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cincinnati reds will benson cleveland guardians Ohio Cup

Cincinnati Reds OF Will Benson, a 2016 first-round pick of the Guardians, went 9-for-19 with four homers against his former team to win Ohio Cup MOP.

CLEVELAND – Now it gets real.

Or at least the schedule does like it hasn’t all season.

And just maybe that means the Cincinnati Reds will get a chance to find out how real they are as a National League playoff threat this season.

“It’s a good check to see where we’re at, right?” said Nick Martinez, who starts Friday in Detroit when the Reds open a three-game series against the team with the best record in the majors.

“It’s gonna show what areas we need to work on, what areas we excel at,” he said. “I expect a good, hard-fought series.”

Even after Wednesday’s 11-2 loss to the Guardians in Cleveland that snapped a five-game winning streak, the Reds (35-34) are coming off back-to-back series wins as they take on a Tigers team that has wins in 11 of its last 15 (through Tuesday, June 10).

“I think it’s exciting,” said Spencer Steer. “It’ll be fun.”

“Is Tarik (Skubal) pitching?” Matt McLain said.

“I hope so,” Steer said.

No such “luck” for the Reds, who miss the reigning American League Cy Young winner, who beat them 5-1 in Cincinnati last year with seven strong innings.

Wednesday’s loss notwithstanding, the Reds have generally played some of their better baseball of the season more recently to push their season record back above sea level after taking the season series from Cleveland, including two of three this week, and sweeping the Diamondbacks at home over the weekend.

“Every win, every game is more information for us,” said Will Benson, who won the Ohio Cup outstanding player award by going 9-for-19 with four home runs against the team that drafted him in the first round and later traded him to the Reds.

“We’re playing good baseball,” he said. “Shoutout to some of the leaders on our team who brought us together and held us accountable for some of the games that we dropped, some of the games that we didn’t come through. But I think how we respond and how we bring the energy and how well we play together, especially as of late, is something we can build upon. Especially going against some heavy hitters coming up.”

Leadoff man TJ Friedl, who homered Monday and Wednesday and robbed an extra-base hit Tuesday with a wall-banging catch, pointed to Sunday’s rout of the Diamondbacks to finish that sweep as an indicator “of how good this team is and our potential,” he said.

Christian Encarnacion-Strand had a big series against Arizona in his return from the injured list, and long-slumping McLain’s bat is showing signs of stirring.

“It just shows the depth we have and how good we are,” Friedl said.

That figures to get seriously tested not only this weekend from the Tigers but in series to follow against playoff-positioned Minnesota, then the Cardinals, Yankees, Padres, and road sets in Boston and Philadelphia.

“The best teams in the game don’t focus on who their opponent is, and I think we’ve worked really hard to get to that point,” closer Emilio Pagán said. “Obviously, we respect our opponent, and Detroit is off to an incredible start. But other than the scouting report on them, we’re really just trying to be hyper focused on us.

“When we’ve played our best is when we’re focused internally. The trick is to do that as much as possible.”

Meanwhile, the yuks and giggles over the Ohio Cup/”America’s Cup” this week fade quickly to the background after the Reds tied their best season record against their cross-state rivals since interleague play began, their 5-1 season mark matching their 2008 success.

With Guardians lefty Logan Allen pitching Wednesday (six innings to earn a win), the Frank Robinson Most Outstanding Player winner didn’t even play, perhaps underscoring Benson’s impact in the series.

Andrew Abbott, who pitched 14 scoreless innings across two starts against Cleveland, also received vote(s).