1976 Cincinnati Reds

102–60 (.630)

1st

October 24, 1975: was traded by the Reds to the Houston Astros for players to be named later. The Astros completed the deal by sending Luis Sánchez and Carlos Alfonso (minors) to the Reds on December 12.[2]

Joaquín Andújar

December 12, 1975: was traded by the Reds to the Chicago White Sox for Rich Hinton and Jeff Sovern (minors).[3]

Clay Carroll

Regular season[edit]

Season summary[edit]

The "Big Red Machine" was at the height of its power in the 1976 season, with four future Hall-of-Famers (Johnny Bench, Joe Morgan, Tony Pérez, and manager Sparky Anderson), the future MLB all-time hits leader Pete Rose, and a notable supporting line up including Dave Concepción at shortstop, and Ken Griffey, César Gerónimo, and George Foster in the outfield. This would also turn out to be the final full year for the Big Red Machine, Perez would be traded in the offseason to the Montreal Expos.


The Reds retained their NL pennant by winning the NLCS in three games over the Phillies, and their second consecutive World Series title by defeating the Yankees in four games, becoming only the second team to sweep a World Series from the Yankees (following the 1963 Los Angeles Dodgers). By sweeping both the Phillies and Yankees, the Reds became the first and only team to have a perfect postseason since the League Championship Series was started in 1969. Joe Morgan was the NL's Most Valuable Player for the second straight season and Johnny Bench was the World Series MVP.


To celebrate the National League's 100th anniversary, the Reds and several other teams adopted pillbox-style caps.

Babe Ruth Award

Johnny Bench

Johnny Bench, World Series Most Valuable Player Award

1976 Cincinnati Reds season at Baseball Reference

Johnson, Lloyd; Wolff, Miles, eds. (1997). The Encyclopedia of Minor League Baseball (2nd ed.). Durham, North Carolina: Baseball America.  978-0-9637189-8-3.

ISBN