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The Big Red Machine


The Big Red Machine were the baseball teams of the Cincinnati Reds that dominated the National League from 1970 to 1979. The team is widely recognized as being among the best teams in baseball history. Over that span, the team won six National League West Division titles, four National League pennants, and two World Series titles. The team's combined record from 1970-1979 was 953 wins and 657 losses, an average of more than 95 wins per season.

Additionally, the core of that Reds team actually had the best record in the Major Leagues in 1981, but did not make the postseason that year because of Bowie Kuhn's split-season playoff format due to the player's strike.

The nickname was introduced in a July 4, 1969 article by Bob Hertzel in The Cincinnati Enquirer, but gained prominence in reference to the 1970 team, which posted a regular season record of 102-60 and won the National League pennant. Rookie and future-Hall of Fame manager Sparky Anderson headed the team, which at its peak featured Pete Rose, Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan and Tony Pérez, and was supported by Dave Concepción, George Foster, César Gerónimo and Ken Griffey, Sr. The eight players most frequently referenced as members of the Big Red Machine include baseball's all-time hit leader in Rose; three Hall of Fame players in Bench, Pérez and Morgan; six National League MVP selections; four National League home run leading seasons; three NL Batting Champions; 25 Gold Glove winning seasons, and 63 collective All-Star Game appearances. The starting lineup of Bench, Rose, Morgan, Pérez, Concepción, Foster, Griffey, and Gerónimo (collectively referred to as the "Great Eight") played 88 games together during the 1975 and 1976 seasons, losing only 19.


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