3. The Reds added Tommy Pham instead of keeping Jesse Winker.
I'm well aware of Jesse Winker's struggles this season. The former Cincinnati Reds left fielder is off to a horrible start. Winker is hitting just .208/.319/.303 and has just four round trippers on the season. But Winker was an integral part of the Reds clubhouse.
Winker, along with Eugenio Suárez, was traded to the Seattle Mariners in exchange for two pitching prospects, Justin Dunn, and Jake Fraley. It remains to be seen who "won" the trade, as both Brandon Williamson and Connor Phillips have the potential to be starters for the Reds in the near future.
But Winker and Suárez were both leaders in the clubhouse. Those two along with Sonny Gray, Joey Votto, and Kyle Farmer seemed to be key to keeping the team loose and having fun in 2021. While Cincinnati failed to reach the postseason, they had a winning record and felt like they were just a few pieces away from contending in 2022.
But management pulled the rug out from underneath Jesse Winker, Eugenio Suárez, and the fanbase. Trading Tucker Barnhart and Sonny Gray was expected, and while questionable, moving on from Wade Miley was necessary with Hunter Greene, Graham Ashcraft, and Nick Lodolo knocking on the door of the major leagues.
But once that trade with Seattle was executed, it felt as though the winds were taken out of the sails of both the Reds players and fans. Then in a shoddy attempt to prove that the team wasn't just going to mail it in this season, Tommy Pham was signed to a one-year deal.
Pham immediately rubbed Reds Country the wrong way with his "revenge tour" comments and his antics on the field with Joc Pederson just further notion that he's not the type of player that the fanbase is going to rally behind.
The trade itself may not be as bad as Reds fans think it was, but the fallout from it has been brutal. Any momentum that the Cincinnati Reds had from 2021 was shattered on March 14th when the front office said goodbye to Jesse Winker and Eugenio Suárez.