Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of team records for the Cincinnati Reds baseball team. The Reds do not recognize records set before 1900. The Reds do not recognize records set before 1900. Single-season leaders
Cincinnati Reds: 1890: 1890: MLB NL – 4th 77 55 .583 10½ 1891: 1891: MLB ... All-time postseason record 10,760 10,543 .505 All-time regular and postseason record
List of Cincinnati Reds team records; ... (1876–1879) all-time roster; Cincinnati Reds all-time roster; S. List of Cincinnati Reds seasons This page was ...
Cincinnati native Paul Keels, who left in 2011 to devote more time to his full-time job as the play-by-play announcer for the Ohio State Buckeyes Radio Network, was the Reds' backup play-by-play television announcer during the 2010 season. Jim Kelch served as Keels' replacement.
The following is a list of players, both past and current, who appeared at least in one game for the Cincinnati Reds National League franchise (1890–1953, 1958–present), also known previously as the Cincinnati Red Stockings (1882–1889) and Cincinnati Redlegs (1953–1958). Players in Bold are members of the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
The 1990 Cincinnati Reds season was the 121st season for the franchise in Major League Baseball, and their 21st and 20th full season at Riverfront Stadium.Starting with a team best nine straight wins to open the season, as well as holding the top spot in the National League West every game during the season, the Reds went 41–21 after 62 games, splitting the remaining 100 games 50–50 to end ...
The Reds drew 2,629,708 fans to their home games at Riverfront Stadium, an all-time franchise attendance record. [1] As mentioned above, the Reds swept through the entire postseason with their sweeps of the Phillies and Yankees, achieving a record of 7-0.
By comparison, the 75 points scored by the Reds and Gunners in 21 games over two seasons only exceed the 73 points scored by the Chicago Bears in the 1940 NFL Championship Game by two, and by three the 72 points scored by the Washington Redskins on November 27, 1966, the record for points scored by a team in a regular season game.