Starter Spotlight: Go, Go, Power Ranger

6-7-2025 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

The Pirates walked it off last night after a bullpen battle for both sides but will have to contend with a much more established starting pitcher for today’s game in Ranger Suarez, who enters today with a perfect 4-0 record and sparkling 2.72 ERA through his first 36.1 innings pitched.

Suarez has been on a TEAR the past few weeks. After a really awful first game back from the Injured List where he allowed 7 runs through 3.2 innings, he has been among the best in MLB at run prevention, pitching 5 straight quality starts allowing just 4 earned runs over 32.2 innings. In fact, since May 10, only Paul Skenes has a lower ERA than Suarez among qualified starters.

Granted, the lone blip outing where he allowed 3 of those 4 runs came against these Bucs on May 16 so maybe the Pirates have something on him here.

We already covered Suarez a bit in our preview piece ahead of that start (see here) but we can go in more depth here based on what we’ve seen thus far this season.

First thing that is clear: Suarez does not allow hard contact. His 0.9% opponent barrel rate is basically impossible and his hard-hit percentage of 26.2% is pretty insane as well. Given that he also generates ground balls like he’s running a miniature golf course, it’s a pretty excellent formula for success.

He’s dropping his sinker, changeup and curve down and away from righties while working inside with his cutter/4-seam fastball.

Suarez has been dispatching the changeup a bit more than the sinker in those situations generating excellent results with a 38.1% whiff rate and .231 wOBA.

By contrast, his sinker has been much more hittable as no righty batter has swung and missed on the pitch yet this season. Although it has resulted in balls hit right into the ground with a -10 average launch angle, righties should target that pitch in the game today to find holes in the dirt or leg out infield singles.

For lefty hitters, Suarez leans on his sinker heavily with his 4-seam as his next most-used offering. 

Presumably, the only lefty in the lineup today will be Oneil Cruz, who has struggled against lefties but overall is batting .267 against 4-seamers and .300 against sinkers on the season.

While Suarez doesn’t get behind on hitters often (only 10 walks in the season and just 5 instances of a 3-0 count), hitters should try to get to 2-ball count before getting aggressive in the box. Opposing hitters are batting .253 against Suarez this season when they have 2+ balls in the count, compared to .190 in other counts so exerting some patience will be crucial for success against Ranger.

Stay on the sinker and try hammer some holes in the infield. Fight off junk in the zone, work counts as you try to get into this beleaguered Phillies pen as soon as possible.

Starter Spotlight: Bullpen Battle Time

6-6-2025 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

Heading to Philly after a late-night loss has the Pirates looking to face a bullpen game with Joe Ross, who is looking to make his first start for Philadelphia. He enters play today with a 2-1 record and a 4.34 through 29 innings pitched.

Fans shouldn’t expect Ross to go too long into the game as he’s maxed out at 3 innings and 51 pitches in a game, and even that was back in April as he has been a mostly 1- or 2-inning arm for Philadelphia this season. That said, Philly will look to get as much length as they can from Ross in tonight’s affair.

Ross spent 2024 with the Milwaukee Brewers and bounced between rotation and bullpen as he started against the Pirates twice last season and pitched once in relief, compiling a total of 11.1 innings and allowing 4 runs (3 earned) off 9 hits, 2 walks and 11 strikeouts.

His pitch mix mainly focuses on his fastballs (4-seam/sinker) and slider, which has previously been a primary offering for the 32-year old veteran.

He will mix in the curve down and in or changeup running away when facing lefties but focuses on the big three pitches against righties, often locating up in the zone with the heat and running away from bats with the breaking ball.

For right handed hitters, they should look to target that slider. Ross has been prone to hanging the pitch and has allowed 2 of his 5 home runs this season off the pitch with a xwOBA of .493 for RHH when facing that pitch.

Lefties will want to focus on his heater, which will sit low-to-mid-90s and has gotten some lucky results for Ross. The numbers against LHH seem wholly unsustainable outside of small sample sizes given the expected values on the pitch.

Opponents overall have been having success against Ross’s sinker, posting a .333/.389/.606 slash line against the offering so for either side of the plate, that’s the one to attack when possible.

Ross isn’t going to target strikeouts and will look to get quick outs with soft contact and ground balls to infielders. Pirate batters will need to dig down to elevate the sinkers and sliders from Ross tonight in order to find early success and be able to battle deeper into the Philly pen.

Series Preview: Philadelphia Phillies (37-25) at Pittsburgh Pirates (23-40)

06-06-2025 – By Josh Booth – @bridge2buctober on X

These two teams met up in the middle of May in Philadelphia. The Phillies swept the Pirates in a weekend series that kicked off a 9-game winning streak. Granted, that winning streak was against the Pirates, Rockies, and Athletics. After winning a series against the division foe, Braves, they were swept at home against the Brewers and lost a series to the Blue Jays in Toronto.

During this 3-7 run, the Phils were passed in the NL East by the Mets and sit in 2nd place. If the season ended today, they’d have a wild card spot.

Kyle Schwarber is 2nd in the NL with 19 HR, including 10 off of LHP which leads the NL. Trea Turner is 5th in the NL with a .300 AVG. Nick Castellanos is in the top 10 in the NL with 16 2B. They can score runs.

The starting rotation leads the MLB in strike outs. The Pirates hitters, well, they strike out: 7th most K’s in MLB.

The Bucs have been improving, but they are still missing the power it’s likely to take to overcome this NL East powerhouse. This is a very good team and a great opportunity for this young club to gain some confidence against. Let’s take a look at the matchup.

6/6

Phillies: Joe Ross 21 G, 29 IP, 4.34 ERA, 22 SO, 7 BB, 1.28 WHIP
(This will be Ross’ first start since July 30, 2024)

Pirates: Bailey Falter 12 GS, 66 IP, 3.14 ERA, 41 SO, 22 BB, 1.08 WHIP
(At PNC Park: 6 GS, 36.2 IP, 2.45 ERA, 22 SO, 9 BB, 0.82 WHIP)

6/7

Pirates: Ranger Suarez 6 GS, 36.1 IP, 2.72 ERA, 33 SO, 10 BB, 1.18 WHIP
(Last start against PIT: 5/16/25 7 IP, 3 ER, 6 SO, BB)

Pirates: Andrew Heaney 12 GS, 66.1 IP, 3.39 ERA, 47 SO, 24 BB, 1.19 WHIP
(Last start against PHI: 5/16/25 5 IP, 1 ER, 2 SO, 3 BB)

6/8

Phillies: Cristopher Sanchez 12 GS, 65.2 IP, 3.15 ERA, 74 SO, 26 BB, 1.31 WHIP

Pirates: Paul Skenes 13 GS, 83.1 IP, 2.05 ERA, 85 SO, 19 BB, 0.88 WHIP
(Last start against PHI: 5/18/25 8 IP, 1 ER, 9 SO, BB)

Phillies: Kyle Schwarber – The last time I did one of these, I talked about Rhys Hoskins tearing it up in the past week. Today, Hoskins has the 2nd most strike outs in MLB in the last 15 days. Hitting just .200. So, this might be a “who’s going to earn a golden sombrero in one of these games” paragraph.

Kyle Schwarber’s move to the middle of the order has been good for the Phillies in ’25. Trea Turner against lefties and Bryson Stott against righties has handled that spot. The response against left-handers is that Schwarber leads the NL in HR off LHP with 10. His 163 OPS+ so far this year would be his best season, yet. His SO% is the lowest it’s been in his career, too. There are no real breaks in the top 5-6 hitters of this lineup, but stopping Schwarber will be an important, and difficult, task.

Pirates: Bryan Reynolds – Reynolds might finally be coming around. In his last 12 games, he’s hitting .356 and the OPS is 1.009. And that’s coming off of an 0-4 performance Thursday night against Framber Valdez. If the Bucs are going to have a chance to take a series, it’s going to have to be because Reynolds shows up.

Phillies: Max Kepler – The last time I did one of these, I talked about Christian Yelich struggling in the past week. Today, Yelich leads MLB in OPS in the last 15 days. So, this might be a “who’s about to break out” paragraph.

Kepler has hit just .156/.238/.211 in his last 24 games. His last HR came on May 24th against the Rockies. He had homered in back-to-back games in Arizona on May 2nd and 3rd and has just hit 1 HR since. He finished May with a .188 AVG and has just 1 hit in the first 4 games this month. The season average has dropped 50 points during this stretch. With the Buccos sending two left-handers and Skenes this weekend, I may pitch around Nick Castellanos to get to Kepler.

Pirates: Ke’Bryan Hayes – The fact that Ke has even 3 RBI in his last 12 games is impressive considering he only has 6 hits. Add 4 walks and it’s only a .220 OBP during the stretch. He has accomplished only a .353 OPS as all 6 hits have been singles. Now, I care most about on base, but the batting average is only .133. The singles don’t bother me, if you can hit more of them. Ke’Bryan Hayes needs to have a much different looking series this weekend.

Phillies: Aaron Nola

Pirates: Colin Holderman, Jared Jones, Justin Lawrence, Tim Mayza, Dauri Moreta, Johan Oviedo, Joey Bart, Enmanual Valdez

Notes

  • Andrew McCutchen is coming off a Golden Sombrero night. He’s now hitting .095 in 6 Thursday games this season. The silver lining is that he’s hitting .394 with a 1.015 OPS on Friday nights this year. But still looking for his first HR on a Friday night. Maybe that comes tonight.
  • With runners on base this season, Ke’Bryan Hayes is hitting .287. With Bases empty, .169. The goal has to be to get someone on base in front of Hayes and see if they can get him hitting. Or even in scoring position, when Hayes hits .298.
  • Henry Davis started showing some signs of putting it together, but it hasn’t continued. He will likely get Saturday off against Suarez, but I’m feeling frisky and calling a big hit down the LF line in this series. A double or homer down that line.

Starter Spotlight: The Gambler Framber

6-5-2025 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

After trading ‘3-0’ games, the Pirates will look for the series win against the Astros today facing their lefty ace, Framber Valdez, who is 5-4 with a 3.12 ERA through 12 starts this season but his reliance on pitch-to-contact is certainly a risky one at times.

In his last start, Valdez shutdown Tampa Bay as he pitched a complete game with just 1 run allowed off 3 hits, 1 walk and 9 strikeouts.

Valdez has pitched 6+ innings and allowed 1 run or less in half of his starts this year, including 4 of his last 5.

As previously discussed, the two-time All Star faced Pittsburgh on July 31 last year – which was notably a turning-point in the season for the Pirates in all the wrong ways. Despite the result of the game and the season, they were able to knock Valdez for 4 runs off 6 hits in 6 innings, though also striking out 10 times with zero walks against the veteran southpaw.

Valdez is essentially a ground-ball pitcher who relies on his talented infield defense, using a sinker/curve/changeup/slider low in the zone.

His curve, in particular, has been a dominant for Valdez with opponents batting a measly .189 against the offering with a 43.3% whiff rate and resulting in 46 of his 73 strikeouts – all the best among his pitches.

By contrast, his more-often used sinker is his contact pitch, resulting in just a 10.4% whiff rate, an average exit velocity of 91 MPH and an expected batting average of .309 so Bucs bats should key in on this pitch, especially if Valdez is struggling to locate one or more of his other options.

As is the case for the Astros hitters, Valdez has struggled away from Daikin Park as his home ERA (2.20) is nearly two runs lower than his away line (4.14) in nearly the same amount of innings.

Pittsburgh has struggled against left handed pitching this season with the 4th lowest wRC+ in MLB (68) on the season but overall have been more effective as of late, posting an above average 103 wRC+ since May 20th and posting a .263/.336/.394 slash line as a team over that stretch.

We’ve seen this Pirates offense really hot at times and very ice cold much more often but if they can dig out some sinkers, lay off the curve and find holes in the infield, there’s a chance they can find victory in the finale today.

Starter Spotlight: Once More With Gusto

6-4-2025 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

Following yet another shutout performance by the anemic offense, the Pirates will look to fill their sails tonight against rookie Ryan Gusto, who has a 3-2 record and 4.62 ERA through his first 39 MLB innings.

Gusto has been thrust into a starting role due to injury woes that have befallen Astros rotation and while he had been a lockdown member of the bullpen (0.93 ERA over 9.2 innings), he hasn’t been able to translate that success into his new position (5.83 ERA through 29.1 innings).

The 26-year old was never a top prospect in the Astros system after being selected in the 11th round of the 2019 draft out of Florida Southwestern State College but performed well post-draft as he posted a 1.84 ERA over 14.2 innings. 

Unfortunately, his development was derailed due to the cancelled Covid season of 2020 and then missing all of 2021 due to requiring Tommy John Surgery.

Despite the setbacks, Gusto progressed quickly after his recovery, collectively posting a 4.31 ERA over 363 minor league innings – including a 3.70 ERA through 148.1 frames with the AAA Sugar Land Space Cowboys in 2024, which earned him an end of season promotion, though his debut would have to wait until the following season.

Gusto has a high-angle delivery with a six-pitch mix that leans on his 4-seam fastball that reaches 97 MPH and resulted in 19 of his 41 strikeouts.

He will also add in a low-80s curve, high-80s cutter, low-80s sweeper, high-80s changeup and occasional sinker that sits 94.

Gusto attacks righties with heat, primarily going with his 4-seam, against which RHH are batting just .121 with a .188 wOBA. His secondary offerings have resulted in better results for opponents as his sweeper (.377 wOBA), cutter (.345) and sinker (.355) have all been much more hittable offerings with righties batting .333 or higher against each of these pitches. 

Against lefties, Gusto dispatches the 4-seam/curve/changeup/cutter working the fastballs up with both of the curve and changeup down low or under the zone. 

Unlike righties, lefties have been seeing Gusto much better overall as they are batting .300 against his fastballs and .308 against his breaking balls with the struggles coming against the changeup (.231 BAA).

Hitters today will want to watch for high heat as he throws fastball 66% of the time. Lefties should try to attack the 4-seam while righties may opt to hold off for his other offerings. 

Two final things to watch for today: First, he’s most aggressive in the zone with no one on-base as all six of his home runs allowed have been solo shots and opponents are slashing .302/.375/.558 with bases empty compared to .225/.317/.282 with runners on base.

The last thing to watch for is how quickly Pirates hitters figure him out after they see him once. On the season, opponents are batting .263 first time against Gusto but it bumps to .315 second time around and .333 the third time they see him. 

Figure out what he has working early in the at-bat, decide what you need to look for and be ready to attack them second time around. The team can’t put up another zero today with a much more foreboding opposing starter waiting to face them tomorrow.

Starter Spotlight: Culling McCullers

6-3-2025 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

Back home in Pittsburgh after a solid road trip as the Pirates welcome the Astros and veteran starter Lance McCullers Jr., who is looking to get back to normal after missing more than two full seasons.

Injuries have plagued the Houston starter who had Tommy John Surgery in 2018 – which cost him the entire 2019 campaign – but had multiple setbacks after a right flexor strain suffered in 2022 delayed the start to his season and eventually resulted in needing surgery to repair the following summer.

As a result, McCullers has pitched just 66 regular season innings since the start of 2022 and enters play today with a 5.89 ERA over his first 5 games started this season – though most of that damage came in 0.1 innings of work against the Reds on May 10, where he allowed 7 earned runs off 3 hits, 3 walks and a hit batter.

Over his last full season of work in 2021, McCullers posted a 13-5 record with a 3.16 ERA en route to a 7th place finish in the Cy Young Award voting.

McCullers has historically been a ground-ball specialist, peaking at a 61.3% in 2017, but has retooled his pitch mix as he has switched from a primary sinker/slider/curve mix in 2021 to a more diverse arsenal so far in 2025.

In addition, McCullers has lowered his arm angle from 31 degrees in ‘21 to 26 degrees this season, creating a cutting movement that drops away from righties and runs in on lefties with great effectiveness.

McCullers has been working the changeup/knuckle-curve/slider mix against lefties with the curve being especially effective with a .077 oBA and a 57.7% whiff rate

Against right handed hitters, he’s mainly gone with his slider and sinker to fairly poor results as opposing righty hitters are posting a  .471 wOBA against the slider and .531 against his sinker.

Overall, righties have fared much better than lefties against McCullers with over 200 points higher batting average and 350 points higher slugging. And that is skewed a bit more in this small sample but righties throughout his career have been better at hitting McCullers with a .712 OPS over 1,612 plate appearances compared to .632 for lefties in 1,496 trips to the plate.

It would run divergent to traditional strategy but it would likely be beneficial for Kelly to push a righty-heavy lineup and cull out the elevated slider/sinker combo, which provides the best chance for this team keeping McCullers in check.

Series Preview: Houston Astros (32-27) at Pittsburgh Pirates (22-38)

6-3-2025 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

While the Pirates and Astros don’t face off nearly as often as they did when Houston was still part of the National League Central Division, there’s still the undertones of rivalry among the two teams who have faced off 715 times previously with the Pirates claiming victory in 369 of those matchups.

Injuries have hampered the Astros on both sides of the ball as they have six starting pitchers and five outfielders (including perennial MVP contender, Yordan Alvarez) on the Injured List. In addition to their injury woes, the Astros have also seen underperformance from newly-minted left fielder Jose Altuve and main offseason signing Christian Walker (both -0.4 bWAR).

Despite the odds, the Astros continue to compete as they are just half a game back in the competitive American League West and, while the Pirates are perhaps a bit further back than that in the NL Central, they have some favorable matchups in the series that will be fun to watch.

6/3

Astros: Lance McCullers Jr. 0-1, 18.1 IP, 5.89 ERA, 26 Ks/11 walks, 1.69 WHIP

Pirates: Paul Skenes 4-5, 75.1 IP, 2.15 ERA, 77 Ks/ 18 walks, 0.92 WHIP

6/4

Astros: Ryan Gusto 3-2, 39 IP, 4.62 ERA, 42 Ks/19 walks, 1.56 WHIP

Pirates: Mike Burrows 0-1, 8.1 IP, 8.64 ERA, 5 Ks/4 walks, 1.56 WHIP

6/5

Astros: Framber Valdez 5-4, 78 IP, 3.12 ERA, 73 Ks/24 walks, 1.06 WHIP

Pirates: Mitch Keller 1-7, 70 IP, 3.72 ERA, 56 Ks/19 walks, 1.26 WHIP

Astros: Jeremy Peña – After earning a World Series MVP in his rookie season, expectations were sky-high for the Astros shortstop following the 2022 campaign where he posted a 5.0 bWAR with 22 home runs over 136 games. Unfortunately, while he posted strong follow-up seasons (3.9 bWAR in 2023 and 4.1 bWAR in 2024), the power dropped precipitously with a sub-.400 slugging percentage each year. This season, however, the successor to Carlos Correa has refound his power stroke as he has hit 9 home runs including 3 in just the last week. And he’s doing this while playing plus defense at a premium position (4 outs above average/8 defensive runs saved) and without sacrificing his batting average as he is hitting .309 on the season and has just a 13.6% strikeout rate.

Pirates: Andrew McCutchen – Continuing to defy Father Time, Cutch has been on a tear over the last two weeks as he secured at least one hit in 9 of his last 10 games while slashing .351/.467/.568 over than span. His recent milestone home run with the Pirates further cemented his legacy to this franchise but that hasn’t – and won’t – stop him from continuing to produce day-in and day-out.

Astros: Isaac Paredes – Over his last six games, Paredes has just one hit (a single) while striking out six times and only walking once. He had a strong start to his Astros tenure with 11 home runs over his first 219 plate appearances after notching 19 through 641 times to the plate last season between Tampa and Chicago and has been prone to prolonged slumps and surges so it would behoove the Pirates to keep his bat ice cold for a few more days, at least.

Pirates: Ke’Bryan Hayes – I hate to pile on Ke and he did have two hits this past series which drove in runs but he also had an 0-for-4 night with 4 strikeouts so it’s been a rough road for him. Dating back to May 16th, Hayes is batting .125 with only one extra base hit over 62 trips to the dish. He is still providing value with the glove but even that is to a lesser extent as his 5 Defensive Runs Saved this season ranks 4th in MLB among third basemen.

Astros: Spencer Arighetti, Ronel Blanco, J.P. France, Luis Garcia, Cristian Javier, Hayden Wesneski, Yordan Alvarez, Zach Dezenzo, Pedro Leon, Chas McCormick, Taylor Trammell

Pirates: Colin Holderman, Jared Jones, Justin Lawrence, Tim Mayza, Dauri Moreta, Joey Bart, Nick Gonzales, Enmanuel Valdez

Notes

  • With the recent move to DFA reliever Tanner Rainey, there is now an opening on the active roster, which could clear the way for Dauri Moreta to return this week. Additionally, Nick Gonzales is similarly close to returning to the team as well.
  • Most teams have a better offense at home than on the road but no one has a higher variance than the Astros who have a .761 OPS as a team at home (8th highest in MLB) compared to a .646 road OPS (5th lowest).
  • The Astros relievers have a combined 3.53 ERA on the season, led by a bounce-back season from closer Josh Hader, who is 15-for-15 in save opportunities this year with a 1.44 ERA over 25 innings and setup man Bryan Abreu who – outside of two games against the Mariners this season – has been nearly untouchable. The Pirates struggled with the late-game play against the Padres and the Astros bullpen is comparable in that department.

Gary’s Five Pirates Thoughts – Coming Home Stronger for Once

6-2-25 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on X

The Pirates went 3-3 in their trip out West to face the Diamondbacks and Padres. They held their own in these series, and even had a legitimate chance to win all 6 games, but there is still work to do to take this team from competitive to winning more series like these.

Lets Go!

1. Andrew McCutchen

Andrew is now tied with Roberto Clemente with 240 Homeruns, good for 3rd on the list of all time Pirates. Roberto is a lot more than a homerun hitter, but for this stat, do keep in mind, Clemente had almost 3500 more at bats than Cutch as a Pirate.

McCutchen also just passed Arky Vaughan for sole possession of 9th place all time for hits as a Pirate, a spot he’ll remain in as the next one is Bill Mazeroski with 2016. Cutch currently has 1713.

Runs is another category Cutch could move up on. He currently is in 10th with 953, Tommy Leach holds down 9 with 1009 and then Fred Clarke in 8th with 1015. Cutch could pass both of these before he’s done.

How about RBI? Cutch is 7th with 836, just 17 shy of Bill Mazeroski for 6th all time and he’ll go no farther since Paul Waner at 1177 is holding down the 5th spot.

Walks, Cutch has 845, good for 5th all time and he could if he plays long enough wind up number 1 as Willie Stargell leads the pack with 937. He’s just 32 behind Honus Wagner for 4th.

This one will roll, as Andrew does. But right now he has a career OPS as a Pirate of .848, one point above the Cobra a couple points behind Honus Wagner. This one could change wildly though.

Doubles you ask? 338, good for 7th, he’d need to hit 33 to match Pie Traynor and 38 to tie Max Carey for 5th all time. A lot to ask from a guy who has to hit doubles nowadays instead of leg them out.

This one is important if only for context. Remember all the places we put Cutch when we talked through this list, then consider he’s 9th all time for at bats as a Pirate and he’ll never go higher as Lloyd Waner is 8th with 7,256, that’s a full 1,211 at bats and unless they allow exoskeleton suits, Cutch ain’t getting 1,211 more at bats. Point is, he’s near the top of a lot of these lists, while having far fewer at bats.

Is Andrew HOF bound? Honestly, the answer here is never going to be clear cut in either direction. I can show you players with less resume who made it, and I can show you guys with more who didn’t. All I know is he’s the best player I’ve seen here since Barry Bonds, and if the Pirates have a HOF player to push from recent versions of the roster it’s Cutch or Kendall and I’d have Cutch above Jason.

Cutch isn’t playing like a nostalgia piece, and until such a time as I feel he is I hope to keep watching him adding to these numbers right here in his adopted home town.

2. June Reynolds Has Arrived

In his career, Bryan Reynolds has .340 Batting Average in the month of June. That’s 151 hits, 23 Dingers, 72 RBI and 69 runs scored in 119 games.

The calendar has just flipped to June, and Reynolds is already on a tear. In his last 15 games he’s hit .364. He’s raised his batting average on the season 43 points in that span.

This is reality for Reynolds. Struggle bus early, on complete fire for the middle of the season, and the end is hit or miss.

Thing is, Reynolds is a guy who needs the struggle to experience the heights he gets to. He may look lost when he’s going through it, but much like Tony Stark, he’s observing and learning from his mistakes and failures. Slowly perfecting his approach to attack anything a pitcher can throw at him.

One of the most impressive things about Bryan is how he faces a new attack just about every season, and it can look like his absolute kryptonite too, you know, until he cracks the code and kills everyone trying to get him out the way they did the first couple months.

I’m not breaking news by telling you how important Reynolds is to any success for this team. And I still contend, the best Bryan Reynolds is a player who doesn’t need to be the best player on his team. He will be at times of course, but if they need him to be, it’s not a good recipe for the team’s success or his for that matter.

These Summer numbers though, they’re proven out to the point of expectation. You can and should expect him to catch fire by June, every year, like clockwork and unfortunately he’s almost always going to struggle for the first couple months.

This, more than any other factor is why Reynolds can’t be your “best” player. If he is, you’ll almost always have a bad record early on.

3. Don’t Destroy What’s Good Trying to Fix What’s Bad

This is a simple statement, and on the surface, I bet 90% of you absolutely agree with the sentiment.

Unfortunately, in practice it’s harder than this statement makes it sound.

In many ways it’s like the Doctor’s principles that include that they emphasize the importance of patient well-being and the doctor’s duty to do no harm. 

Treating a disease can call for actively harming another part of a patient, and the same can be true for a baseball team, but not if it’s permanent damage.

On a large scale, this is best exemplified by the concept that the Pirates have to trade pitching for hitting. And before I start going down this road, please, actually read what I say, I’m not advocating that they sit on their hands, I’m simply saying, think first, and make sure it’s the right move or set of moves before you irreparably harm what you do have going for you.

Something the Pirates do poorly, especially in this regime is they identify options, meaning a player or group of players who rightly could fill a role. Far too often, this player or mix of players doesn’t have a single member that screams can’t miss. Not that can’t miss often actually exists, but suffice to say they tend to not have a really good bet in the bunch.

Options don’t equal answers, at least not nearly enough, and certainly not here.

So while I as a fan can look at Carmen Mlodzinski, Braxton Ashcraft, Mike Burrows, Bubba Chandler, Thomas Harrington, Hunter Barco and whomever else you want to include in your list of unrealized starting rotation options and think man that’s a lot of arms, some of them gotta work out right?

A team that intends to win in 2026 should probably be a bit more sure than that.

There are two real ways to help yourself make a good decision. One, get them up to the Major League level and get the process started, and two, push through what could simply be a rookie learning the tough lessons you know they have to get through.

Here’s the Pirates biggest problem as it comes to this, they don’t have more than one clearly open spot in the rotation. They will have 2 when they decide to move on from Andrew Heaney.

Moving Heaney is an easy call, he’s a free agent in 2026 and this team has absolutely no investigation to do with him. He does what he does, and he does it well, more importantly, he does it the way he does it almost every season he pitches.

He’s also not going to return an immediately helpful bat. More likely a lottery ticket that hopefully helps the team later if at all.

Moving something for a bat that helps today, well, that’s going to take something more bold.

Let’s not let this get derailed by worrying about which GM will do it. In my mind, they’ve got plenty of players on expiring contracts they can deal at the deadline and this larger scale stuff, can just wait for the offseason.

The main guys that come up in these discussions are Bailey Falter and Mitch Keller.

Bailey has 3 more years of arbitration. He makes a little over 2 million this year and next year if he keeps pitching like this, he’ll get somewhere in the neighborhood of 5-6 million, still a bargain. Now, on the other hand, Bailey before this season really had 1 or 1.5 pitches. Now with the urging of Brent Strom he’s using more pitches and it’s made his already hard to see fastball that much harder to identify and hit.

In other words, the Bailey of last year was good, and with 4 years of team control, entirely tradeable, but limited. This year, this Bailey, well, he’s more than that. To a degree, his biggest reason for success, his 4-seam fastball is still his best pitch, and to the league, the reason (extension) is still living in the world of parlor trick as it comes to scouting.

All that said, he has a ton more value now than he did when he struggled in 2023 after being acquired. He’s a better pitcher with more value than the guy none of us wanted in our rotation in 2024. And as we sit here in 2025, he’s a lot more than a guy you just trade like he’s as replaceable as JT Brubaker was.

He’s also a guy who everything could change for if he loses even an inch of that 99th percentile extension figure. This WILL happen with age and at 28 you shouldn’t be all that concerned yet, in fact, he’ll be through his team control before you get there.

The last thing here, he’s a lefty. The Pirates have two internal options to take that over, Barco and Anthony Solometo. Barco is close to being ready, Solometo not so much.

The Pirates have done well getting veteran lefty help for their rotation too, so that probably makes it a bit less scary.

He costs very little, he has 3 full seasons of team control, he’s at the top of his game and getting better, he’s a low injury risk because he doesn’t throw the ball all that hard and…

He’s also not a guy who ANYONE will consider the type of acquisition that takes you through the playoffs, in fact, he might struggle to get a start in a series depending on where he goes.

For that reason, I don’t see this as a deadline goldmine. I see it as an offseason move where teams are more actively carving out their innings schedules and place value in the steadiness of a guy like this. In other words, teams won’t look for him to carry the team, they’ll just look for him to eat innings capably and affordably for years to come.

After this year, that team control aspect will decrease. That can to a degree be countered by continued improvement, but at some point it’s a zero sum game. One side is pulling down on your value, the other up.

The sweet spot if you’re not going to extend him, is to deal him after this season or after next. I think that’s when you see more MLB talent available in return, and I think that’s when he’s seen in the best light.

Again, all those arms coming, great, maybe you do have plenty to move him, but Bailey Falter was acquired for one player with very little MLB experience, he’s performed better than any pitcher this GM has brought in short of Paul Skenes and the ONLY hope this team has of playing baseball that matters is if this rotation is untouchable.

It warrants thought. And if nothing else, it requires getting exactly what you want, not close, exactly. If you trade Falter, you better get back a completely vetted MLB bat with almost the same amount of team control left.

This won’t be a star, but it could be a guy a lot like IKF or even a Spencer Horwitz type, although he’s not as vetted as I’d prefer.

It’s not time for names. I’ll do that at some point but we aren’t there yet. I have some I like, but honestly I’d like to see their original teams do some of the hard work I just talked about the Pirates need to do with some of their pitching.

We’ll talk about Keller another time, but suffice to say, this is the type of discussion I have with myself before I start crowing about trading a guy and when.

This isn’t the Pirates way, at least it hasn’t been, but maybe it’s better for THIS team, with Paul Skenes on it to keep the player you know, and know you have affordably for 3 more years than to trade him and replace him with someone you hope can get where he was at some point. Then again, if Hunter Barco is close to what he looks like, maybe you simply have to take a leap.

4. Is the Bullpen Bad?

Well, it’s not great that’s for sure.

I hate looking at overall bullpen numbers in season. Let me explain, see the numbers at this point, or really any point in the season, they reflect every Tom, Dick and Harry they’ve used.

Everyone. Even the guy who comes up and throws 4 innings in garbage time, gives up 8 runs and gets shipped back out or DFA’d.

In other words, no matter when you look at the number, the current construction of the pen is being misrepresented.

I could add up the numbers from just this current set up, but some guys have been here for a week, others a victim of this team misusing Joey Wentz as a fireman.

The numbers aren’t wrong, and no matter what has happened in your pen, you should always stack it against what others have done, after all, they have all these same problems.

So right now the Pirates have the league’s 22nd ranked bullpen by ERA. And they’ve given up the 19th fewest earned runs with 100.

I say all of that just to explain a little about how I see bullpens. I see them as living organisms.

They evolve and they change and you have to absorb bad nights and not get fooled by especially great outings and more than anything, you have to build flexibility, maintain optionability if that’s a word, and learn to ride what’s working.

It’s hard, and in today’s game, it quite literally wins championships. Just ask the Dodgers who spend a fortune to build a juggernaut but win the Series because they put together a bullpen that gelled and carried the team through the playoffs with an absolutely decimated starting rotation.

So do the Pirates have a bad bullpen? Well, yeah, but for me, it’s less about the numbers and more about the construction. They built an IKEA table, had a bag of bolts left over and still invited the in-laws over for dinner.

Some of it their fault, some of it injury related, but mostly, just not enough hammers.

The Pirates have one reliever maybe 2 who you could truly consider a hammer. He’ll get the out or the Strike Out when you have to have it. Dennis Santana and David Bednar. I could argue Justin Lawrence was becoming one but I digress, it’s about the pen right now right?

Late and close, the Pirates have divided their labor like this, and again this is guys currently on the roster.

Dennis Santana has gotten 11 IP
David Bednar has gotten 9.1 IP
Caleb Ferguson has gotten 11.1 IP
Chase Shugart has gotten 6.2 IP

Now, before I continue, these are all guys who’ve largely done well in these situations, and they are the guys they’ve used most. Chase has probably snuck into this because as he covered a couple innings the Pirates made the game close, but we’ve also seen them try him in the 7th and I’d consider that late.

This next group are the guys they will use if they have a rest problem, and I have to say, while the team went 3-3 on the road trip, they were in almost all of those games, and were left to cover the 7th through the 9th most nights. So that group up there got used. And tired.

Ryan Borucki has gotten 4.2 IP
Joey Wentz has gotten 4.2 IP
Tanner Rainey has gotten 3.1 IP (Just DFA’d today)
Braxton Ashcraft is hard to figure, he finished a game, but it wasn’t close, and he got into yesterday’s game for an inning, and I think I’d count that one, so lets go with 1 IP

So out of these 4, you could probably talk yourself into Borucki getting a look but he also happens to be the team’s best fireman, so he is just by nature going to get used earlier at times.

Wentz and Rainey have probably shown me enough. Wentz just isn’t that good, but if you’re going to keep him, never bring him in with runners on, not even 1. Rainey has one interesting pitch, and when he can’t land it he’s Kyle Crick. Just an NRI, and an easy bye.

Ashcraft, I hate just letting a guy have a spot in the pen and essentially committing to using them once a week as an expected long man. First, if Burrows does well, Ashcraft won’t pitch much. If he doesn’t, Ashcraft could go for a while but if the game tightens up they’ll pull him. Third, they make the pen intentionally short. Not to mention this guy is capable of really helping in the pen, maybe even in the Hammer category.

The bullpen options in the minors that are on the 40-man are Carmen Mlodzinski, who they’re still having start, and to his credit, he’s actually doing some work in AAA that show no signs of moving in the ramp down direction. He could really help, but he actually might be something of a starter too. Truly.

Kyle Nicolas has struggled, but has reversed course as of late. 14.1 IP and a 4.40 ERA, but after how he started, trust me, the 4.40 ERA is a good mark. He showed last year he could be a good piece, but right now, I might want to hold off, just to make sure it’s ironed out, 10 walks in 14.1 IP is not what you want to see up here. The K’s are great, but if you walk that many, guys hit .271 off you and you strike out 25 of the 43 you’ve faced, it’s just close to a good recipe. Walks have to decrease or hits need to nosedive then you’ve got something.

Isaac Mattson hasn’t been down long enough unless there’s an injury.

Holderman has a weird thumb thing that sounds like it’s recurring. IL for a while more.

Dauri Moreta could be close to returning. He’s on a rehab assignment, and man if he’s himself what a kick in the ass that would be. (Could be as early as tomorrow and could be the guy who replaces Rainey and be that missing hammer)

At some point, this team will have to embrace some of these starters have to at least for now transition to the pen. That’s where the talent is, and this rotation deserves a good pen, almost as much as they deserve a competent offense.

A true long man in today’s game is solely an insurance arm for a bad start. When you have one spot in your rotation that you “expect” it, or “prepare” for it, then, it’s a hole in the bullpen. Since baseball went to the ghost runner in extras, a traditional long man has no real role, or is often miscast, such as Joey Wentz.

So is it bad, right now, I hate the mix and I don’t trust it. Get me another hammer I can trust. Another fireman from the right side. I like it a lot better. Moreta could be both.

If it stays bad, their stubbornness with the starting depth will be the culprit.

5. Bucs Baseball is Fun to Watch Again

Say what you will about the holes this team still very much so has, you’re right about all of it, but one thing is very true this past few weeks, they’re playing a better, and more fun brand of baseball.

Credit who you like, Don Kelly certainly gets his share, the entire mood is different in the dugout, but the players rightly should get credit for how they started, and how they’re playing now.

I’d honestly think if all it took was a different guy saying go get ’em boys was all it took, that speaks worse to the players than the coaching.

Functionally, he is pushing different buttons, not completely from Mars type stuff or anything, but different enough that it’s noticeable. And a lot of it has worked.

He’s more passionate, and he tends to walk up and down the dugout a hell of a lot more rather than sending lieutenants to deliver a message he’s more hands on. Less gets lost in translation that way, even if he’s speaking directly to someone who speaks broken English at best in their face almost pushing the translator to the side a bit. Like, look kid, you may not get every word but you’re going to see how I felt about it when I said it, even if you literally hear what I said after I walk away.

So there is something to Donny Ball if you will.

But if you ask me, it’s because Oneil Cruz and Bryan Reynolds are hitting. Yeah, I know other guys are too, but those two alone make a whole lot of things possible that simply aren’t if they aren’t.

Cutch is killing it, Frazier looks like he did in the build up to his All Star season the way he’s swinging it lately, I mean if THIS is the Frazier I thought even had a death rattle left I probably don’t make the fuss I did about the signing.

Davis had a couple really good games, and continues to shine defensively.

Isaiah Kiner-Falefa has truly been, for the player he is, tremendous. He’s hitting .303, yes, he doesn’t hit for power, no, he’s not playing his best position, but he’s contributing, and consistently so. I’d love to see them put him in the 2 hole. Great guy to have following Cruz who might steal and turn a single into a run, and he’ll get the opportunity to steal because IKF sees a shit ton of pitches not to get to scientific on you.

In fact, I’m having so much fun watching right now, let me take a crack at my everyday lineup.

1 CF Oneil Cruz (L)
2 SS Isiah Kiner-Falefa (R)
3 RF Bryan Reynolds (S)
4 DH Andrew McCutchen (R)
5 1B Spencer Horwitz (L)
6 LF Alexander Canario (R)
7 2B Adam Frazier (L)
8 C Henry Davis (R)
9 3B Ke’Bryan Hayes (R)

I use everyday lightly of course, but this is my starting lineup and I make changes from here. It’s old school, but reflects a team that doesn’t have the power to wait for 3 run homers to score runs. IKF becomes the get the guy over or at least get someone on for the meat of our order at all costs guy. The very thing he does no matter where you put him. I just want to see if we can’t turn a leadoff walk to Cruz into a run a hell of a lot more often.

This shouldn’t be set in stone, but close. Until they call someone up.

Hayes hits like a 9 hole hitter in every way. I really have no desire to see him 5-7 until he starts really doing something. I should say if he really starts doing something. Then, if you want to move him up, have at it, but until then…

Still, it’s been more fun and there’s been more reward for good pitching.

Not enough of course, but more and if nothing else, I feel like they’re playing like a .500 team, and that’s what I expected, the hole they dug is probably too deep but they currently are playing .500 ball.

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Starter Spotlight: Cut Up Randy

6-1-2025 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

With the first two months of the season in the books, the Pirates are eager to cut their losses and look forward to the next chapter of the year. Can they continue their recent surge of offense to complement the strong pitching they’ve been running out lately? They will be facing Randy Vasquez in the finale today, who enters with a 3-4 record and a 3.58 ERA through 11 games this season.

The third-year starter, who came over to San Diego as part of the return for Juan Soto trade with the Yankees, likely hopes he can continue his May magic and avoid a June swoon.

Over the last month, Vasquez tossed 28 innings across 5 starts with 22 strikeouts to 8 walks and a 2.89 ERA on the month. Granted, that comes with an astonishing 92.9% strand rate so he’s either terrific under pressure, or he’s due for the pendulum to swing the other way.

His strong May began with his game against the Bucs (preview here) where he allowed just one run through 5 innings of work with 6 hits and 5 walks to only 3 strikeouts.

While he has a variety of pitches, Vasquez mainly works a fastball-heavy arsenal, tossing his low-90s cutter/sinker/4-seam combination make up ~60% of his total pitch mix, and he’s leaned on these offerings even more heavily as of late, averaging 68% usage over his last four games.

He’ll use the cutter and 4-seam primarily against lefties while adding in his curve and changeup to mix speeds and eye level. Lefties should key in on the cutter with its 31.4% usage as they are batting .333 and slugging .556 against the offering.

They have also effectively neutralized his changeup as opponents are posting a 1.100 OPS against the offering as Vasquez struggles to disguise the pitch, allowing opponents to easily pounce when it’s up in the zone.

Right-handed hitters have had more difficulty finding success against the Padre pitcher, batting .116 against his sinker (31.4%) and .183 against his sweeper (25.4%) but have also had success against his cutter (26.1%), batting .316 against the offering.

Despite the fastball-heavy usage, Vasquez doesn’t get high exit velocity numbers. Bucs bats will need to hold to the heat and try to flip some balls into outfield gaps. Stay on the cutter and be ready to do some damage.

The Pirates are Playing Better Baseball, Where Does 2025 Go From Here?

5-31-25 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on X

It’s the last day of May.

A time that I arbitrarily like to look at what’s been, where we are and where it’s headed. By this time, you’ve seen a couple months of baseball, enough to really make some judgements on things.

Don’t get me wrong, you don’t need 2 months to decide anything, and you as a fan get to make up your own mind about when you’ve seen enough.

Personally, I like to see a solid 150 at bats, or 60-70 innings from a stater, and those marks tend to start coming to life around now in a season.

But we’ve had a rather large disruption in our season already, the firing of Derek Shelton. The team performed a certain way under him, and they’re performing a certain way under Don Kelly.

Kelly has also had the benefit of Reynolds turning things around, but he lost Cruz for a week too. He’s had Horwitz, Shelton had Valdez.

Point is, it’s probably not fair to just say, welp, Donnie got ’em playin’ like a team. I think there’s some truth to that, but he’s also got better play on a lot of fronts, and it’s not like someone just told the guys it’s ok to hustle.

So let’s look at where we are, and how the season could play out under some very specific discussion buckets.

The Don Kelly Difference

First, is there one? I personally think so, it’s just surface level observational stuff for me really at this point, but I see more focus in general. I see more in the moment decisions that don’t exactly line up with what the math would have you decide.

I’ve seen more of an emphasis on stringing together opportunity for youngsters, a real shot at seeing what a player could do, I mean scratch that, it’s more accurate to say the fair shake they give all these scrub pickups like Tommy Pham or Rowdy Tellez, now is being given to younger players.

It doesn’t always have to be what Kelly has done with Canario either, sure he’s simply turned him into the just about every day starter in Left Field, but the small changes he started making with how he used Henry started to get him going before Joey Bart hit the IL and opened a spot. Making Henry the dude for Paul Skenes and Mitch Keller ensured him two back to back starts every week and helped him put less stress on the 3 cracks he’d get in a week before.

There’s a fire in Don Kelly and slowly but surely you can see it sweeping over the team, not just last night’s outburst by seemingly everyone in black and gold toward the AAA call up umpire, but certainly illustrated well by how the night played out.

There’s more swagger, and more than that, a clear belief that they need to earn more. Andrew McCutchen did a great job of illustrating that last night too. I’m not sure I feel the team is purposefully robbed of calls, but he’s right about earning calls. If a pitcher is always around the plate, they’ll get more calls, and if a team is going really good, I am convinced officials somehow feel the vibe and tend to lean to the side of most everything they do being a safer bet to be right.

The point is, Don Kelly is doing at least on the surface a better job with just about all the same pieces to move around the board.

The next big question is, can he survive a GM change, the best thing I can tell you here is, yeah. Bob Nutting doesn’t just like him, he thinks he’s the right guy for the job, and I don’t think he’ll change his mind for a new GM hire, at least without making him or her try it for a season.

I can honestly and unironically say, the Don Kelly product has been more fun to watch than the Derek Shelton product, and a big part of me doesn’t care if it’s Don’s doing or not.

Improved Offense

In April, the Pirates hit .236, in May .226
In April, the Bucs hit 20 Homeruns and in May only 17.

I can go on.

April they scored 91 runs, and in May 79.

So, maybe my assumption that the offense is looking better, is, well, bunk.

Or, maybe, more accurately, it really just took a turn a couple weeks ago.

In the past 15 games the Pirates have scored 46 of those 79 runs. So leaves 25 for the first roughly 15 of the month.

Hey, that smells like marginal and recent uptick, but nowhere near enough to pretend they’ve really turned things around.

I’m afraid I need to see much more, and it needs to improve even more if it’s truly to support the pitching they’ve gotten.

A -61 Run Differential this early in the season is brutal especially when your team has given up the 10th fewest Earned Runs in baseball at 228.

There is still room for better than they’ve done, even with this roster and the trend is certainly positive, but they’ll need to take a rather sizable jump to balance the scales and that’s just to make them a lot more competitive, not climb back into anything.

Ch-ch-ch-changes

Much like a butterfly, it’s never uglier than before it’s metamorphosis.

That’s what you have to hope we’re watching this year.

One criticism I’ve had of Ben Cherington throughout the years has been his seeming unwillingness to really see what young players had in lieu of playing completely proven out veterans or worse veterans with severely depleted skills.

Hell, he even placed more emphasis on giving shots to waiver claims than his own internal prospects.

Don’t get me wrong, Will Craig, Travis Swaggerty, and guys like that weren’t exactly thrilling, but the Pirates had absolutely nothing in the outfield, and I find it hard to believe we couldn’t have made an effort to just see what 50 games of Travis might look like? Defensively, it certainly would have been ok, and hell I had to watch Dyson try to hold on for half a season instead.

Just sayin’.

And probably focused on it too much but it was bugging me. The point is his unwillingness to start the hard work of on boarding youngsters when the record was supposed to be bad has created a team with a lot of long in the tooth prospects standing at the bottom of a hill looking up at a big task. A task he simply refuses to let begin even as he’s watched and pushed the pitching side along.

This is a long winded way of saying the team didn’t come together in part because the vast majority of Cherington’s draft capital has gone to pitching, and in part because he and his development team have done precious little with the few hitters they did select. Even when he has brought in even interesting talent, it’s been loathed to be used. This changed for me when Don Kelly decided to use Alexander Canario in his first lineup and then played him continuously.

Sure, it’s easy to call out when it works, but even if it doesn’t, you can turn guys who even show flashes of something like Rodolfo Castro into a starting lefty for a few years. So…do more of that. See what the hell you have in Peguero ya know?

This club needs to do better at on boarding, and frankly, they need to have better talent to do so with, that’s kinda why we need a better GM.

That said, this team started ugly and no matter how ugly it might get, they need to make this the cocoon season. Sell off what you’re going to sell off. Do it whenever.

It’s going to make Don Kelly’s job harder, and the team might wind up looking worse, but hopefully its heading in the right direction by the end.

Meaning, as you replace guys like Pham and Isiah Kiner-Falefa and Adam Frazier, and you start infusing Nick Yorke, Nick Gonzales, maybe Peggy, who knows, you hope that the ship doesn’t take on too much water and Kelly can keep the nose pointed up as they go along hopefully a new GM has enough to work with to make a go of it next year.

In some ways, what’s done is done. The start was brutal, the team seems to have caught it’s balance under a new coach and improved performance coming along with some health. That’s where it is right now, the more answers this team forces themselves to answer in 2025, the fewer they need to in 2026.

More money, sure. But better choices with money too. Fill one hole well as opposed to patching 3 poorly.

2025 still has a lot to stay interested in, they are playing better baseball, but a win at this point might be playing .500 ball from here on out.

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