Two good things happened to the Cincinnati Reds on Sunday. They beat the Pittsburgh Pirates and emerged from their one-day stay in last place in the NL Central. That coincided with Scott Rolen's return from the disabled list. Unfortunately with the Reds, their two pieces of good news were balanced with two more players hitting the disabled list. Aaron Harang will miss the rest of 2009 after an appendectomy on Saturday night and Chris Dickerson badly sprained his ankle during a pick-off attempt during Sunday's game. The list of Reds' injuries this year is staggering. John Fay at the Cincy Enquirer has a good run down of all of them; every opening day starter except Brandon Phillips has spent time on the DL while Harang joins Edinson Volquez and Johnny Cueto there, making up 3/5ths of their opening day starting rotation. It's an incredible run of bad luck that's certainly part of the reason the Reds are battling the Pirates for last place. I also think it's creating an easy excuse for a team that has deeper running problems.
WASHINGTON -- Reds manager 

When the winter meetings draw to a close today, it seems likely that they will do so without Jermaine Dye pulling on a Cincinnati Reds' uniform. Just because that trade fell through doesn't mean the Reds are giving up on finding a right-handed power hitter to bat between Jay Bruce and Joey Votto, though. Today,
It looks like the 2009 Winter Meetings are going to get a little bit of a kick start tonight, as a little more than 12 hours before things are scheduled to kick off in Vegas tomorrow, the Dayton Daily News is reporting that
There have been several stories lately about how slow the offseason has been. It's very true and that becomes obvious when throw-away comments by general managers suddenly become full-fledged rumors. 

One would think that a recently fired baseball executive credited with helming what is generally established to be one of the worst run operations in baseball would be unemployed for a while after getting the ax from said operation. Unfortunately if you're a Reds fan, you would be wrong about that. Less than two months after getting the ax from the Mariners, a franchise he destroyed on almost a comical level, 
























