Can JT Brubaker Take the Next Step?

4-2-22 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

Persevere, adapt, execute.

Three things that JT Brubaker has had to learn to do in order to reach the major leagues, now he has to again adapt to the challenge the league has presented him.

JT entered 2020 fresh off a disappointing 2019 that saw him only throw 27.2 innings between AAA and rehab in Single A. As our own Craig Toth has documented in this space, desperation for pitching help led the Pirates braintrust at the time try to accelerate his recovery, costing him months.

To his credit, he came to camp strong and took advantage of a rebuilding roster to take hold of a spot in the rotation with the big club and left that shortened season as one of the team’s few bright spots.

As we moved into 2021, we wanted to see more and he obliged by throwing more innings than anyone else on the team, 124.1 to be precise. He hadn’t thrown more than 47.1 since 2018 and visibly wore down as the season progressed.

An admirable achievement by anyone’s standard, but it came with 28 homeruns. This of course made his numbers devolve into poor, potentially even put himself right back in fighting for his spot territory.

We in Pittsburgh knew he was safe, we’ve been following the Pirates and this slow burn rebuild long enough to know replacing a cheap controllable pitcher who has a proven record of eating innings and fighting through fatigue was going to almost ensure he’d get another whack.

So, what caused the homerun issues? It’s never been a thing in his career coming up. For perspective JT only allowed 38 walks to go with his 28 homeruns, so it’s not like this is a guy not hitting most of the spots he wants to. His K/9 numbers of 9.3 were the highest he’s ever had in his career at any level, in fact nothing he did last year lines up with a career high, by far mind you, HR/9 of 2.

Pundits and folks like me put forward that he was just tired, but the homeruns weren’t so disproportionately toward the end of the season for that to be the case. Spin rate was brought up with all the sticky stuff discussion last season, nope, his numbers actually ticked up a bit in that regard.

As Pirates fans the next logical reason was of course geared toward the club forcing him to pitch to contact, but that ignores that this regime doesn’t preach from the same pulpit, and again, his K/9 numbers were the highest he’s ever achieved.

So let’s dig in.

Brubaker has a 5 pitch mix including a slider, curve, changeup, sinker and 4 seam fastball and he throws all of them, least of which is the changeup at around 6% of his pitches.

The curveball is in the 89th percentile in the league for spin rate and surrendered only 2 homeruns.

He’s getting beaten on the slider, sinker and 4 seam fastball, especially with two strikes. It’s easy to see why when you look at the placement. Meaning hitters are pulling the trigger on velocity from JT, and his willingness to challenge hitters with his stuff works against him.

In other words, hitters know he isn’t going to walk them, they also know they’re most likely to get speed, and when they catch up with it, they’re making him pay.

His sinker tails, rather than sink and he often leaves it in a very hittable area. The Slider has nice shape to it, but he too often goes for the backdoor against lefties who are more than ready when it enters the zone. The 4 seam is almost exclusively thrown high in the zone and not quite high enough. In fact look at the launch angle disparity for when JT gets his pitches lower in the zone versus up.

It’s stark. coupled with his proclivity to chase the strikeout by attacking the zone, guys are teeing off.

There are adjustments to be had here. He could throw the offspeed stuff a bit more in these situations, or he could even start adjusting the placement of the hard stuff, but what he can’t do is continue to just give hitters exactly what they want and expect.

The reason for optimism with JT is his stuff being plenty good. Now it’s about becoming a pitcher, something Roberto Perez is notoriously good at doing with guys.

Being predictable is not a pitcher’s best friend. Take a look at what I’m talking about here. the only pitch that’s really well spread out is the sinker, and if we’re being blunt here, that’s not a pitch you really want to place where he has.

The curveball is rarely in the zone so it becomes easy to spit on. The 4 seam is almost exclusively up, the slider is primarily outer third, the changeup is rarely thrown but left up too much and the sinker/2 seam is all over the map.

His spin rate on curveballs is elite, but he renders them much less effective by rarely threatening the zone with the pitch. The 2 seam fastball could be effective, but needs to find it’s way to the bottom of the zone much more frequently and he needs to learn to use the 4 seam fastball to establish the zone.

These are basic things that I’m sure are on the Pirates radar, but knowing it, and trusting it are two very different things.

It’s clear Brubaker will get another shot to be in the starting rotation this season, he’s a good pitcher, with quality stuff and a proven track record for eating up innings. If he’s going to be successful this season I think we need to look for a few signs he’s changing up some things with his approach.

Either learn to challenge inside to lefties with the slider or eliminate the pitch. It’s just too close to his 4 seam in velocity and doesn’t move enough to pretend it doesn’t matter.

Challenge hitters by letting the curveball at least threaten the zone.

Increase the use of the changeup to keep hitters off balance.

Isolate the 2 seam to the bottom half of the zone .

Use the 4 seam in a more diversified fashion to stop hitters from recognizing the shape of everything else.

Now, that seems like alot, but it’s really not all that much. It’s not like learning a new pitch, it’s more about learning to use them to his advantage.

Brubaker has overcome challenges his entire career, 2022 will be his next, best chance to take a step from borderline MLB starter to MLB reliable starter.

Pirates Middle Infield Battle Is Heating Up

4-1-22 By Craig W. Toth (aka @BucsBasement on Twitter)

Back when Ben Cherington signed on to be GM of the Pittsburgh Pirates-and subsequently hired Derek Shelton to be the team’s manager-during the 2019-20 off-season, two of the positions that didn’t really need to be addressed, or questioned were those on either side of the keystone corner. Shortstop Kevin Newman was coming off of a rookie season in which he slashed .308/.358/.446 with 12 homers and accumulated 3.0 WAR; second only to ROY candidate Bryan Reynolds, who put up 4.2 WAR to finish 4th in the end of year competition. Meanwhile, former super utility player Adam Frazier had second base virtually locked down thanks to a solid .278 AVG and 10 homers with the bat; complimented by 6 DRS and 9 OAA with the glove.

Unfortunately for both men 2020 would be nothing short of a disaster. However, preceding this catastrophically bad season, former #5 Pirates Prospect Cole Tucker burst back on the scene by blasting three homers with a .957 OPS during the split Spring Training Schedule. Ultimately, and understandably it was not enough to unseat Newman or Frazier. Still, it forced Shelton and Cherington to find a place on the roster for him, with regular playing time in center and right field. Regrettably, this was also somewhat of debacle.

On the season Newman, Frazier and Tucker all found themselves hovering slightly above the Mendoza Line with averages of .224, .230 and .220 respectively. In the field Newman posted stats of -3 OAA and -3 DRS from the six spot, while Tucker landed at -1 OAA and -6 DRS in his new outfield role. Luckily, the trio did have a highlight as Frazier was nominated for Gold Gold Glove for the second straight season,

Due to such overall poor performances in the shortened 2020 season, Derek Shelton chose to hold an open competition at shortstop between Newman and Tucker to begin Spring Training; with Erik Gonzales added in, just like he had been since arriving from Cleveland prior to 2019. At second, Frazier would assume his normal spot, as trade rumors swirled around him once again.

Eventually both Gonzalez and Tucker would find themselves on the outside looking in-way outside in Tucker’s case-as Newman proceeded to bat .606 while not striking out once. Gonzalez hung around with a .326 AVG and a couple of homers, and Tucker saw himself optioned to Triple-A after struggling to hit .176. Prior to official start of the season it was determined that Tucker-along with Jared Olivia-would not travel north to the Alternate Site, but instead stay behind in Florida for “skill development” (aka hitting instruction) from then Triple-A Hitting Coach Jon Nunnally.

In the end Newman would crater with the bat; finishing the season with the worst wRC+(54) among all qualified hitters in MLB, Gonzales would be DFA’d, Frazier found himself in San Diego and Tucker made a slight push in the last month or so of the the season by batting .240 with a couple homers. To his credit Newman made a complete 180 on defense, earning a Gold Glove nomination along way; although no long term questions were really answered concerning the middle infield positions, as well as the super utility role that usually backs them both up.

As the shortened Spring Training finally started after the extended MLB Lockout, it felt as if there would be free-for-all to fill these three spots on the Opening Day Roster, with a minimum of 7 candidates-Kevin Newman, Cole Tucker, Oneil Cruz, Michael Chavis, Hoy Park, Rodolfo Castro and Diego Castillo-bunched together, fighting it out.

After a little over a week-and 13 at bats-Castro was dropped from the competition. Next up on the chopping block-in a fairly unpopular decision-was Oneil Cruz. On the surface Cruz performed well; with exit velocities that were pretty much unheard from anyone else on the Pirates roster and moonshot homers from anywhere in the zone. Nevertheless, for the purpose of this discussion, his is just another name crossed off the list.

Out of the remaining five players, Chavis is actually the only one that has truly underperformed. In 20 at bats-an extremely small sample size-he has struck out 7 times, managed only one extra base hit and is currently batting .150.

Kevin Newman on the other hand is back with his revamped swing, has a .313 AVG and a no doubt home run, Cole Tucker also has a new approach and a bulked up appearance-something that Gary broke down in detail yesterday-and Hoy Park has jumped right in after a COVID-19 diagnosis delayed his arrival. Of the three, Tucker has the slight edge as far as OPS, Tucker and Park each have a pair of homers and Newman leads in batting average; yet, the fifth and final player leads them all.

Thus far, Diego Castillo has mashed 4 homers, has a .364 AVG and a 1.326 OPS, while also making several outstanding plays in the field. According to manager Derek Shelton, Castillo is, “…in competition for a job on the club.” From all of the articles and tweets I’ve read on the subject, many feel he has more than earned this spot.

Now you have to add Josh VanMeter into the mix. Last evening-in a slightly perplexing move-the Pirates acquired the recently DFA’d VanMeter from the Arizona Diamond in exchange for a lottery ticket right handed pitcher, Listher Sosa. To clear space on the 40-man roster, Pittsburgh designated outfielder Jared Oliva for assignment; which wasn’t really all that much of a surprise, and was actually something I had previously written about. However, if I am being honest, I always thought that Oliva’s DFA would come at the expense of an additional arm for the rotation or bullpen, not another super utility player for the already crowded middle infield.

Which truthfully begs the question(s): 1) What exactly is VanMeter’s role with the Pirates? And, 2) Is there anything he can do, that any other player couldn’t?

Originally drafted by the San Diego Padres in the 5th Round of the 2013 MLB June Amateur Draft out of Norwell High School in Ossian, Indiana, VanMeter is probably more well known to Pirates Fans as the Cincinnati Reds utility man from the 2019 season; spending the majority of his time in the outfield, but also seeing action at his more natural infield spots. So, he’s an infielder by trade, that can also play a little outfield; a role that four out of the five guys left in Major League camp can-and have-filled in their professional careers, with Castillo as the lone infield specific utility man.

As far as I can tell, currently, this move truly makes little sense. Prior to last evening I was more than content rolling into the season with a version of Newman at SS, Tucker at 2B, Castillo backing them up and either Chavis or Park playing the super utility role on the bench. Not this is an ideal or finalized portion of the roster by any means, but at least I could logically work it out in my mind, considering the current options.

Be that as it may, this isn’t the situation the Pirates are left with at the moment. Instead, it is one that we will have to see work itself out. I just don’t know why, and I can’t exactly see how.

Can Cole Tucker Finally Emerge?

3-31-22 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

I’ve beat this kid up.

Early, often, and with no real off ramp for him figuring it out.

I loved the kid’s attitude, and personality. The speed and hustle, coupled with the genuine and obvious love of playing the game, but none of that on its own was ever going to be enough.

Then he goes out and gets himself a celebrity girlfriend and all anyone could talk about was how quickly she’d break up with him when he gets demoted. I guess he’s already proven us wrong on that front for now.

Here’s the point, I’d absolutely love to eat crow, and let’s just say I have the place setting laid out.

Before we get into what Tucker has done and why he might be coming around now, I think we would all benefit from truly wrapping our arms around the journey this kid has gone through with this organization. I don’t mean to use this as an excuse for why his development has taken so long, as much as illustrate just how meandering a journey can be.

Cole was drafted 24th overall in the first round by the Pirates in the 2014 MLB Anateur draft. A 17 year old athletic short stop, Tucker was expected to take a while, but was also seen as having a frame to build on, meaning his height had room to build on.

First of all, it’s not often you draft a 17 year old, finding talent that young is usually reserved for the international signing period, and let’s be completely honest here, domestic scouts aren’t used to looking for the same things international scouts are. Point is, this wasn’t a safe pick to say the least. If you want to call it a signability choice I’d be hard pressed to argue.

He’d start rookie ball almost immediately in 2014 and go up a level just about every year through 2019.

He never really performed. Batting average never really peaked, power never emerged, walks and strikeouts never flipped like you’d like to see, and more than anything, he just never filled out. He still looked like the skinny kid they drafted five years later, and the previous development system allowed him, no, forced him to progress all the way to MLB driven by perceived pedigree more than achievement.

When he was called up to MLB in 2019 because of an injury to Erik Gonzalez and Kevin Newman, it was evident that he was only using his arms to swing. He struck out 40 times in 159 at bats, and was easily overcome by returning players.

Fact is, he had done precious little with the bat to show he was ready for promotion, but the eminently likeable kid was still looked at as someone fans would want to see more of, and soon. Some even would blame his struggles on this early call up, ignoring entirely that all he did was continue what he had done in the system. It’s not like he got to MLB and became a train wreck in comparison, instead he just continued to not perform.

Enter 2020, new GM Ben Cherington and Derek Shelton decided Cole Tucker who had always been a short stop was now going to play Center field. It seemingly came out of nowhere, and it was being tried on the fly at the major league level. Ignore for a moment the bat still wasn’t playing, nothing was really done to improve that aspect of his game, I mean the team quite literally retained the hitting coach from the regime they completely replaced. He looked awful out there. Clearly had no clue tracking balls, instead relying on pure athleticism to get to everything and almost doing some real damage to himself running into the outfield wall to make a catch that for anyone with experience would have been routine or at least not dangerous. He never complained.

In 2021 he’d split time between AAA and MLB, still being asked to play some outfield and with the benefit of actual training and a switch to corner, started looking a bit more like he might just be able to handle the spot. The Pirates, still holding on to Rick Eckstein finally tried addressing the lack of oomph Cole had in his swing, and by the end of 2021, he started showing some positive signs that he might just be taking to it. Certainly not enough to pencil him in to the 26 man for 2022, but at least give himself a shot.

And here we are, Spring of 2022. A Spring that most people including me, saw as an ending to another sad Pirates draft history story as the likely outcome.

But wait, um, the kid looks a bit different.

Cole has finally added some bulk, specifically to his legs and more importantly, he’s using his lanky build to add power to his swing. He’s never going to be a guy who hits 30 homeruns, but he’s got speed and gap power if he’s swinging like this. He just looks different and Andy Haines seams to agree with him as the new hitting coach.

Tucker used to do what many observers called “the rock” in the batters box. A bad habit that robs a hitter of the ability to stay grounded and get leg muscles into the swing. Seeing that disappear this Spring has been wonderful, for a couple big reasons.

First, Cole is legitimately a great kid, exactly the type of player you’d want in your clubhouse. Second, it shows that the Pirates are truly working hard to develop ALL the talent they have, not just the prospects Ben Cherington brought in.

Look, nobody is blind here. Tucker at almost 26 years old and with serious talent coming quick hasn’t proven anything yet, but he’s also a guy who doesn’t even reach arbitration until 2024, so if he’s real, if he’s really figured it out, he benefits this team one way or another.

Good for Cole, and honestly good for this development team if it holds true.

Spring is Spring. We just watched Kevin Newman hit .600 last year and bomb the entire season. None of what we’ve seen from Tucker means he’s finally going to look like a first round pick, but it’s fair to say he’s earned another shot, one I sincerely doubted he’d get.

Again, my table setting is there Mr. Tucker, make me eat crow, I won’t even ask for salt.

Convince Me This Team Will Be Better Anytime Soon!

3-30-21 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

In a word, No.

That’s not my job.

I can tell you about who I feel comfortable believing will come up from the system, and when. I can probably talk about reasons to believe a GM would take a job like this if he didn’t know he’d be given the tools to succeed. I mean if you dig through this site at all you’ll find bits and pieces of this from Craig or I.

One thing you won’t find is a guarantee ANY of this will work.

There’s a reason for that folks, and I mean beyond the far too easy there are no guarantees in baseball fodder. How could I or anyone else tell you with a straight face to trust this team’s attempt will work when it’s literally only worked once in a small market (KC-2015), let alone in Pittsburgh, with this owner.

I can’t, we can’t.

Further, it’s not my job to help this team create fans, or to strengthen the resolve of their fanbase. I’m glad you read my stuff, happy you listen to my podcasts, but I’m not creating fans, players do that, winning does that, not my explanations of why they seemingly do the opposite of what would make you happy at every turn.

As soon as an outlet like this decides something like that is their job, and this applies for all potential outcomes, like overt failure, World Series certainty, blind optimism, hell bent negativity, it becomes impossible to objectively talk about what’s actually happening without destroying your narrative.

Having a narrative at all beyond simply trying to cover the team fairly is going to skew what’s done here, or anywhere.

In a given week, I’m probably called a Nutting shill 20 times and a Nutting hater 20 more. That’s good, it’s exactly what I’d expect. I’d of course prefer people see it as well rounded, but good or bad we live in an increasingly red pill/blue pill world where everything has an agenda.

So when something emotionally charged happens like yesterday with Oneil Cruz getting optioned to AAA, oh man does it ramp up.

Say something entirely true and reasonable like every team in baseball does this, and some just aren’t going to see that as anything other than caping for Nutting. Remind people that the kid legitimately does have to do some work on his feilding and you might as well tell them you personally went and Will Smith’d him across the face in front of his mom before telling him to stop sucking.

I’ve even written that I personally would have brought him North, while still mentioning that the defense isn’t just ‘a work in progress’ but instead really not good enough. I just happen to believe this team, where it is can afford to allow that development to happen at the MLB level just to get the bat involved.

None of this matters, because see I either have to say Nutting sucks and Cruz is a nailed on rookie of the year winner or Nutting rules and Cruz isn’t close to ready. That’s really the point, you aren’t ever going to get that here. Not from me, not from Craig, Ethan, Anthony, Jud, Joe, none of us are ever going to take the bait.

If you really want to have an interesting conversation about trying to convince people to stick by this team, perhaps you should focus on whose responsibility that really should be, the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Travis Williams, Ben Cherington, Bob Nutting, Derek Shelton, and anyone else whose name you bother to recognize need to convince you it’s worth sticking around, not me.

Just last week on the Pirates Fan Forum I said, why should I sit here and try to help the Pirates with their self inflicted PR problem?

If those four men don’t recognize that the fans are restless, tired, frustrated and at the very least not seeing their vision, here’s an idea, maybe come out and try to talk to them. Frankly, and honestly.

Ben Cherington in particular has on record talked about being competitive earlier than most think. Now if you’re a weary fan trying your best to patiently believe in this new regime, even when things they do seem counterintuitive to you, a statement like that makes you think what? Right, you’re thinking ok, they’re gonna sign some guys. Alright, finally the extensions are coming. Sweet, he thinks these prospects are getting closer!

All the while you’re told how dumb you are by other fans who just think it’s all crap.

Then the hits start coming.

Bryan Reynolds is asked if the team approached him about an extension and he flatly says no. You’re thinking damn, if extending this guy isn’t part of the plan, how the hell are we really going to be better sooner than many expect? You probably talk yourself into it being ok because they’ll get to it before arbitration.

Uh oh, here comes the arbitration story with Reynolds, all over 650K. You repeat the same question to yourself and know this won’t help an extension happen. Those fans who told you that you were dumb, well they pull out the receipts to make sure you remember your foolish optimism.

And the team is absolutely silent.

Not one of those big 4 ever bother to address it in any way. Nobody comes out and says this process takes place every year, with every team and we still very much so want to extend him. They just don’t make a peep. So, how are you, a fan, really trying to buy in to the process supposed to take that? Add in that everyone associated with the team tells you nothing short of Reynolds is the best player on the team, and the undisputed leader of the players. Hell one coach in particular Tarrik Brock told us while mic’d up for a broadcast that he literally leans on Reynolds to help him improve the fielding of others in the outfield. They go out of their way to tell you how unflinchingly important he is to what they’re doing, and that just doesn’t match up with taking him to arbitration over a piddly sum and not offering an extension.

Point is, I or anyone really, can tell you what they think of the situation, and of course I have, but the team is who you really need to hear from.

Boom, another hit, Oneil Cruz gets optioned down to AAA. Oh sure lots of folks told you he would be, some, me included, told you it was most likely going to happen but also showed why it didn’t have to be.

Still it hurts. It says to fans we aren’t going to play our best 26. The team did speak this time, well at least Shelton, and I’ll be honest, what he said is absolutely true, in fact probably would have been what he said if Cruz stayed on the team.

This is from Dejan Kovacevic at DK Pittsburgh Sports…. “I think it was a development decision,” Shelton would say. “There’s still room for development, still things that we feel he can maximize on. We feel he’s going to have a major impact on the Pirates, but right now, we feel like there are things for him to do moving forward that are going to help us win games.”

See what I mean? He could have said the same thing answering why he wasn’t starting every day. Same answer if he’s up here and making a bunch of errors. Shelton is the coach and he’s rightly going to have a take entirely devoted to development which the team and Shelton himself continue to say doesn’t stop at the MLB level.

This is all part of the game in MLB. Teams manipulate service time, GMs don’t acknowledge it’s happening instead pretending you’ll all just accept that 100 more at bats were needed, or 50 more chances at Shortstop in AAA would take a poor fielder and make him Ozzie Smith. For the most part, they’re right, most fans do eventually just accept it, but a team like this, where you’ve been pointing down to the system for the best part of 3 years (it’s not fair to hammer this regime with what the previous did) finally has a player who looks transformative on the doorstep and fans have had enough.

The next time Ben Cherington is made available to the media, the question will be asked. His answer will be word salad like all his answers and the fans are tired of that too. Now, no GM is going to tell you ‘of course we’re manipulating his service time! Have you ever watched the sport?’. But something better needs done.

I can honestly say if Oneil Cruz is up here crushing balls over the Clemente Wall this June, after the initial mocking period where everyone has to make sure they’ve said he could have been doing this in April too, most fans will just calm down and enjoy watching him play, but I’m just as sure it’s not the last PR puddle this franchise is going to step in.

Listen, I’ve spent most of my adult life in marketing, I get it, selling a product that isn’t 100% clearly developed is a near impossible task, but not trying to sell it is easily the bigger sin.

The Pirates have alienated so many fans and the game itself has driven so many young fans away it stands to reason the Bucs should know most of their audience at this point are adults, perhaps they should start talking to us like we are.

Sam Howard Finds Himself in a Competition for Innings

3-29-22 By Anthony DiFilippo (aka @Cityofbridgesp on Twitter)

When the Pirates took the field against the Chicago Cubs to start 2021, there was just one left-handed pitcher in the bullpen: Sam Howard. Coming into 2022, the Pirates have a few more southpaw options, including Anthony Banda, Aaron Fletcher, Dillon Peters, and José Quintana (although the latter two could be in the rotation). They also have some pitchers in Indy nearing their debuts in the show, making for a spring bullpen battle (for better or worse). Today’s player profile will be all about the Bucs’ longest tenured lefty, Sam Howard, as he finds himself in an interesting spot in Pittsburgh. 

Howard was a third-round draft pick of the Colorado Rockies in 2014. Two years later, he jumped into the Rockies’ Top 30 Prospects on MLB Pipeline at number 27, three spots below former Rockie and Pirate Tyler Anderson. In 2017, Howard jumped to 19. He finished at the 17th spot in 2018, which was also the year he made his major league debut.

When Howard’s career first started, he was used as a starter, pitching 506.1 innings in 96 starts, and a 3.68 ERA from 2015-2018. Howard did not start when he was called up for four games in 2018, three of which came in September. He allowed one run over four innings of work, but that sample size obviously isn’t large enough to make any conclusions one way or another. 

Now working out of the bullpen, Howard’s 2019 season at Triple-A Albuquerque started really rough, as he gave up 17 earned runs in 26 innings in April and May combined. However, he really turned it around in June and July, where he allowed just two earned runs in 18.1 innings. That performance would give him an opportunity to succeed in Coors Field (you can likely see where this is going). 

It went about as well as it has for a ton of other pitchers in Denver, which is not well at all. In 19 big league innings, Howard allowed 16 runs (14 earned) and five home runs. His WHIP was also high at 1.63. His expected ERA (xERA) that year was 4.89, about two runs lower than the 6.63 ERA he posted. That would mark the end of Howard’s Rockies career, as he was placed on waivers in the offseason. 

Howard was claimed by the Pirates’ interim GM Kevan Graves on October 30th, and he was going to get a chance to compete in the bullpen for 2020. 

Howard did not help himself during 2020 Spring Training, allowing five runs over 5.2 innings. When the team finally started up in July, Howard was not named to the Opening Day roster, and he was sent to the Alternate Training site. He was up within the first week, on August 2nd, when the team decided they had seen enough of another lefty, Robbie Erlin. 

A very solid couple of months followed for Howard, as he allowed nine earned runs over 21 innings that year. Howard featured a two pitch mix, throwing his slider about two thirds of the time, and everything else was the four-seam fastball. His underlying numbers were also good that year, as his xERA was 3.79 (vs. a 3.86 ERA) and his xBA (expected batting average) was actually lower on his offspeed (.165) than what the actual results showed (.200 BA). 

When it came around to 2021, Howard’s first full season with the team, it became the expectation that he would be the Bucs’ top lefty reliever (take that for what it’s worth). He was honestly a really great pitcher in the month of April, allowing just a pair of runs in ten innings. His next four months were almost night-and-day compared to the first month, and Howard allowed 20 runs in his next 21.2 innings. Howard also walked 19 batters over that stretch. He did have a pair of injuries which held him out a total of two months last season. 

When Howard returned in September, he actually pitched a lot better, conceding five runs over 12 innings. The analytics from Howard’s 2021 season gives mixed results. His 4.21 xERA is much lower than his actual 5.60 ERA. The thing that really hurt Howard was the percentage of at-bats where his pitches were barreled up, at 8.7%. That is the highest of his career by far, and the league average is about 5%. It’s also unclear how much of an impact those injuries had on Howard, because when he was bad last year, he was really bad.

This spring has really been concerning for Howard, one which has seen him allow six runs over three outings, and tack on a pair of home runs as well. It’s not like spring training results really mean anything in the grand scheme of things, but one thing I know for sure is that it’s better to have good results than not. 

Another thing that I can say with certainty is that Ben Cherington and company have not been shy to rotate bullpen pieces as needed via waiver claim. Like I mentioned, Anthony Banda and Aaron Fletcher, two lefties, could be in line to steal innings. Adonis Medina just got claimed really recently. Heath Hembree just joined the ‘pen. More than likely one or two of the rotation guys will shift to a bullpen role. If it’s anything like last year, Duane Underwood, Jr. will pitch a million times. Don’t forget about Miguel Yajure, Roansy Contreras, Max Kranick, and more who are waiting in the wings to get a crack and already did a bit last season.

Whether or not you believe the Pirates’ options are good is a different story, but there are definitely options. The first month or two will be crucial for Sam Howard, and how it plays out will be largely up to him. 

Talking Pirates With Justice delos Santos

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-f25j9-11e4665

A few important questions are asked about Bryan Reynolds and his relationship with the Pirates. What is the long-term goal with the best player on the roster? We’ve got the new guy covering the Pittsburgh Pirates for MLB.com, Justice delos Santos. He is very impressed so far with Mitch Keller and Oneil Cruz.

Craig Toth covers the Pirates for Inside The Bucs Basement, and joins his buddy Chris at a 9-foot homemade oak bar to talk Pittsburgh Pirates Baseball. Listen. Subscribe. Share. We are “For Fans, By Fans & all Pirates Talk.” THE Pirates Fan Podcast found EVERYWHERE podcasts can be found and always at BucsInTheBasement.com!

Five Pirates Thoughts at Five

3-28-22 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

We’re getting close to the start of the regular season, in fact there will only be one more Five Thoughts before we get there and the opening day roster is starting to take shape, yes, even if you don’t like the shape it’s taking.

So let’s have some fun and talk through some topics I have on my mind as we enter the last full week of Spring Training.

1. Is There Another Rookie We Should Be Screaming For?

Believe it or not i don’t mean Roansy Contreras. No, I’m talking about Diego Castillo. The Pirates currently have Cole Tucker and Kevin Newman backed by Hoy Park and Michael Chavis to cover Short Stop, Second Base, backup Third Baseman, backup First Baseman and backup Corner Outfield.

In order for someone else to make this team, even in April with expanded rosters because they will undoubtedly use the extra two spots on pitching, it’s likely the Pirates would have to decide that Anthony Alford is out and someone I just mentioned is able to cover the outfield when Allen, Gamel and Reynolds need a breather.

That’s probably fine for someone like Tucker, maybe could even be how Cruz gets the call, but someone who has really performed this Spring and rather under the radar is Castillo. Now, he would need in my estimation an injury or overt DFA of either Park or Chavis, but he sure looks ready.

First of all, he’s 24, so this isn’t a guy this team is going to sweat starting whenever they damn well please, and in 17 PA this Spring he’s really put up some nice albeit short sample size numbers including a .333 BA, .945 OPS. These numbers line up super well with what he put on tape this past season in all three of his stops, if not a little better.

Again, if the Pirates keep Park and Chavis, Castillo would be a tough choice to include in a swap for Alford. He’s going to be primarily an infielder, but coupled with a more permanent move of Tucker to corner outfield it could make sense.

I in no way call this a lock, and I’m certainly not trying to tell you to forget about Cruz in lieu of Castillo, but we might just have a prospect to be excited about on opening day regardless. The Pirates have certainly given him a good look this Spring, and he was an early addition to the 40-man shakeup too.

2. One Step Forward, One Step Back

The Starting rotation should be of paramount concern to everyone hoping for improvement this season, even if marginal. To his credit, Mitch Keller has straight shoved this Spring and looks to have figured out some of what ails him. Now, he still has to do it in real games and for that matter it’d be nice to see him do it for a nice stretch before we start lowering the temperature on Oscar Marin’s seat, but I also believe you have to, at least to a certain degree, celebrate the baby steps or you’ll miss the kid learning to run.

That’s a nice step forward, and bluntly, from a guy the vast majority of Pirates fandom already had out of the plans.

Then there’s everyone else.

Jose Quintana has had two starts, both awful. And before you start, of course I know short sample size sucks and of course I know he’s a veteran, yes, yes I even know he could be working on a new pitch or whatever too. Thing is, what he’s struggled with, are the same things he’s struggled with since his failed stint with the Cubs. That doesn’t instill much confidence in me that he’s going to have a resurgence and my greatest hope is that the Pirates don’t feel we need to work 2 million dollars worth of pitches out of him before realizing it. Hope I’m wrong, doubt I am.

JT Brubaker looks much the same as last season, with the velocity back to where it was early in the year, problem is the hard contact and long ball issue decided to come along for the ride. Look, he’s in this rotation, no doubt, but he has to get better at attention to detail on all his pitches. He’ll throw 5 of 6 really nice, well placed pitches in an at bat, but that 1, oh man that 1 is a meatball. Can’t have that, not in this league. That’s his challenge this season, and if he doesn’t fix it, he’s on his last shot at being a Pirates Starter.

Thompson and Wilson, well, both fairly as advertised. Lots of movement, good enough velo, just too aggressive at times. For an older pitcher, this is a hallmark of Spring, which we probably should acknowledge both are. Both of them have been to a multitude of Spring Camps and both probably feel more than at ease they’re making this team. Still, in their next starts and into the early season I’d like to see a bit more focus from both.

Crowe and Peters are probably next in line and they’ve both shown fairly well. Peters more so because Crowe still can’t get his pitch count under control. Both of these guys could potentially start in the pen or even be the 6th man if they chose to start the season like that.

All in all, I like this rotation better than the 2021 opening day set up, but not by much. Look for an infusion from AAA before June if I had my guess.

3. DFA Danger

This list isn’t going to be long, but we must remember the Pirates have to make room for a backup catcher and at least one more for the bullpen to round out the roster so that has a few players in my mind on the bubble.

Anthony Alford – Easy pick. He’s done nothing to change anyone’s mind this Spring, unless of course you were really excited to see him take hold of a starting role this season.

Jared Oliva – The outfield mix is muddy at best, but sincerely, when a spot opens up do you want Oliva over Canaan Smith-Njigba, Jack Suwinski, Cal Mitchell, Travis Swaggerty, hell even Oneil Cruz? I can’t see it, this is a numbers game and the Pirates clearly aren’t going to give this kid a crack.

Anthony Banda – This might not come until May 1st when rosters contract back to 26 but the Pirates don’t need 4 lefties in the pen. They figure to have Peters, Fletcher and Howard already. In AAA the Pirates have lefties Blake Weiman and Cam Alldred who just had NRI stints this Spring backed by Nathan Kirby and Joe Jacques. To me Banda has about a month to prove his worth and if he pitches like he did last year down the stretch he may very well do so.

Hoy Park – I’m probably reaching here, but Hoy Park isn’t someone who should be blocking players like Cruz or Castillo from reaching the majors. He’s got a great shot to make the club out of Spring, but he might just be in a placeholder role. I didn’t even mention someone like Rodolfo Castro, Ji-hwan Bae or Tucapita Marcano. He’s a swiss army knife in a development system purposefully developing swiss army knives.

4. Greg Allen Ain’t No Prospect

Now, that doesn’t mean he can’t be a great fit for what the Pirates need today. He’s fast, he has some pop and plays a nice outfield, being a switch hitter is nice too in a lefty dominated lineup.

But he ain’t no prospect folks.

He’s 29 years old, still pre-arbitration and got his first shot at MLB in 2017 with the Indians (now Guardians). Nothing ever really stuck for him as he bounced in and out of the lineup before being traded to San Diego, where he was again given no chance. The Yankees played him in 15 games during the 2021 season and he got on base, did damage with the stolen base when he did, but nothing so special the Yanks had to hold on.

So he enters the Pirates plans right here as a bridge. If he produces, he replaces Ben Gamel as the guy who could start or be the fourth outfielder for a couple years, if he doesn’t, no harm no foul.

Not to backtrack but the very fact this team thinks they need Greg Allen is enough reason to believe Jared Oliva is never getting a shot here.

Anyway, enjoy him because he could be some fun and energy if he finds something, but don’t get confused, when one of the prospects is deemed ready, Allen isn’t blocking any of them, well, except maybe Oliva.

5. One Way or Another

This roster is going to turn over big time this year. Some I think we’ll see fairly quickly, some at the deadline and more than anything, after the season. Everything that has been done up until this time has been to build up the system and you’re already going to see some of that talent bursting at the seems to break through as we get into 2022.

Next year they won’t be so lucky as to avoid the Rule Five draft and they have a ton of guys that will need protected by December of this year. The very best way to handle that is to changeover the roster, and I believe that’s exactly what we’re going to see.

I think 10-14 players who should make the opening day roster won’t be here come 2023, and no, Bryan Reynolds and Ke’Bryan Hayes aren’t on the list.

It’s part of the process, and depending on how some guys do, I could even see this offseason being about addition. Not kidding. In fact I think there are 4 or 5 projected opening day starters who won’t be here in 2023.

That’s what you get when your team has no financial commitment heading into a season.

I really want you to note this today, before we get going on the season because some of these moves are going to be met with the same old “they got good then that sumbitch Bob didn’t wanna pay ’em!” stuff, and I want you to know this is simply nature taking its course.

Some of it might look like exactly what you describe, but in reality the plan has been and will be getting a first big wave of prospects up here together, and that simply can’t happen without moving on from guys.

You’ll also note, I’m not predicting that every prospect will turn out for this to take place, I’m simply taking a look at who I see as a placeholder paired with who I see making a sincere push to become an MLB player this year and I come up with 10-14. I’ll elaborate on this and who I’m thinking in more detail soon but for now, if you’re irritated by the opening day roster, do realize it isn’t going to be the one they finish with, and more than that, if some should over acieve, realize the plan is still happening.

The Pirates Best Players Should Play….Right?

3-28-22 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

This is the easiest question in sports, well it sure as hell should be anyway, yet every year here we all are, arguing and passionately fighting for one side or another with every prospect who looks close.

Oneil Cruz is special, sure looks like he could come right up on opening day and I have no doubt he’d dance through the growing pains his 6′ 7″ frame defies he still has left to do and put together a decent rookie season. Might even win Rookie of the Year. Thing is, might not too. It could be that after facing Major League pitching that actually studies him, and places importance on every pitch, holes will be exposed.

See the thing is, and we all know this if we’re honest, Major League Baseball is hard. One thing no GM wants is to call a guy as crucially important to their franchises’ success up, only to discover their gut was right and he needed more time to work on ironing out the wrinkles.

Add in that this league despite saying a bunch of the right words regarding wanting to eliminate service time manipulation they actually didn’t get it done. Both sides have always have claimed to want it fixed, both sides did little more than add in a thought or two of pause with draft pick rewards and awarding a year of service time to Rookie of the Year winners and runners up.

That bit I wrote up there about baseball being hard, and the very real difficulties rookies tend to have, see, that’s why it’s so easy to still do it. How could anyone with a straight face argue that most rookies are going to get slapped in the face with reality?

Now, should the Pirates start the season with Cruz on the team? I mean, anyone who’s a baseball fan probably says unflinchingly yes. Anyone who’s a fan of a team that isn’t capable of dishing out whatever it takes to whomever they like, probably sees the merit in seeing if you can get that extra year. Even if they feel icky saying it, or feeling it.

Baseball failed to eliminate this problem, and the easiest way would have been to eliminate Super 2 all together. Neither side seriously entertained doing that mind you, but here we are. And if you’re going to tell me the players wanted to and the owners blocked them, I’ll simply say yes, they tried as hard as the owners did to install a salary floor.

The Pirates might leave him on the roster, they might send him down. No matter what they decide some folks are going to think they’re stupid, or cheap, or both.

I personally want him up here, I think he’s shown enough to pretty safely say he’ll run into 15-20 on the low side and while I think he isn’t ready to play short stop at the big league level, I also don’t care, at least not right now.

I can say all that with a straight face, but I can also tell you there aren’t many GM’s who would see 21 errors in 230ish chances at short stop and just shrug.

If we’re really honest here, we’re frustrated with this team, this payroll, the owner, the rebuild process and the seemingly nonsensical consideration being paid to willingly starting a season without ALL the best players you have at your disposal.

We’re mad they didn’t bring in anyone who’s name we recognized to play outfield, or did bring in a name we recognized to pitch but like 7 years too late.

So the least they could do in the minds of many is give us at least this one kid as a token that this damn rebuild is working, even if it’s not one of the kids this GM brought in, just give us something.

Right?

Better yet, if the Pirates are already so convinced that the extra year of control is going to be so important, maybe offer the kid a deal? Make the year not matter. Yeah, I know why too.

If you really want to know why baseball is so hard to like for normal fans who just want to watch a team play and hope they win without caring about how they got there, this is it.

Everytime they want to read or hear about how the team is shaping up, half of the coverage is this stuff. You can blame people like me for that if you like, but I can’t just ignore every aspect of what goes into decisions like this. Baseball has created a system that doesn’t allow us to simply talk about players for what they do, instead we have to talk about what they make and how long they’ll be here before they even start. It makes us stop focusing on enjoying the talents of players and instead looking at how long they think he’ll stay with the club before being moved to a team that can afford him.

Bob didn’t create the rinse and repeat system you loathe, he just makes it more apparent than others that the game is rigged because he does precious little to fight it.

Oneil Cruz is an opportunity to step up and do something different, I have my doubts they’ll take it and no matter what he’s still the next, most exciting thing coming our way.

Try to allow yourself to enjoy him, even if they make you wait a bit first.

The Pittsburgh Pirates 2022 Pitching Staff: All Arms On Deck

3-26-22 By Craig W. Toth (aka @BucsBasement On Twitter)

In 2021 the Pittsburgh Pirates used 35 pitchers-including 17 different starters-to navigate 1396.1 innings across the 162 game-101 loss-season. On the year only four pitchers-JT Brubaker, Wil Crowe, Tyler Anderson and Mitch Keller-totaled more than 100 innings, with Brubaker on top at 124.1. Of course this was before he ended up on the IL due to inflammation in his right shoulder. Out of the bullpen, Chris Stratton accumulated 79.1 innings in a team high 68 appearances. Following close behind him was Duane Underwood, Jr. with 72.2 innings in 25 less games. Like Brubaker-and on the exact same day no less- Underwood, Jr. also found his way to the IL with right shoulder inflammation.

Obviously the number of pitchers it took for the Pittsburgh to get through the season, as well as the innings they accumulated, had something to do with the effects of the shortened 2020 season. However, on the season there were 88 pitchers who tossed more innings than the Pirates leader, JT Brubaker, so this can’t be used as an overarching excuse; something I’ve been guilty of myself to a certain degree. Yes it was a factor, but it wasn’t the only one. Ultimately it comes down to the Pirates pitchers being more efficient and way more effective; especially at the start of every contest.

Last season Pittsburgh’s starting rotation earned the fewest number of quality starts in Major League Baseball with 25; which works out to a Pirates pitcher lasting 6 innings, while giving up 3 or fewer runs, a mere 15% of the time. Averaging only 4.7 innings per start these aren’t really stats that should surprise. Also, it should be noted that as a group they posted the second worst ERA (5.53) and WHIP (1.48), with a FIP (4.96) that only moved them up to 27th.

Out of the bullpen, the Pirates relievers did not fair much better; although at times they showed glimpses of success. Over the first month of the season the Pirates Bullpen had a combined 3.57 ERA, a 1.07 WHIP, 108 strikeouts to 33 walks and mostly importantly a 1.69 WPA (Win Probability Added). For reference an average WPA starts at 1.0, with an above average WPA kicking in at 2.0. Yet, by the end of the season the Pirates relievers found themselves with 4.55 ERA, 1.39 WHIP, 641 strikeouts to 307 BB and -.21 WPA.

Clearly there is plenty of room for improvement from both the starters and relievers on the Pirates; however, before we try to figure out the best pitching options for the 2022 season, it only make sense to see what has changed by looking back at last year’s staff.

2021 Pittsburgh Pirates

Starters

Rotation Regulars

  • JT Brubaker (IL 9/5)
  • Mitch Keller (Triple-A 6/12-7/30)
  • Tyler Anderson (Traded 7/28)
  • Wil Crowe (Team High 25 Starts)
  • Chad Kuhl (Non-tender 11/30)

Next Men Up/Spot Starters

  • Chase DeJong (Free Agent 11/7)
  • Max Kranick
  • Bryse Wilson (Acquired 7/30 then IL 9/19)
  • Trevor Cahill (IL 6/12 then FA 11/3)
  • Steven Brault (DFA 11/29)
  • Dillion Peters

Cups of Coffee

  • Miguel Yajure
  • Connor Overton (Free Agent 11/7)
  • Cody Ponce (Released 11/29)
  • Roansy Contreras

With the array of injuries, demotion(s) and trades it’s no wonder the Pirates ran through 17 different starters in 2021; leaving Wil Crowe as the lone man to last the entire year.

Following the season the Pirates parted ways with Chad Kuhl, Steven Brault, Trevor Cahill, Connor Overton, Cody Ponce and Chase DeJong. Between them, that’s 42 starts 150+ innings that will need to be replaced.

Bullpen

The Reliables

  • Richard Rodriguez (Traded 7/30)
  • David Bednar
  • Chris Stratton
  • Duane Underwood, Jr. (IL 9/5)
  • Chasen Shreve (Free Agent 11/5)
  • Sam Howard

Next Men Up

  • Clay Holmes (Traded 7/26)
  • Kyle Keller (Free Agent 11/7)
  • Nick Mears
  • Kyle Crick (Released 7/24)
  • Luis Oviedo (Mr. Rule 5)
  • Anthony Banda (Claimed 8/2)

Cups of Coffee

  • Shea Spitzbarth (Free Agent 11/7)
  • Sean Poppen (DFA 5/13)
  • Austin Davis (Traded 7/30)
  • Shelby Miller (Free Agent 11/3)

The Pirates Bullpen was even more of a motley crew than the starters, if you can believe it. On the year, the only thing that became abundantly clear was that the team had a regular closer in the form of David Bednar.

2022 Pittsburgh Pirates

Before we get started on the 2022 MLB Season, please keep in mind that these are simply projections as to who I think will be the primary options for the season. Although, it seems that some things are starting to sort themselves out as Spring Training progress.

Starters

Rotation Regulars/Projected Starting Rotation

  • Mitch Keller
  • Bryse Wilson
  • JT Brubaker
  • Zach Thompson
  • Jose Quintana
  • Wil Crowe

Next Men Up

  • Dillion Peters
  • Miguel Yajure
  • Chase DeJong
  • Roansy Contreras
  • Max Kranick

Cups of Coffee

  • Cody Bolton
  • Adonis Medina
  • Trey McGough
  • Omar Cruz

All off-season Pirates Fans have been looking forward to Ben Cherington signing the Free Agent starting pitcher that he’s been talking about. But, what if he already did? Or maybe he traded for him?

Jose Quintana isn’t what he used to be. At best he’s Tyler Anderson, and gets traded by the deadline. At worst he is Trevor Cahill, which means you won’t have to worry about him beyond May or June; just in time for Yajure and Kranick to be healthy, or Contreras to be warmed up.

Zach Thompson is the MLB ready piece from the Jacob Stallings Deal, who looked pretty good in a small sample size last year with the Marlins.

And oh yeah, Chase De Jong is back.

Bullpen

The Reliables

  • David Bednar
  • Chris Stratton
  • Heath Hembree
  • Anthony Banda
  • Duane Underwood, Jr.
  • Sam Howard

Next Men Up

  • Aaron Fletcher
  • Eric Hanhold
  • Austin Brice
  • Jared Eickhoff
  • Blake Cederlind (60 Day IL)
  • Nick Mears (60 Day IL)

Cups of Coffee

  • Hunter Stratton
  • Beau Sulser
  • Blake Weiman
  • Luis Oviedo
  • Yerry De Los Santos

Outside of David Bednar, the rest are somewhat of a crap shoot. Stratton is serviceable and remains a trade piece, Hembree is solid veteran option and Underwood, Jr. can’t be asked to pitch his arm off again.

I have Cederlind listed as a reliever, even though he wants to be a starter. The reason for this is, that by the time he completes his rehab and gets ramped up, the bullpen is the most likely landing spot to limit his innings.

Conclusion

There are four starters that I’ll be keeping a close eye on to start the season; Keller with his velo jump, Brubaker trying to put it together for a full season, Thompson getting a longer look and Wilson possibly benefiting from a change of scenery. Add Crowe in because of how he finished off 2021; along with the fact that I could see him making a favorable transition to the bullpen. As the year progress, I’ll be waiting on Contreras, Yajure, Kranick and the like.

As far as the bullpen is concerned, it’s all about Bednar; and, possibly finding a diamond in the rough, or good trade partner. Beyond that, things will most likely sort themselves out; as the pitchers potentially get pushed out of the starting rotation, Cherington continues to watch the waiver wire and hopefully some prospects earn promotions.

Let’s Take a Stab at the Pirates Position Players and a Lineup

3-24-22 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

We’re quickly approaching the get serious part of Spring Training, you know, the time when you start seeing pitchers try to go 4 or 5 innings or position players start getting 4 or 5 at bats in a game.

Part of this will be the big decisions that have to be made and I’ll be as blunt as possible, most of them aren’t that hard, yet the Pirates have a terrible habit of making them feel that way.

We just learned that the season would begin with expanded rosters, from 26 up to 28 through the month of April. That’s primarily an effort to help the pitching staffs deal with a shortened Spring so instead of the 13 pitcher limit, I think it’s fair to expect they’ll keep 14 or 15. Today, I want to focus on the other 13 or 14 position players.

We’ve all heard the cries for Cruz to stick and whatnot but let’s walk through this roster and really try to figure out the locks vs the bubbles.

Locks

  1. (C) Roberto Perez
  2. One of (C) Taylor Davis, Jamie Ritchie and Michael Perez
  3. (OF) Bryan Reynolds
  4. (OF) Ben Gamel
  5. (OF) Greg Allen
  6. (3B) Ke’Bryan Hayes
  7. (1B/DH) Yoshi Tsutsugo
  8. (1B/DH) Daniel Vogelbach
  9. (SS/2B) Kevin Newman
  10. (SS/2B/RF) Cole Tucker

I can’t think of anyone else who I firmly believe IS a lock, keep in mind that’s different than SHOULD be.

The catching is obvious, one of those 3 has to be the backup and even if they aren’t one will be acquired. Greg Allen get’s lock status in my mind because he has shown pretty well, and unlike Alford hasn’t already had parts of 2 seasons in black and gold to judge his ability.

The controversial ones here are Newman and Tucker, but if you’re honest with yourselves you know I’m right. Newman has proven his glove to be more than just ok and Tucker looks like he’s finally made changes and put in the work to at least potentially show some of that first round pedigree. Now that’s 10, leaving us 3 or 4 spots depending on how they handle the pitching staff, but if I were forced to guess, it’ll be 3.

Bubble

  1. (OF) Anthony Alford
  2. (Utl) Michael Chavis
  3. (Utl) Hoy Park
  4. (SS/DH) Oneil Cruz
  5. (OF) Bligh Madris
  6. (Utl) Rodolfo Castro
  7. (SS/2B) Diego Castillo

OK, I’ll admit the team might not be on the same page as me here, but Anthony Alford is done. I’m not saying he has no talent, I’m just saying he’s had enough time to show it now and it isn’t happening. Even if he has a spell in him where he makes contact you can’t afford to keep a bench guy who falls into funks where he strikes out at an 80% clip. Allen won, move on and either trust Tucker as the 4th OF or bring Bligh North. This would be a direct 40 man swap.

I’d say Chavis, Park, Castro and Castillo are all battling for one spot. If I had to guess, Chavis and Park are probably more realistic here. If the Pirates choose to have Tucker act as the 4th OF as well as Middle IF bench player (hell even if that’s Newman) they can choose 2 here.

I know it’s not a very Pirates thing to do, but I can’t see how Oneil Cruz gets sent down. I’m aware that’s very possible, and I’m sure they have plenty of excuses already, but he’s the best player arguably on either list not named Bryan or Ke’Bryan and it’s visibly clear to everyone watching.

So I guess I owe you the 3 I’d pick.

  1. Oneil Cruz
  2. Michael Chavis
  3. Hoy Park

Yup, I’d go with Tucker/Chavis/Park as utility guys and be done messing with Alford.

So, Want a Lineup?

  1. Greg Allen (RF)
  2. Bryan Reynolds (CF)
  3. Ke’Bryan Hayes (3B)
  4. Oneil Cruz (SS)
  5. Yoshi Tsutsugo (DH)
  6. Roberto Perez (C)
  7. Daniel Vogelbach (1B)
  8. Ben Gamel (LF)
  9. Kevin Newman (2B)

Bench
1. Michael Chavis
2. Hoy Park
3. Cole Tucker
4. Jamie Ritchie (just because he isn’t Michael.

It won’t look like this by the end of 2022, I could have really spread out that bubble section to show that.

What do you think? Anything you think I’ve missed here?