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Cincinnati Reds End Losing Skid, Hit 5 Homers to Drub Miami Marlins

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  • The Reds were missing outfielder Yasiel Puig and manager David Bell, suspended for their part in a fracas in Pittsburgh on Sunday.

Manager David Bell had an unfamiliar vantage point — a booth far away from the field — to watch his struggling Reds end their slump at long last.

Matt Kemp started Cincinnati's spree of three consecutive homers, Luis Castillo dominated again, and the Reds snapped their eight-game losing streak Tuesday night, beating the Miami Marlins 14-0 shortly after their manager and an outfielder were suspended.

The Reds hit five homers in all as they won for the first time since opening day. Their 2-8 mark matches last season's start.

"I kept telling people when we break out, it's going to be a party, and it kind of turned into that today," said Scott Schebler, who completed the three-homer barrage. "It was a lot of fun."

The Reds were missing outfielder Yasiel Puig and Bell, suspended for their part in a fracas in Pittsburgh on Sunday. Puig decided to serve his two-game suspension rather than appeal. Bell got a one-game punishment, and bench coach Freddie Benavides took his place for the series opener.

Bell watched the game from the general manager's booth — an unaccustomed place — as his fill-in ran the show.

"It was really weird," Bell said. "It was better as the game went along."

Benavides didn't have any difficult decisions as the Reds emerged from a deep hitting slump. They batted .167 during the losing streak and were shut out four times. Cincinnati had scored a total of 21 runs in its first nine games.

"It was an easy game, there were not a whole lot of moves," Benavides said. "It was a good game to manage today."

Castillo (1-1) allowed only a pair of singles and a walk over seven innings and struck out eight. In three starts, the right-hander has given up only five hits and two runs in 19 2/3 innings.

"I've watched his games," Marlins manager Don Mattingly said. "He's given good teams trouble. He has a really good changeup and his fastball is 96-98 mph. He's got the weapons to make you uncomfortable."

Jesse Winker hit a two-run homer in the fourth inning off José Ureña (0-3), who has failed to build upon his solid finish last season. Ureña won his last six decisions last season, a career high, but has given up 14 runs in only 13 2/3 innings this season.

The Reds put it away in the sixth inning by hitting three straight homers for the first time since 2012. Kemp hit a three-run shot off Wei-Yin Chen, and Eugenio Suárez and Schebler also connected as Cincinnati surged ahead 11-0. Kyle Farmer added a three-run homer in the seventh.

Marlins catcher Jorge Alfaro got hit on the top of the head by Winker's bat on his swing in the sixth inning. After a few moments to recover, Alfaro stayed in the game. He had a passed ball on the next pitch.

The last time the Reds hit three consecutive homers was May 21, 2012, against Atlanta. Mike Leake, Zach Cozart and Drew Stubbs connected off Mike Minor in the fourth inning.

Marlins leadoff hitter Curtis Granderson walked twice and struck out twice. He had homered in each of his last four games at Great American Ball Park, the second-longest active streak at a ballpark behind Edwin Encarnacion's five-game homer streak at Citizens Bank Park.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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