Spencer Steer homered in the fifth inning Tuesday and drew two walks as the Reds beat the Rays 12-6, a night when Cincinnati’s bats kept coming from start to finish.
The solo shot was Steer’s fourth home run of the season, part of a game in which the Reds hit five homers against Rays pitching. The 28-year-old was hitting.216 with a.721 OPS across 22 games after the game, a line that shows both the power he has flashed and the uneven start he has had at the plate.
For Steer, the home run was the kind of timely damage that can change the shape of an early season stat line. For the Reds, it was another sign of an offense that can still overwhelm a staff when it starts lifting the ball.
The tension is in how much of that production can hold. Steer’s.216 average and.721 OPS point to a player still searching for consistency, even after a night that added to his home run total and helped bury Tampa Bay early.
Tuesday’s result leaves the Reds with a clearer picture of their lineup’s ceiling, and Steer with a useful reminder that one swing can still shift the conversation around a slow start.