Reds Miss On Kyle Schwarber, Trey Hendrickson Rumors, Cincinnati Bengals News
In the cutthroat world of MLB free agency, few stories sting like a prodigal son choosing the bright lights of Philadelphia over his Ohio roots. On December 9, 2025, Kyle Schwarber, the Middletown native who grew up idolizing the Cincinnati Reds, inked a five-year, $150 million deal to stay with the Phillies—leaving the Reds empty-handed after a spirited but ultimately underpowered pursuit. For a franchise desperate to reignite fan passion at Great American Ball Park, this was more than a missed signing; it was a gut punch to the Queen City’s baseball soul.
Schwarber’s 2025 season was a revelation: 56 home runs—tops in the NL—and 132 RBIs, a career zenith that vaulted him to second in MVP voting. At 32, the burly designated hitter evolved into a complete force, smashing an MLB-record 23 homers against lefties and posting a .964 OPS versus them, upending his platoon woes. His raw power, infectious energy, and Wawa-endorsed Philly flair made him the perfect leadoff masher behind Bryce Harper, fueling the Phillies’ championship chase. No wonder Philly locked him up; he’s their clubhouse heartbeat, a grizzled leader who bet on himself and won big.
The Reds, though, saw Schwarber as destiny’s gift. Just 35 miles from his boyhood diamond, he could’ve been the thunderous bat to complement Elly De La Cruz’s spark and Jonathan India’s savvy—propelling Cincinnati from rebuild purgatory to playoff contention. GM Nick Krall courted him aggressively at the GM Meetings, even hosting Schwarber and wife Paige for a November tour of GABP. Their offer? A five-year pact around $125 million, with escalators—respectable, but shy of Philly’s bounty. Even the Orioles matched the Phillies’ terms, only to watch Schwarber’s heart pull him eastward.
This miss exposes the Reds’ fiscal bind: a mid-market team chasing splashy dreams without the deep pockets of NL East behemoths. Ticket sales would’ve surged with “Schwar Bomb” nights echoing off the Ohio River, but instead, fans are left with echoes of 2010 glory. Pittsburgh and Boston sniffed around, too, but Cincinnati’s emotional pitch fell flat against cold cash.
As Schwarber preps for another Citizens Bank Park barrage, Reds Nation mourns what could’ve been: a homecoming homer derby that never materialized. It’s a reminder that in baseball, roots run deep, but dollars dig deeper. For now, the Phillies feast on continuity; the Reds pivot to Plan B, hoping for fireworks elsewhere. But oh, what a Schwarber-shaped hole in the lineup—and the heart.
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