Chase Burns owns the cleanest run-prevention profile in this matchup, carrying a 1.87 ERA and 1.00 WHIP through nine starts for Cincinnati. The Reds arrive at Citizens Bank Park on a three-game skid, their bullpen having coughed up late leads in two of those losses. Philadelphia counters with Jesus Luzardo, whose 5.07 ERA and 1.33 WHIP reflect contact-heavy starts despite a recent six-inning shutout. The Phillies have won five straight and eight of nine, climbing to 25-23 under Don Mattingly after a 9-19 start under Rob Thomson. First pitch is tonight, May 19, at 6:41 p.m. EDT.
| Metric | Cincinnati Reds | Philadelphia Phillies |
|---|---|---|
| Record (Away/Home) | 24-24 (11-12) | 25-23 (12-12) |
| Runs Per Game | 4.3 (T16th) | 4.2 (T19th) |
| Runs Allowed | 5.1 (25th) | 4.6 (T19th) |
| Batting Average | .226 (29th) | .235 (19th) |
| On-Base Percentage | .312 (22nd) | .302 (27th) |
| Slugging Percentage | .392 (12th) | .394 (10th) |
| Home Runs | 61 (5th) | 57 (T7th) |
| ERA | 4.81 (26th) | 4.22 (18th) |
| WHIP | 1.48 (29th) | 1.35 (T20th) |
| Stolen Bases | 40 (T9th) | 31 (T16th) |
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Key Advantage
Starting Pitching: Cincinnati’s Chase Burns carries a 1.87 ERA and 1.00 WHIP against Philadelphia’s Jesus Luzardo and his 5.07 ERA, a 3.20-run gap that shapes the first six innings. If Luzardo’s contact-heavy approach bleeds early runs, the Phillies bullpen faces extended leverage with a taxed relief corps.
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Market Analysis
The market prices Philadelphia at -138 on the moneyline, implying roughly 58% win probability, with Cincinnati at +118 and a +1.5 run line at -172. The 8.5 total sits with slight under juice at -105. The -138 moneyline reflects Philadelphia’s five-game surge more than the pitching matchup, compressing Luzardo’s risk into a home-team premium. Cincinnati’s 11-12 road record and recent bullpen collapses explain the market’s skepticism, but Burns’s 1.87 ERA against a 5.07 opponent is the sharpest mismatch on the board. The total at 8.5 runs prices Citizens Bank Park’s hitter-friendly environment against two offenses that have underperformed their power profiles.
Burns’s top Run Prevention vs. Luzardo’s Contact Vulnerability
Cincinnati right-hander Chase Burns has allowed six earned runs in 47.2 innings outside one outlier start against the Angels, a span covering eight of his nine outings. His 55 strikeouts against 18 walks in 53 innings generates weak contact and limits traffic, with a WHIP that sits among the league’s best. The Reds offense has struggled to convert, hitting .226 as a team, but Burns creates margin for error that Luzardo cannot match.
Philadelphia left-hander Jesus Luzardo has allowed 53 hits in 49.2 innings and served up five home runs, with a 5.07 ERA that sits nearly two runs above his FIP would suggest if regression arrived. His six-inning shutout against Boston last outing broke a three-start stretch in which he allowed 14 earned runs in 14.1 innings. Cincinnati tagged him for six runs in two innings last season, and the Reds’ 61 home runs provide a path to repeat that damage if Luzardo’s fastball command wavers early.
Bullpen Fatigue and Late-Inning Variance
The Cincinnati bullpen has blown consecutive save opportunities, with Graham Ashcraft surrendering a go-ahead two-run homer to Bryson Stott in Monday’s 5-4 loss. Philadelphia’s Jhoan Duran converted his eighth save but needed 13 pitches to escape the ninth, and the Phillies have leaned heavily on their relief corps during this five-game win streak. Both bullpens carry usage concerns that amplify the importance of starter length.
Philadelphia’s offense has produced during this surge despite a .235 team average, relying on power and timely hitting rather than sustained rallies. Kyle Schwarber’s 20 home runs anchor the middle of the order, though he is listed day-to-day with illness. Cincinnati’s Spencer Steer has hits in 19 of 20 games and carries a .333 average against left-handed pitching, a split that targets Luzardo directly. The Reds’ 40 stolen bases add a baserunning dimension Philadelphia’s 31 steals do not match, creating pressure on a catcher corps that has not controlled the running game.
