The Reds enter this offseason on the heels of a playoff berth that ended almost as quickly as it came, having been swept by the eventual World Series champion Dodgers in two games during the NL Wild Card series. There’s still reason for optimism headed into next year thanks to a fantastic rotation led by Hunter Greene and Andrew Abbott, but Cincinnati’s offense could clearly use some help. It can be hard for a team with the Reds’ small market budget to make substantial upgrades via free agency, but Ken Rosenthal, Will Sammon, and Katie Woo of The Athletic write that the club can be flexible as it tries to upgrade the lineup thanks to their existing players’ significant positional versatility.
According to Rosenthal et al., the Reds’ lineup only has three truly locked down positions as things stand: recently acquired third baseman Ke’Bryan Hayes and star shortstop Elly De La Cruz are locked into the left side of the infield, and Noelvi Marte appears to be set as the club’s everyday right fielder going forward. Setting catcher (where the trio of Tyler Stephenson, Jose Trevino, and Ben Rortvedt seem fairly entrenched) aside, that leaves two outfield spots, two infield spots, and the DH slot for a host of players to jockey for playing time in. Spencer Steer, Sal Stewart, Matt McLain, Gavin Lux, TJ Friedl, Will Benson, and Christian Encarnacion-Strand makes seven players currently on the roster for five spots in the lineup, before any external additions. Steer and Friedl seem like the best bets of that group to be locked into regular playing time, though Stewart will surely get an extended opportunity as well coming off an impressive cup of coffee in the big leagues down the stretch.
Friedl has been one of Cincinnati’s best hitters in recent years. While he was limited to just 85 games by injuries in 2024, he earned some down-ballot MVP consideration for a four-win 2023 season where he hit 18 homers, stole 27 bases, and posted a 117 wRC+ in 138 games. This past year saw him look more or less recovered from his injury-plagued 2024, hitting .261/.364/.372 with less power and speed than he flashed in 2023 but a career-best 11.8% walk rate to make up for it. Friedl’s .364 on-base percentage ranked 17th in the majors among all qualified hitters this year, and he’s sure to be an asset to the Reds’ offense whether he ultimately ends up in left field or center field. Steer, meanwhile, has been more of a league average hitter in the past two seasons after enjoying a strong 2023 season, but has average 21 homers and 16 steals over the past three seasons.
Rosenthal et al. suggest that Steer could wind up at either first base or in left field, while Stewart could play either first or second base. With Friedl capable of playing either open outfield spot, Lux experienced at both second base and in left field, and McLain able to handle both the keystone and center, there’s plenty of room for moving parts in the Reds’ lineup. That’s good news for a team that needs to add offense, as the Reds can afford to be opportunistic and not worrying as much about positional fit. If an infielder like Jorge Polanco becomes available, it would be easy enough for the Reds to simply plug him into second base, leaving McLain and Lux to move around the diamond in utility roles while Stewart takes over first base, Steer slides to left and Friedl handles center. Alternatively, a first baseman like Ryan O’Hearn could push Stewart over to second, or an outfielder like Cedric Mullins could push Steer to first base.
Speculatively speaking, that would appear to leave McLain, Lux, Benson, and Encarnacion-Strand without a position headed into 2026, although Rosenthal et al. did suggest the possibility that Benson could platoon with an outfielder acquired in free agency, which could be sensible if the Reds were to land a right-handed bat with significant platoon splits like Rob Refsnyder. Keeping those players in the fold as depth to protect against injuries and under-performance would be a valid path to take for the Reds, though it’s also possible that a trade or two could be made at some point this winter that would help to thin the glut of positional talent jockeying for playing time.
Even as the team looks for external help in the lineup, there’s reason to believe improvements could be on the horizon internally next year, as well. Manny Randhawa and Mark Sheldon of MLB.com recently relayed comments from club GM Nick Krall regarding De La Cruz’s health this offseason. While Krall had previously suggested that De La Cruz played through a “partial tear” of his quadriceps late in the 2025 season, he later clarified that it was actually a quad strain that De La Cruz was dealing with. Quad strains are defined as a partial tear of the muscle, but Krall noted that his wording suggested the injury was more severe than it actually was.
Whatever the specifics of De La Cruz’s injury may have been, the fact that he was playing through something helps to explain his repeated defensive miscues at shortstop in the final months of the 2025 campaign, as well as his lackluster .236/.303/.363 slash line after the All-Star break this season. That creates some reason for optimism that De La Cruz will be able to rebound and turn in a performance closer to his 2024 form (when he hit 25 homers, stole 67 bases, and finished 8th in NL MVP voting) next year. For a Reds club that seems unlikely to broach the top of the market for hitters like Pete Alonso and Kyle Schwarber, having De La Cruz performing at a star level to anchor the lineup is all the more important.

Tj can handle the infield?
And Sal Stewart play second? In this writer’s defense, we did have Mike Moustakes play second for us for a while.
Stewart played a lot of 2B in the minors.
He’s played in 61 games in 4 seasons. He’s listed at 224 pounds but is probably 235 to 240.
And that was during the shifting era where you could hide about anybody at 2B. Idk how that’s going to work out under today’s rules.
Adolis Garcia, Kyle Schwarber, Miguel Andujar or a trade for Byron Buxton should be be strongly considered.
No yes mayb no
Andujar was fine but he’ll probably cost more next year
Nice thought but they won’t do that even though they should.
It appears Seattle has made Polanco a 2 year $24M offer. He said, he would think about it. Apparently he wants 3 years instead of just 2. However, he likes the playoff money. I doubt Cincy is going to make him the highest paid player on their team. It is tough being a small market team.
This writer seems a bit out of touch with the Reds. He clearly doesn’t have a pulse of the team.
Yeah signing a 2B when Reds have McLain, Lux, and Steer plus Arroyo in AAA when they really just need a big bat for the offense would be D.A.F. which is why Reds will probably do it.
Lux wasn’t great defensively at second and even worse in left field, and the bat wasn’t what they hoped. I don’t see them paying 5 million for a part time player.
Yea, I view him as an easy nontender, assuming a big market team doesn’t want to stash him as overpaid offseason depth.
Hasn’t the non tender deadline already passed?
Yea, you’re right. That’s a surprising choice—he really doesn’t fit in MLB. They must think he can 2-4 mph to his EVs because that’s what he needs to be worth his projected salary.
So many pieces to move around but none can really help improve the offense, Stewart aside. Maybe they’ll take next year a more careful approach regarding EDLC playing time.
Sometimes you just trade from your surplus to fill a need (like im stating something new). ECS has been a disappointment to date but has so much talent. In the minors, he once stayed with my cousin who described him as a “great kid”. What about one for one, him for Casas?Is that a realistic proposal? I think it is.
Lux and Benson probably won’t be part of the puzzle if anyone is signed that plays outfield, but as we have seen in the past, actually filling obvious needs isn’t necessarily what we will see.
I am hoping we do better than Polanco ,O’Hearn or Mullins. They are affordable and would help but is it enough to make us solid playoff material? A trade of a starting pitcher is the only way to get a difference maker.
Swing a deal with the Tigers. Torkelson for McLain. Fill the rest of the deal in around the edges.
Cincy gets their big bat and Steer can stay in the OF. The Tigers can go get a 1B through trade or free agency or move Keith there and McLain fits nicely on their roster.
Or think bigger. Those two players and also add in Hunter Greene and the Tigers ship back Olson, Briceno and Hamm as part of the package. Briceno is a catcher now but will ultimately be a 1B in the long run. He and Hamm are close to MLB ready (2027) and Olson is a solid #3 starter now. Tork, Briceno, Olson and Hamm for McLain and Greene. Cincy gets something for now and something for later. The Tigers get the #2 starter they need..
0% chance your getting Greene for that low a haul. Your also not getting McLain for a guy that will be a free agent soon.
I know your hobby is trying to fleece other teams. Rodriguez for Sal Stewart would have been an extreme fleecing BTW.
Im not a GM so not sure how I’m fleecing anyone. Just doing what everyone else on this site does and chatting. If you dont like it dont read it.
Resign Andujur. Sign a young bat with upside like MJ Melendez. Trade Stephenson for a pitcher. Trade Greene for a power bat.
move de la cruz to RF, which improves the IF and the OF. start from there.
I really think RF would be best for him, especially with the rocket arm. Put Marte in LF, he can adapt. It might seem like shuffling the deck but the key move would be at 1B or DH. They have to pay for Alonso or Schwarber.
The rest of the guys an be traded a/o rearranged to address SS, depth, versatility and bullpen.
Man I would love to see this. Unfortunately Boris wouldn’t let the Reds reduce Elis free agent value. Tatis didn’t move until after he signed his massive SS contract.
First, everyone should stop with the “Small Market” constraints. In 2025 the Reds were one of the most profitable teams
Roughly $30m pure profit. That’s per Forbes with calculations that include all expenses (ballpark, etc. NBC leaves that out).
Congratulations Castellini’s !!!$$$
$30,000,000 won’t even get them 1 top tier free agent or bring their total payroll within half of the “large market” teams
And how much are the Reds worth? $30M on a $2B investment is not a big return.
In pro sports the vast majority of profit is in franchise value, and you have to sell (in whole or part) to feel that…
Small market and profitable are only tangentially related. I could have a profitable hot dog stand, but it would still only be a hot dog stand.
So many young, talented teams like the Reds and Orioles are seriously a Schwarber or Alonso away from making the playoffs for several years and being a threat. $27 million for four years gets those guys, presuming Schwarber gives a slight discount. Yet owners come up with reasons not to, despite the revenue a playoff run would generate.
I don’t think either player makes the O’s a playoff team.
But past that, I assume (hope) that they take playoff money and increased attendance into consideration. IMHO, Cincy could pick up another 300k in attendance with a big bat and a closer.
Have you ever seen the Reds play a game?
The last legitimate star the Reds actually acquired was Ken Griffey Jr. Even if the Reds were able to somehow land a Schwarber or an Alonso you can bet there will be opt-outs in the deal, probably after the first or second year
And the Reds promptly went from a playoff team to no longer relevant with Griffey.
Playoff team? They played and lost a wildcard game to Mets in 99. Acting like bringing in Griffey destroyed a dynasty.
I never said dynasty. I said playoff team. After Griffey joined the team they never came close to the post season. And before anyone infers I’m blaming Griffey, I’m not. All I’m saying is one player doesn’t make a team.
The days where they would go get Dave Parker or Greg Vaughn or Ken Griffey Jr. are long past.
When one of your “locked in” players is KeBryan Hayes your team probably sucks.
As usual, the media “experts” project more dumpster diving. Since when does Boras have any say in where teams play their position players based on projected value? EDLC should be playing CF regardless of whether he likes it or not…
Schwarber would be 35 million. There won’t be a discount. That number would tie the Reda up from signing their younger guys longterm and getting a bullpen.
“Meanwhile” should START the sentence, not come in the middle between commas. And there shouldn’t be a comma before “as well.”
“Meanwhile” should START the sentence, not come in the middle between commas.