I figure most have seen this by now, but here is the latest "vote of confidence" from Castellini :
Castellini maintains status quo
Reds CEO: Team better than record
BY JOHN FAY | JFAY@ENQUIRER.COM
Reds CEO Bob Castellini sounded downcast Friday. It would be hard for him not to, with the way his club is playing.
But even though the Reds now have the worst record in baseball, Castellini isn't promising a shakeup or big changes.
"We're taking it day by day," he said. "We're trying to get better."
He reiterated that there will be no management change: The jobs of field manager Jerry Narron and general manager Wayne Krivsky are safe.
Link to Poll: What should Reds do now?
"We're much better than we've played," Castellini said. "But the results sure don't show it, do they?"
The Reds lost three of four to the Washington Nationals to start an eight-game homestand. The Nationals came to town with the worst record in the National League.
Two of those losses came after Castellini addressed the club.
"I just encouraged them," he said.
The Reds are in a similar position to where the Houston Astros were two years ago and where the Minnesota Twins were last year. Both teams turned it around and made the playoffs. The Astros made it to the World Series.
"I know we've played as poorly as we can play," Narron said. "We're capable of playing better. But our margin of error is not very great. If we make any kind of mistake, we get beat. We've got to play better all-around baseball."
The Reds are getting some help. Reliever Gary Majewski came back Thursday night, and closer Eddie Guardado begins a rehabilitation assignment Monday.
"Getting Majewski back was a huge lift," Narron said. "Getting Eddie Guardado back would be a huge lift. You can set up your bullpen a lot better with Majewski and Guardado. We're not counting on Eddie until he's back. But the way Majewski threw last night, that's one step in the right direction."