play for. I was just trying to get ready and then go up there and get my pitch. I tried to get ready for a pitch in the middle, and I got it."

The next two batters worked walks to keep the pressure on in a tie game: Matt Vierling walked on six pitches against Cruz; pinch-hitter Andy Ibáñez walked on seven pitches against left-handed reliever Sam Moll.

Then, slumping veteran Mark Canha flared a fastball down the first-base line and beyond the reach of the first baseman for a double. Vierling scored standing up from second for a 3-2 lead as the ball rolled slowly into foul territory in shallow right field, allowing Canha to reach second.

The Tigers increased their lead to 4-2 on Riley Greene's groundout that was misplayed by the Reds.

The Reds swapped Moll, a lefty reliever, for right-handed reliever Lucas Sims after Greene's groundout, but Carson Kelly greeted Sims with an RBI double to left-center field for a 5-2 advantage.

"We never quit," Pérez said. "We have to always stay in the game, trying to battle to the end. The game is not over until they got 27 outs, so we just stuck to our plans, tried to get our pitches and executed in that inning."

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Cincinnati Reds outfielder Nick Martini (23) is tagged out by Detroit Tigers second baseman Colt Keith (33) in the second inning at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, July 6, 2024.
Cincinnati Reds outfielder Nick Martini (23) is tagged out by Detroit Tigers second baseman Colt Keith (33) in the second inning at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, July 6, 2024.

Right-handed reliever Shelby Miller completed a pair of scoreless innings in the seventh and eighth in a much-needed bounce-back performance. He protected a three-run lead in his second inning of work.

Miller entered Saturday's outing having allowed nine runs in 2⅓ innings — a 34.71 ERA — across his first three games during the three-city roadtrip. Before the bad stretch, he had a 3.70 ERA across 24⅓ innings in his first 22 games of the season.

"I'm trying to focus on keeping the heater down a little bit," Miller said. "These hitters, they study all day on what you're trying to do as a pitcher and how you're trying to execute. All I tried to do today was have success."

Right-handed reliever Jason Foley, who threw 24 pitches in Friday's win, surrendered a a leadoff solo home run to Spencer Steer in the bottom of the ninth inning, making it 5-3. Foley responded with back-to-back outs before a two-out single from Noelvi Marte to keep the game alive.

After 10 pitches, Hinch replaced Foley with left-handed reliever Andrew Chafin for a matchup with left-handed pinch-hitter Edwin Rios, but the Reds immediately swapped Rios for right-handed pitch-hitter Santiago Espinal.

Chafin struck out Espinal to end the game.

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Hunter Greene dazzles

The Tigers nearly advanced a runner to second base against Greene in the third inning, but Meadows was thrown out by catcher Tyler Stephenson trying to steal.

Before that, though, Meadows refused to chase Greene's first-pitch slider below the zone, then ripped a second-pitch 97 mph fastball to right field for a leadoff single.

Cincinnati Reds pitcher Hunter Greene (21) pitches to the Detroit Tigers in the first inning at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, July 6, 2024.
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Hunter Greene (21) pitches to the Detroit Tigers in the first inning at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, July 6, 2024.

It was another positive sign in his return from the Triple-A level, considering the Tigers sent him down to get on time for fastballs. He has three hits — including two on fastballs — in his two games since getting called up.

"Parker is my brother," Pérez said. "We've been playing together since a long time ago. It's great to have him here. He's a great person. I think he's a great player, but he's a better person."

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Facing Greene, the Tigers collected three singles and two walks with seven strikeouts. Greene retired all three batters in the first and seventh innings, but he had to work with one runner on base in each of his other five innings.

Greene threw 104 pitches, using 60 fastballs, 38 sliders and six splitters. He generated 15 whiffs on 49 swings — a 30.6% whiff rate — with seven fastballs and eight sliders.

Bullpen-only

The Reds cashed in from one big hit with a runner in scoring position. Right-handed reliever Beau Brieske gave up a two-run double — a consequence of back-to-back walks — in the fifth inning.

Detroit Tigers pitcher Alex Faedo (49) pitches against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, July 6, 2024.
Detroit Tigers pitcher Alex Faedo (49) pitches against the Cincinnati Reds at Great American Ball Park in Cincinnati on Saturday, July 6, 2024.

Right-handed reliever Alex Faedo started Saturday's bullpen-only game and completed two innings with two strikeouts on 25 pitches, including a swinging strikeout of Elly De La Cruz in the first inning with a pair of sliders.

Brieske, who replaced Faedo, retired six batters in a row with four strikeouts on 23 pitches in the third and fourth innings. He then walked back-to-back batters on 12 pitches to open the fifth inning, issuing free passes to Steer and Nick Martini.

Stephenson made Brieske pay for the walks with a two-run double for a 2-0 lead.

Contact Evan Petzold at epetzold@freepress.com or follow him @EvanPetzold.

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This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit Tigers blast Cincinnati Reds for 5 runs in 8th for 5-3 victory