Welcome back to the Reds newsletter. The edition was written by MLB.com's Manny Randhawa.
The Reds got off to a hot start this season, opening the 2026 campaign with wins in 20 of their first 31 games. While they’ve hit a rough patch since, losing eight straight before rebounding with a series win over the Astros last weekend, they remain a club with exciting young players who could be in the conversation for major awards this year.
Here’s an early-season check-in on those players and a look at their chances to become the first Reds player in several years to take home an award in their respective category.
MVP: Elly De La Cruz (Last Reds MVP: Joey Votto, 2010)
De La Cruz has been a Statcast darling for his five-tool talent ever since he made his Major League debut in 2023. And while the 6-foot-6, 200-pound shortstop has certainly demonstrated his potential to be an all-time great -- particularly when he hit 25 home runs and stole 67 bases in 2024 -- it still feels like his best is yet to come.
One of the major limiting factors for De La Cruz has been his penchant for striking out. Over his first two big league seasons, he struck out 32.2% of the time, yet he still managed to produce 8.5 wins above replacement (Fangraphs) in 258 games over that span. That goes to show just what type of production we could see if the strikeouts decline and his contact rate goes up.
De La Cruz has been working on it, and the results are showing. Since the beginning of the 2025 campaign, his strikeout rate is 26.3%. And so far in 2026, he’s posted an .875 OPS with 10 homers and nine steals. He also entered the week tied with the Dodgers’ Andy Pages for second among position players in the National League with 2.1 fWAR. Only Atlanta slugger Matt Olson was ahead of him, at 2.4.
The big question when it comes to NL MVP balloting this year is the same as it’s been the past two seasons: Will anyone be able to dethrone two-way superstar Shohei Ohtani?
It’s a tall order. The four-time MVP remains the man to beat, and until someone does it, it’s hard to see anyone other than Ohtani taking home MVP honors. But there is an opening with Ohtani getting off to a relatively slow start at the plate this season. And in MLB.com’s first MVP poll of 2026, De La Cruz finished runner-up to Ohtani.
It would take a monster season from De La Cruz to pull it off. Never say never, though -- he undoubtedly has the talent to wow us, and he’s now in his fourth Major League season despite being just 24 years old.