The chilly weather isn't bringing the crowd to Great American Ball Park this year.

The Cincinnati Reds Monday loss against the Milwaukee Brewers also set the low attendance record at Great American Ball Park.

Brewers All-Star closer Josh Hader pitched a scoreless ninth inning to hand the Reds a 4-3 loss in front of a crowd of 7,799.

It was the smallest crowd in Great American Ball Park history, more than 1,000 fans below the second-smallest crowd (9,087) in 2009.

Tuesday's attendance rebounded to 10,195.

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We can probably thank the weather in part for poor attendance.

Sunday's game time temperature, which was only 35, tied for the second-coldest in GABP history, according to the Reds. It was about 46 Monday night when the game started, according to the National Weather Service.

It was 30 degrees on April 7, 2007 vs. Pittsburgh.

Coldest Reds games at Great American Ball Park:

April 7, 2007 vs Pit: 30

March 31, 2019 vs. Pit: 35

April 5, 2007 vs Chi: 35

April 6, 2007 vs Pit: 36

April 6, 2009 vs NYM: 37

April 6, 2003 vs Chi: 38

April 8, 2007 vs Pit: 38

April 9, 2016 vs Pit: 38

April 4, 2007 vs Chi: 39

April 15, 2014 vs Pit: 39

April 2007 saw the coldest stretch of games in Cincinnati, but attendance was still high. The coldest game during that stretch was April 7 and temperatures only reached 30, but attendance was 15,815, according to Baseball-reference.com

The Reds finished fifth in the National League that year with a record of 72-90.

The first and second weeks of April 2007 were chilly, with five games with temperatures below 40, the Cincinnati Reds said. The first two series of the season were against the Chicago Cubs and the Pittsburgh Pirates and attendance was the lowest on April 8 when temperatures hit 38. Attendance that day was 14,000, according to Baseball Reference.

The previously lowest attended Reds game at GABP was on Monday, Aug. 31, 2009 against the Pirates. It was a doubleheader.

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