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Wearing the No. 13 that former Reds shortstop Davey Concepcion made famous, Castro came to the plate and worked Bailey to a 2-2 count in the second inning, then drove the next pitch over the wall in right field. No Cub had done that in his first at-bat since Jim Bullinger in 1992.
Castro lined out to Drew Stubbs the next time up, forcing the center fielder to make a sliding catch to rob him of another hit. He came up again in the fifth with the bases loaded and lined a ball into the gap in left-center, making it all the way to third with a headfirst slide.
Won't be the last time he kicks up dust in the majors.
Marlon Byrd added a two-run homer for the Cubs and narrowly missed another. His eighth-inning drive smacked off the yellow line at the top of the padding in left field. Third base umpire Mike Winters ruled the ball in play, a call that was upheld after a review that took 2 minutes, 24 seconds.
Mike Fontenot made it 14-4 with a pinch-hit grand slam in the eighth inning off Carlos Fisher.
NOTES: Castro surpassed Marty Shay as the youngest Cubs shortstop to make his big league debut. Shay was 100 days older when it made it to the majors in 1916. ... Castro's promotion meant that Ryan Theriot had to move to second base. Theriot became the Cubs' everyday shortstop in 2007. He has played 80 games at second base during his career. ... Orlando Cabrera batted leadoff for the Reds for the first time. Drew Stubbs was dropped from first to seventh.
[Associated Press;
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