Arizona’s Zac Gallen enters Great American Ball Park this afternoon, June 14, at 1:41 p.m. EDT with a 5.43 ERA through 69.2 innings, a mark that sits well above his career standard. Cincinnati’s Andrew Abbott counters with a 4.10 ERA and a recent stretch of 2.48 ERA over his past seven starts, giving the Reds a starter edge that the market has compressed to a virtual coin flip. The Reds won Saturday’s Game 2 by a 2-1 margin, evening the series and setting up a rubber match where both bullpens enter with heavy usage.
| Metric | Arizona Diamondbacks | Cincinnati Reds |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Away/Home) | 35-35 (15-15) | 33-36 (15-15) |
| Runs Per Game | 4.2 | 4.1 |
| Runs Allowed | 4.5 | 4.8 |
| ERA | 4.23 | 4.74 |
| WHIP | 1.28 | 1.47 |
| On-Base Percentage | .306 | .314 |
| Slugging Percentage | .384 | .394 |
| Home Runs | 60 | 86 |
| Batting Average | .238 | .230 |
| K/9 | 8.5 | 8.9 |
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Key Advantage
Bullpen Depth: Arizona’s 1.28 WHIP and 4.23 ERA reflect a staff that has kept runners off base more effectively than Cincinnati’s 1.47 WHIP and 4.74 ERA. With both starters likely to exit early, the Diamondbacks’ cleaner bullpen path supports their slight moneyline edge.
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Market Analysis
The market prices Arizona at -111 and Cincinnati at -109, a split that implies 50.2% win probability for the Diamondbacks and 49.8% for the Reds; essentially a pick’em with fractional juice toward the road side. The -1.5 run line runs +138 for Arizona and -169 for Cincinnati signal that the books see one-run variance as the most likely outcome. The 10.0 total sits above both teams’ season scoring averages, reflecting Great American Ball Park’s hitter-friendly dimensions and the fact that both bullpens worked Saturday’s tight contest.
Gallen’s Regression Profile Against Abbott’s Recent Form
Zac Gallen’s 5.43 ERA is inflated by an 11-homer allowance in 69.2 innings, a rate that outpaces his career norms and suggests some batted-ball volatility rather than a true talent decline. His 1.55 WHIP shows traffic on the bases, though his 46 strikeouts against 21 walks indicate that command has not fully collapsed. The deciding factor is Gallen’s home-run regression arrives against a Cincinnati lineup that has hit 86 homers this season, second among the metrics available.
Andrew Abbott’s 4.10 ERA is supported by a stronger recent trend; a 2.48 ERA over his past seven starts with 29 strikeouts; but his 1.41 WHIP and 33 walks in 74.2 innings reveal a starter who allows baserunners and relies on sequencing luck. The Diamondbacks’ .306 on-base percentage is not elite, yet it is sufficient to exploit Abbott’s walk rate if Gallen can keep the game within reach through five innings.
Bullpen Fatigue and Late-Inning Volatility
Saturday’s 2-1 contest required Cincinnati to use Chase Petty for 1.2 innings, Tony Santillan for a save, and Rhett Lowder for 5.2 innings as the starter. Arizona burned Michael Soroka for seven strong innings and Juan Morillo for the eighth, where Morillo allowed the decisive home run to Noelvi Marte. Both pens enter Sunday with recent usage, but Arizona’s structural advantage in WHIP and ERA suggests their depth arms carry less blowup risk.
The Reds’ absence of Elly De La Cruz and Ke’Bryan Hayes on the 10-day IL removes two middle-order bats from a lineup that already strikes out at a high rate. Cincinnati’s .230 batting average is weak, and without De La Cruz’s .280 average and 12 home runs, the Reds’ power threat concentrates on Sal Stewart and Spencer Steer. Arizona’s bullpen, which has allowed a .246 opponent average, is positioned to navigate this reduced lineup more effectively than Cincinnati’s staff can handle the Diamondbacks’ order.
