Dan Johnson takes you through his preview, prediction, and best bet for today’s baseball game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Kansas City Royals.
Kansas City arrives at Great American Ball Park carrying the weariness of a season beginning to collapse in public. The Royals are 22-37, losers of six straight and 16 of their last 19, with Sunday’s sweep in Texas deepening a road trip already short on answers. Cincinnati is only 30-28, buried in a packed NL Central race, yet its current problem feels sharper: Elly De La Cruz has landed on the 10-day injured list after injuring his right hamstring Sunday. He leaves a tremendous absence behind him—.280 with 12 home runs, 37 RBI and 10 stolen bases—just as the Reds meet one of the softest pitching assignments on their schedule. Cincinnati’s season now asks for a different kind of win. Its most electric player is missing, its margin in the division is thin, and a fading opponent has arrived at exactly the moment a serious club has to keep taking games. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the Cincinnati Reds and the Kansas City Royals.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
Chase Burns is the reason the Reds can survive a quieter offensive night. The 23-year-old right-hander has already become the most reliable force in Cincinnati’s rotation, entering at 7-1 with a 1.96 ERA, 0.96 WHIP and 72 strikeouts across 64 1/3 innings. Opponents have managed only a .271 xwOBA against him, with a .201 expected batting average and .345 expected slugging percentage. His attack is blunt and vicious: a riding four-seamer used more than half the time, followed by a slider generating a 53.2% whiff rate and a .183 xwOBA allowed. Kansas City has to solve premium velocity early, then protect against the finishing pitch once Burns owns the count. Luinder Avila offers Cincinnati the opposite assignment. He enters 0-2 with a 5.06 ERA, 1.83 WHIP, 27 hits allowed and 12 walks through 21 1/3 innings. Avila has primarily worked in relief, leaving the Royals dependent on several innings from a bullpen already carrying too much weight.
The loss of De La Cruz transfers Cincinnati’s offensive authority directly to JJ Bleday. Few hitters in baseball have done more with a midseason change of uniform. Bleday enters batting .303/.398/.642 with eight doubles, one triple, nine home runs, 26 RBI and 70 total bases across 128 plate appearances for the Reds. His .416 xwOBA and .564 xSLG confirm the violence behind the production, and Sunday supplied its quieter version: two RBI doubles in a 6-4 win over Atlanta. Nathaniel Lowe supplies another left-handed threat against Avila, carrying a .264/.343/.552 line with nine home runs and a .540 xSLG. Lowe has punished right-handed pitching at a .300 clip, with all nine homers coming in that split. Sal Stewart has added 12 home runs, 10 steals and a .356 on-base percentage, while Spencer Steer remains a steady traffic-and-conversion bat at .271/.345/.432. Kansas City still has the finest individual hitter in the game. Bobby Witt Jr. is batting .286/.350/.474 with nine home runs, 17 steals and an average exit velocity near 94 mph. Jac Caglianone provides the dangerous secondary barrel, averaging nearly 94 mph off the bat with enormous hard-contact force. The drop after those two remains severe, and Burns is built to punish thin innings.
De La Cruz’s absence makes Cincinnati less frightening in every way that matters. It removes a middle-of-the-order slugger, a stolen-base threat and the hitter who could turn an ordinary single into a scoring inning before the next pitch arrived. It also creates a softer lineup position wherever his replacement lands. Kansas City’s countercase grows from there: Witt can change a game by himself, Caglianone can crush elite fastballs, and Cincinnati’s late bullpen has absorbed serious damage with Graham Ashcraft, Pierce Johnson and Emilio Pagán unavailable. A Burns-built lead can still bleed away after the sixth inning. The reason Cincinnati remains convincing is that this matchup does not demand six runs from a depleted order. Burns has allowed the Reds to win low-volume games throughout the spring, while Kansas City’s offense has repeatedly left Witt stranded inside dead innings. Bleday, Lowe and Stewart only need to damage Avila and the Royals’ relief chain enough to turn Burns’ run suppression into working daylight.
Royals vs. Reds pick, best bet
That balance makes the run line the cleanest market in the game. Cincinnati’s team total over 4.5 demands five runs at -130 after losing its best all-around offensive player. Kansas City’s first-five team total under 1.5 gives Burns the full burden of the wager and can disappear on one Witt-Caglianone sequence. The full-game total asks the Royals to supply scoring against the strongest starter on the field. Reds -1.5 at -101 uses both stable advantages without demanding either one to carry the entire night: Burns can keep Kansas City beneath three runs, while Cincinnati has nine innings to find separation against Avila and a strained Royals bullpen. The offense retains enough extra-base force to produce a three-run inning without De La Cruz. The starter gap gives those runs far more weight than usual.
Best Bet: Cincinnati Reds -1.5 (-101), playable to -110. Kansas City’s clean route to the cover is Witt producing instant damage before Burns settles, followed by Cincinnati’s depleted bullpen allowing the game to tighten late. The larger picture still favors separation: Burns owns the matchup’s deepest advantage, the Royals have spent three weeks failing to build innings around Witt, and Cincinnati’s remaining power bats draw the softer pitching path for the full nine.
Final score prediction: Reds 5, Royals 2.
Best bet: Reds -1.5 (+100) vs. Royals
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‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source dknetwork.draftkings.com ’














