Romano pitches Reds to 2-1 victory over Nova, Pirates

CINCINNATI -- Sal Romano had complete-game stuff. He settled for the best start of his rookie season.

Romano pitched a career-high eight shutout innings, Jesse Winker homered and the Cincinnati Reds beat the reeling Pittsburgh Pirates 2-1 on Saturday.

"It was fun playing behind Sal tonight," Winker said. "It was cool to be a part of the game."

Romano (5-6) allowed five hits, struck out six and walked none while improving to 3-1 over his last six starts. Elias Diaz's one-out double in the fifth was the only runner to get past first base against the right-hander.

"I felt I got into a good rhythm," Romano said. "I had fastball command and a curveball that I could throw for strikes. The difference is confidence. You have to believe that you're better than the hitter."

With top relievers Raisel Iglesias and Michael Lorenzen unavailable, manager Bryan Price thought about leaving Romano in to pitch the ninth. But he ended up taking him out.

"The decision to not let Sal finish was tough and not tough," Price said. "I knew he was up third in the eighth. If he had to run the bases and knowing we didn't have Iglesias and Lorenzen made it easy. I would have set myself up. I had (Cody) Reed and (Kevin) Schackelford. I wanted them to have a clean inning. It was tough because I really wanted Sal to finish. He had pitches left."

Pittsburgh avoided a shutout when Andrew McCutchen homered against Schackelford in the ninth. Reed came in with a runner on first and retired Gregory Polanco on a grounder to second for his first career save.

The Reds won back-to-back games for the first time since sweeping Milwaukee in a three-game series that ended on Sept. 6.

The Pirates wasted a solid start by Ivan Nova in their fourth consecutive loss. McCutchen and Diaz each had two hits.

Nova had struggled since the All-Star break, but he went into the outing against the Reds with a fresh outlook.

"Today was a good day since I woke up," he said. "When you go through tough times, you say you try not to think about it, but it's in the back of your mind. I woke up today not thinking about it. I just decided to have fun today."

Nova had allowed one hit and faced the minimum 18 batters before Winker led off the seventh with a drive to right for his sixth homer.

Zack Cozart followed with a double. Joey Votto then flied out and Eugenio Suarez walked before Nova (11-14) departed with right calf discomfort after talking on the mound with a trainer and manager Clint Hurdle.

Scooter Gennett, playing for the first time since Tuesday after being sidelined by a hand injury, greeted Dan Gunzler with an RBI single into center field for Cincinnati's second run.

Nova allowed three hits, struck out six and walked one. He dropped to 1-6 in his last seven starts.

"He pitched a really good game," Hurdle said. "His delivery was synced up. He had movement on his fastball. He had a good curveball. He had a solid strong outing today."

WELCOME TO CINCY

Right-hander Hunter Greene, who was selected by Cincinnati with the No. 2 pick in the June draft, visited Great American Ball Park for the game. Greene arrived in Cincinnati on Friday and said he ate a bratwurst and a cream puff at the downtown Octoberfest celebration.

MAHLE DONE

Price announced before the game that rookie right-hander Tyler Mahle is done for the season. Mahle has pitched 164 1/3 innings between two minor league stops and the Reds, 13 2/3 more than he logged last season.

POWER SURGE

McCutchen's 26th homer was his third in the last five games after going 29 straight without one.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Pirates: LF Starling Marte was getting treatment for discomfort in a finger and shoulder after leaving Tuesday's game in Milwaukee due to an awkward headfirst slide. He was planning to take some swings on Sunday to see if he might be available, Hurdle said.

Reds: CF Billy Hamilton's fractured left thumb has improved enough that he might be able to return to the lineup before the season ends. He got hurt on Sept. 6.

UP NEXT

Pirates: RHP Gerrit Cole (11-10) starts the series finale Sunday. He is 0-2 with a 4.50 ERA in three starts this month.

Reds: RHP Robert Stephenson (4-5) was roughed up for five hits and six runs -- four earned -- in three innings in his last start at St. Louis on Tuesday.

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