ARLINGTON — It didn’t dawn on Reds starting pitcher Graham Ashcraft until he got on the bus and headed to Globe Life Field on Friday afternoon. April 26 is the same day he faced the Texas Rangers during the 2023 season, an emotional outing two days after his grandmother had passed away.
“There were a lot of emotions on this day last year,” Ashcraft said. “This year was a little bit easier to know like, ‘All right, she’s with me.’ I knew I had to go out and do my best. That’s all I could do.”
Ashcraft knows he made his grandmother proud with his performance in the Reds’ 2-1 loss to the Rangers. He went a season-best 6 1/3 innings, allowing one run on seven hits with no walks and three strikeouts. Ashcraft did not factor into the decision, and his only mistake was leaving a cutter down and in to Evan Carter, who sent the pitch over the right-center-field fence to start the second inning.
Outside of that, Ashcraft couldn’t have asked for a much better night. He kept his personal emotions in check as he faced his late grandma’s favorite team. His grandmother, Theresa Ann Ashcraft, lived in nearby Fort Worth.
Ashcraft kept his competitive emotions in check, too, in what he described as “one of the loudest games I’ve pitched in.”
“If that’s what playoff baseball feels like, I mean, that’s a hell of a game,” he said. “That was fun to be a part of and fun to experience.”
It helped that Ashcraft had his best performance of the season. It was his first start without issuing a walk and the fewest runs he’s allowed.