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The Cincinnati Celts (pronounced with a hard C) was the first professional football team to play in Cincinnati, Ohio. The team played in the unofficial "Ohio League" and the American Professional Football Association (renamed the National Football League in 1922). The Celts were a traveling team, playing all of their APFA games in other cities ...
This is a list of team records for the Cincinnati Reds baseball team. The Reds do not recognize records set before 1900. Single-season leaders. Batting [1
In 1933 they scored 38 points in 10 games, tying the 1942 Detroit Lions for second on that list. In 1934 the Reds and Gunners combined for only 37 points in 11 games [2] with the Reds, themselves, scoring only 10 points in 8 games before their suspension. [3] The franchise was shut out in 12 of its 18 games.
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.
Check out the all-time Cincinnati 40-man baseball roster. ... including a pair of Reds playoff clubs in 1972 and ’79. He finished with a 3.82 ERA and 12 saves in 4.09 career appearances. ...
The pennant winning club still holds the record for the highest winning percentage of any Reds club to date (.688). In November 1889, the Cincinnati club and the AA's Brooklyn franchise both left the Association for the National League. Around this time, sportswriters started dropping "Stockings" when writing about the club and used simply ...
NEW YORK – New York Mets third baseman Mark Vientos powered the Mets to a 6-4 victory over the Cincinnati Reds on Friday night in the opener of a three-game series with two-run homers in the ...
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.