Starter Spotlight: A River Runs Through It

8-10-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

Mired in a 5-game losing streak – their longest of the season, the Pirates have quickly dropped out of the playoff race and are now just desperately trying to get back in the win column.

But it’s never easy when you’re facing the Dodgers, and they’ll have to face arguably their top pitching prospect tonight in River Ryan.

Brother of former Pirates relief pitcher, Ryder, the younger Ryan rocketed through the minor leagues for the Dodgers after coming over from the Padres in a 2022 trade. He pitched just 176.1 minor league innings, compiling a 3.22 ERA, 1.25 WHIP and 212 strikeouts against 75 walks.

Over his three starts since being promoted to Los Angeles, Ryan has continued that success as he posted a 1.72 ERA with 14 strikeouts through his first 15.2 innings; however, walks have spiked a bit as he issued 9 free passes already.

Ryan offers a number of plus-pitches: a high-90s 4-seamer, a high-80s slider and a low-80s curve – with a developing high-80s changeup as well.

He follows the standard formula of hard stuff up, soft stuff down – albeit in a small sample size.

Given the recent uptick in walks, Pirates should wait for Ryan to make pitches. Let him get behind in counts and punish the mistakes.

This kid can touch 99 with the heat and then drop down to 82 with breaking pitches so 

Series Preview: Pirates (56-58) at Dodgers (66-49)

8-9-24 – By Drew Cagle – @cagles_bagels on X

The Pirates’ post-All Star break gauntlet rolls on, and Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles is the next stop. Following a homestand that saw the club drop five of six against fellow wild card competitors Arizona and San Diego, this series grows in importance. LA enters the weekend off of a series loss to the National League-leading Phillies, after which there is increased concern in DodgerLand about the team’s World Series chances, namely due to their inconsistency in the bullpen.

8/9
Pirates –  Mitch Keller (R) – 10-5, 132.1 IP, 3.20 ERA, 118 Ks/36 walks, 1.19 WHIP
Dodgers – Jack Flaherty (R) – 8-5, 112.2 IP, 2.80 ERA, 140 Ks/20 walks, 0.96 WHIP

8/10
Pirates –  Paul Skenes (R) – 6-1, 86.0 IP, 1.99 ERA, 107 Ks/19 walks, 0.94 WHIP
Dodgers – River Ryan (R) – 1-0, 15.2 IP, 1.72 ERA, 14 Ks/9 walks, 1.28 WHIP

8/11
Pirates –  Bailey Falter (L) – 5-7, 97.2 IP, 3.87 ERA, 65 Ks/28 walks, 1.19 WHIP
Dodgers – Tyler Glasnow (R) – 9-6, 127.0 ERA, 3.54 ERA, 164 Ks/34 walks, 0.95

Pirates: Bryan Reynolds

An 0-for-4 showing on Tuesday night against the Padres served as nothing more than a speed bump for the 29-year old outfielder. He followed that up with two hits and a pair of RBIs on Wednesday, and another hit in Thursday’s contest.

Dating back to July 13th in Chicago, Reynolds is hitting .441, to pair with a gaudy 1.095 OPS, though he’s only hit one home run over the stretch. Look for him to set the tone for a Pirates team that is in desperate need of a series win.

Dodgers: Teoscar Hernandez


Despite the bottom of Los Angeles’ order being inconsistent at the plate throughout the season, Hernandez has been a steady force in the middle of the lineup. He’s picked up a hit in each of his last six games, in addition to 3 home runs and 5 RBIs in that time.

The first few months of the season were fairly ho-hum for the two-time All-Star, with his average never reaching above .260 for a month. In July, he began to heat up with the weather, hitting .301 with an .848 OPS.

His personal splits are also good indictator of how the Dodgers are playing as a team. In LA’s wins, he’s put up a .311 average, while in losses it’s plummeted to .209.

Pirates: Connor Joe
After losing his everyday role at first base to Rowdy Tellez earlier this summer, Joe’s bat hasn’t kept up enough for him to carve out a starting role. Over his last 13 games, the 31-year old is hitting just .194, with only 2 extra base hits and a single walk drawn. His defense has remained solid at first base, but it hasn’t been enough to overshadow his struggles at the plate.

Seeing that LA is starting three righties in the series, it’s unlikely that Joe receives a plethora of playing time, but his services may be required as a pinch-hitter for Tellez should the Dodgers play matchups with a left-handed reliever.

Dodgers: Andy Pages
A hot start to the 2024 season from the 23-year old rookie Pages had Los Angeles brass looking like geniuses for having him almost skip Triple-A entirely (only 16 games played with Oklahoma City before his MLB callup). After hitting .286 with an .810 OPS over his first 24 games this season, his bat has cooled off.

Since May 14th, his average has dropped to a .232 clip, including a .202 mark over his last 24 games. In addition to his struggles at the plate, his fielding has been below-average, with some insiders calling for the Dodgers to replace him for a postseason run. As a hitter with a higher-than average strikeout rate, look for Pirates pitching to go after the outfielder at the plate.

Key Injuries

Pirates:

Both Jared Jones (lat) and Joshua Palacios (hamstring) began rehab assignments at Triple-A Indianapolis on Thursday.

Nick Gonzales (groin) and Colin Holderman (wrist) are both on the IL.

Dodgers:
2-time All-Star Walker Buehler (hip) made a rehab start on Thursday in Triple-A.

Star infielder Mookie Betts (hand) is nearing a return, but shouldn’t be back for this series.

Reliever Brusdar Graterol (hamstring) is on the IL, with what could potentially be a season-ending injury.

LA has dealt with a bevy of injuries to other players, including Tommy Edman (wrist), Max Muncy (oblique), and Yoshinobu Yamamoto (triceps), who will all look to come back in the next few weeks.

Things to Look For

The key to the series for me is the Pirates’ bats against the Dodgers’ starting pitching. Facing a trio of quality arms in Flaherty, Ryan, and Glasnow means it won’t be easy, but it’s necessary. That’s because the real weakness of this Dodgers team is their bullpen.

Getting length from starting pitching hasn’t been the Dodgers’ thing as of late. Since July 1st, they’ve only had a starting pitcher go six innings five different times. In that same span, only one pitcher has gone at least seven innings. This is a starting staff that the Bucs need to work counts against.

For the Pirates, I’m looking for a bounce-back series from Bryan De La Cruz. He has yet to make a significant impact to the team’s offense, unlike fellow trade acquisition Isiah Kiner-Falefa.

Pittsburgh has their top two arms going in this series (Keller and Skenes), and are as formidable as they come with those two on the mound. But don’t count out young right-hander River Ryan for the Dodgers. He’s off to a solid start over his first three big-league outings against the Giants, Astros, and Athletics. I’m not taking Saturday’s pitching matchup for granted, even though the Pirates have the clear advantage.

You don’t need me to tell you how important it is for the Pirates to win this series after what went wrong on the last homestand. If they’re going to climb out of the hole they’ve dug themselves in the standings, it’ll have to start this weekend in Southern California.

The Pirates Have Some Big Problems

8-9-24 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

I’m different things to individual readers and listeners. I take pride in being called a Nutting Shill and a Nutting Hater right under the same piece, although I also know why it happens.

One of the first things I learned doing this is that people tend to read and hear what they want to. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying anyone is dumb or even that they invent words that were spoken or read. I just mean things like me saying “hey, Shelton really screwed the pooch on that call” gets turned into “Gary agrees with me, Shelton is a disaster who should immediately be fired”. Now, I may or may not feel that way but until I’m ready to say it, I’d rather you not guess.

So when I do a piece like this, yeah, extra important to me anyway, if I didn’t write it, I didn’t mean it. If I did, I took the time to be confident I’ve said what I meant or at least believe to be true.

I’m going to list off some of the biggest issues this club has, and how they can fix them. Again, pay close attention to the words I actually write, “can” isn’t “will”.

This also isn’t ALL their problems, just some I think they can fix.

Let’s go and don’t expect this one to feel great.

1. Hitting Instruction

I’m going to say something here and I’m quite sure it won’t be received well but here goes. Andy Haines and what he teaches probably would have little negative effect on a roster full of veterans, but on a team like Pittsburgh it’s clearly a constant issue. The Pirates have been vocally stubborn on this front, and frankly, I’m not convinced they’ll move on after the season. I still hear far too much praise for someone who should be likely to be job hunting in the Winter.

I’ve said this probably a hundred times this year but there are three paths here. 1. Replace him. 2. Get him some skilled help. 3. Pretend 4 seasons isn’t enough to know better.

I guess there could be a fourth, admit you didn’t provide enough talent, but being that almost all the talent is here for the next several years I don’t see that as an easy swap.

When you have a category that has been bottom 10 if not 5 in MLB for 4 straight years, some of which is record setting bad for your franchise that hasn’t won in 40+ years, I’m not sure how you don’t make changes, that said, I had this same speech last year.

2. Small Ball Roster, but…

The Pirates have assembled a small ball roster, but they coach them like a club that hits homeruns like a top 10 team. One of those things needs to change. Derek Shelton seems to recognize that they need to bunt more, run the bases more, shorten up a bit, problem is, he doesn’t coach them to be ready for it.

If you want to be a team that bunts guys over, practice it. Decide which guys should and shouldn’t be asked to do it, make them practice it.

I should be less concerned about watching a guy trying to lay down a bunt than swinging away with guys on base, but unfortunately, I tend to just assume neither will work.

I shouldn’t feel that way.

Coaches who are sitting a mere 10 feet from these guys really shouldn’t feel that way. If they don’t see they’re asking guys to do things they aren’t training them to pull off I’m not sure they can be saved as a management team.

3. Young Players Making the Leap

The Pirates have for years struggled to get AAA players to MLB, and more than that, even when they get them to the league they tend to hit a wall. It’s super easy to blame Andy Haines for most of it, or the Pirates drafting over the years, but I think this is really a communication issue.

I have people I talk to all up and down the system. I’m not special, almost everyone who does this stuff does. The one thing I notice most, if I follow a guy from Bradenton on up, it’s like playing the telephone game all the way.

One player who’s still active but with another organization in particular was incredibly open through his entire journey. I won’t reveal his name, you’re welcome to guess, but it hardly matters and one day when he’s done playing, I’ll have him on the show to tell you himself.

He was a speedy contact hitter in Bradenton and when he got to Greensboro he hit some dingers. The dingers caused the team to believe he could be more of a power hitter. In Altoona he had minimal success on that front and his hitting instructor at that level didn’t really buy into what the team was telling him to do or be anyhow so they went another direction.

It hindered him being called up to the next level if only because he wasn’t checking off the boxes the team was looking for. So, that Winter he went off and worked specifically on the things he was told needed addressed. Came back, ignored his AA coach, checked boxes and got sent to AAA and ultimately, yeah, on to MLB. There he was met with even more contradictory things he was to be doing at the plate along with a booklet of data he’d never been presented.

Maybe talent was at play here, I make no claims that the team “messed him up”, I’m just saying, at every level he was presented with something to do that he didn’t know was wanted or needed.

The team has changed some of this stuff now, and it’ll be years before we really know how effectively they changed things.

This can’t keep happening.

It’s a fact of life that some players simply aren’t ever MLB talents. When that happens you can squarely blame scouting. When guys get here and they’ve done massively well in AAA, there’s an adjustment period, but you shouldn’t see guys just overtly fall on their face.

The Pirates see a problem and they chase the problem. To succeed under the constraints they place on themselves, they have to win on more than they do. If they develop a league average player, he needs to make it and at least become tradable excess.

They don’t spend money, so they need to cultivate currency of a different kind. MLB players at the very core of the definition.

Take it a step further, because this is very much so what the Rays do. Get them to MLB, and as soon as they do something uncharacteristic like hit 25 homers, or steal 40 bases, or hit .285, boom, the Rays trade them. See, the Rays know what false looks like. They know that 25 homers won’t likely happen again, or 20 of those 40 stolen bases were on the back end of a double steal.

They’re brilliant and the Pirates are hoping to be like them but they wanna skip Summer School.

4. Fundamentals

There is an awful lot you have to overcome when you’re a team that isn’t going to try to buy their way out of being talent deficient. One of those shouldn’t be hustling. One of those probably shouldn’t be shortening up and making contact.

This team in 2020 was statistically one of the best defensive units in baseball. Derek Shelton’s first year as manager for what it’s worth. Joey Cora might not have been much of a Third Base Coach, but as it came to a defensive instructor, hey, he got through to these guys, clearly.

I mean that team had Josh Bell at First Base, Gregory Polanco in Right, and somehow they always were in the right place, and made the right decisions with the ball. Errors happen, but positioning and execution, those should be much less likely. And the overall team stunk out loud, so let’s not pretend this is about just not having good players.

I’m not going to pretend I have the knowledge to outline what or who needs to do what, I’ll simply say Derek Shelton is the top of this pyramid, he’s overseen good defense and fundamentals at this level and he’s overseen 4 times as much of the opposite. It’s on him to fix it, and young players isn’t enough of an excuse.

Guys should be flying out of the box when they make contact. If Bryan Reynolds isn’t loud enough in the outfield, I’m sorry, hire him a voice coach. I’m kidding but just a little. Fix this stuff.

If Cruz won’t stop feeling the need to throw 110 MPH to first base inaccurately, hey, do what you gotta do.

This team can’t afford to keep allowing the minutia of baseball to keep the team from having a chance to compete. Fire who you have to, replace them with the Dewey Robinson of their specialized field.

That is money Bob Nutting will and has spent. Derek Shelton can either be friends with his coaching staff or bring in guys that help him succeed.

Be a winning coach and you can buy friends.

5. Payroll is a Constant Impediment

The payroll will increase. It’ll be near impossible to avoid finally going over 100 Million for the first time in close to a decade next year. I said this on the Pirates Fan Forum last week, but I don’t believe I’ve written this in quite some time.

Bob Nutting doesn’t budget based on current team earnings, he budgets based solely on cash in hand. Meaning, it’s not just that he’s cheap, he’s also extremely risk adverse. All those Paul Skenes inspired sellouts, well, they’ll help the team in 2025 but having them cause Bob to feel adding big this year was simply never going to happen.

It’s short sighted. Hell, it’s just about everything you want to say it is, but the most important takeaway here is, this is what they do.

Another part of this that I just have to make clear, Ben Cherington’s deadline approach was very much so effected by this policy. He was asked to add talent but not payroll.

I’m not going to get into it too deeply here if only because some of what I could say would probably reveal who told me, but I can sum up what he was dealing with in one quick quip.

I’ve been told Ben quite literally couldn’t complete the Bryan De La Cruz deal until he completed the Martin Perez deal. Even as they retained half the salary owed Mr. Perez, it was just enough to keep payroll from increasing in 2024.

He really is that cheap.

Now, for me, I always knew he was, and I’ve followed this whole thing and viewed it through that lens. Payroll will increase, they will continue to extend players, they’ll still sign people, but if and when they do this successfully, the Pirates will absolutely try like hell to do it on the cheap.

The CBA comes up again in 2027. Pray. And if you don’t believe in anyone who’d listen, just hope. The economics of this game, and or the shitty things the game allows their owners to do changing is a lot more likely than this one guy.

Starter Spotlight: Beat Back Jack

8-9-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

Hitting the road out west as the Pirates visit the NL West-leading Los Angeles Dodgers – and the first pitcher they will see this weekend is old rival, Jack Flaherty.

Flaherty has plenty of experience facing the Buccos with 16 career appearances, compiling 90 strikeouts to 28 walks with a 2.52 ERA over 89.1 innings against Pittsburgh.

Despite an inconsistent few years in St. Louis – followed by a poor half-season in Baltimore last year – Flaherty has recaptured that early-career luster with a breakout 2024 campaign.

Over the past few months, Flaherty has been one of the best pitchers in MLB. Since April 30, he has pitched 83.1 innings and posted a 2.05 ERA, 0.89 WHIP and K/BB% of 27.8% – all of which are top 3 in MLB over that span.

Arguably the biggest trade deadline acquisition for the Dodgers this year, Flaherty went 6 shutout frames in his first game in blue against Oakland with 5 hits, 1 walk and 7 strikeouts.

Looking at his pitch arsenal, Flaherty typically throws low-90s 4-seam fastball, mid-80s slider and high-70s curve – utilizing his fastball up and the breaking stuff down and under the zone.

Across the board, he has improved the results of his pitches from last year as he dropped the opponents batting average against on his curve (.204 to .183), fastball (.290 to .217) and slider (.339 to .195) while eliminating his ineffective cutter (.318 oBA).

The curve has been his main strikeout pitch (45.1% put-away rate) but he racks of Ks on each of the main three options. Pirates hitters will find their best chance is staying upright and holding on the heater. Anything breaking is likely going to drop down under the barrel, leading to a whiff, ground out or, at best, a foul ball. Stay within your zone as both his chase and whiff rates are among the best in baseball for starting pitchers.

Team will need to tighten up to rebound from the rough home-stand but they have risen to the occasion before and, hopefully, will do it again.

Let’s Go Bucs!

Brutal Homestand Comes to an End: Pirates/Padres Takeaways

8/9/24 By Drew Cagle – @cagles_bagels on X

A pair of ugly losses where the Pirates held 9th-inning leads bookended a less-than ideal homestand for the club. Losing five of six, especially against fellow wild card contenders Arizona and San Diego, makes it even harder to swallow. A trip to Dodger Stadium awaits, but let’s look back on how the Friars took down the Buccos.

Bullpen Woes

The Pirates’ bullpen is a liability to the team, as of writing. In each of the team’s last eight losses, a reliever has been the losing pitcher. Blown saves from David Bednar in each of the last two games, along with shaky outings from recently-IL bound Colin Holderman and others, have them in this spot. At this point, Aroldis Chapman and Kyle Nicolas are the two relievers I feel most confident in, and they’ve still had control issues somewhat recently.

The Pirates are losing ground, and quickly

Many other fellow wild-card contenders are making things tougher on the Pirates, pairing Pittsburgh’s cold stretch with hot streaks of their own. San Diego is on a five-game win streak. Arizona has won four straight. San Francisco is 7-3 in their last 10 games, and has passed the Pirates in the standings. When compared to the Pirates’ 4-game losing streak, it only creates a taller mountain to climb in an unforgiving race.

All records/streaks as of the end of Thursday’s midday games

Joey Bart Continues to Mash

I know I discussed Bart’s potential future with the team after the Diamondbacks series, but he continued to show off his power during this series. Sunday’s game was no different, with the Pirates’ backstop swatting his 9th homer of the season, a 2-run shot to give the Bucs the lead. A 9th-inning double and run scored added to his output.

Marco Gonzales

My confidence in Gonzales was high to start the season. A former Opening Day starter in his own right, I saw him as a valuable addition to a rotation that could use him to give Paul Skenes or Jared Jones extra days between starts. Following a solid start in his return against the White Sox, he’s put up poor numbers in the last three starts. All three have included multiple runs, at least six hits, and less than five innings pitched. I’m officially worried about his fit as a Pirates’ starter.

Starter Spotlight: Stop The Padre Party

8-8-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

After dropping 5 of their last 6 games, the Pirates dip below .500 for the first time since the All Star Break. They have a chance to fix that today in the finale versus the Padres and their starter, Randy Vasquez, as the Bucs look to avoid getting swept at home for the first time since April.

Being a pitcher named Vasquez in Pittsburgh doesn’t have the best connotation in recent history, though Randy spells his surname differently and doesn’t have a familial connection to You-Know-Who.

Vasquez, like Michael King, came over from the Yankees in the Juan Soto trade. He has had a less successful transition to playing in San Diego as he has a 4.62 ERA and 1.53 WHIP while allowing 12 home runs in just 76 innings this year – and the underlying numbers indicate he is still over-performing expectations.

Much of the problem possibly spawns from the pitch mix as Vasquez has 6 distinct pitches (per FanGraphs) that he has thrown at least 10% of the time this season: mid-90s 4-seam, low-80s curve, mid-90s sinker, low-90s cutter, high-80s changeup and low-80s sweeper.

Having a diverse pitch mix is great but Vasquez appears stretched too thin with his arsenal as none of the pitches have performed exceptionally well in his career and only his cutter has been above average this season – even with xBA of .285 and xSLG of .405.

He mostly utilizes the 4-seam/curve/sinker against RHH and 4-seam/changeup/curve when facing LHH so hitters should be looking for the elevated heater from both sides of the plate.

This is the most winnable matchup of the series and, given it’s also the last, let’s get a dub here.

Let’s Go Bucs!

If You Want a Happy Ending, that Depends, of Course, on Where You Stop Your Story

8-7-24 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

One of my favorite quotes from Orson Welles and one I find incredibly appropriate for this point in a baseball season. I probably could have gone with Mike Tomlin’s now famous “Only one team will finish with a Win”.

What we have on the scene right now is seemingly everyone stopping everything after each win or loss and deciding the story is of course, happy, or not.

That’s no way to take in baseball. I mean, you’re welcome to it of course and I’m not immune to feeling like a big loss to a direct competitor for a ticket to the dance feels finite. I’m not blind to watching the overall trend of my favorite team’s play, even if they’re winning games, you can tell when they aren’t winning them the right way, or should I say, in a sustainable way.

Listen, the best thing I can say is the 2024 season is part of the story.

If they make the Wild Card and lose to whomever they face in the first round, well, you can choose to end the story right there. They were a success if you didn’t think they’d make the dance at all. They were a failure if you thought they should have gone farther.

Even then, did they get swept out of it and just about shove in your face they never belonged like the Twins do every year? Did they fight like hell and simply fall to a foe that had more of just about everything important?

I don’t blame any fans for whatever they choose. Just maybe don’t tell me which one I have to make in the process of making yours.

This team is at .500, exactly, and just like PNC Park, they look like they’re taking on water.

The pitching is still strong and poised to get stronger with Jared Jones heading out on a rehab start. The bullpen still has a core of solid contributors, even as some of them have struggled, the point is, the pitching isn’t the problem.

It might feel that way some nights, because frankly, some nights everything is a problem, that’s baseball. The offense is not good enough and it hasn’t been all year. They’ve also gotten less out of Ke’Bryan Hayes than any other position player in the sport who has played enough to qualify for the batting title. Jack Suwinski went from a promising kid who popped 25 dingers to a guy who couldn’t hit a beach ball with a boat oar.

It happens.

You wind up being right on a guy like Bailey Falter and you get nothing from your Gold Glove winning Third Baseman offensively. You’re patient with your First Baseman free agent signing and he ultimately rewards that patience with becoming one of your stronger hitters, and at the same time your patience handed to Jack Suwinski or Jared Triolo is met with ineptitude.

50 games left. 20 of which are against teams ahead of them in the standings. 24 if you want to count the Cardinals who I simply don’t believe will be by the time we get there.

The story ends when you want it to, but I’d suggest 2024 is more of a chapter than an entire work. More of a series than an all encompassing story.

To me, it’s not as bleak as it looks, but there are some things that simply have to change or this chapter will end like so many others have, to be continued…

  1. Run Differential – This is a junk stat to many fans, but to me it’s an indicator of playoff eligibility. Next to nobody makes it into the dance without having a positive mark. The Pirates are -11. As we sit here, the lowest mark on either side of the league that’s “in” is the Seattle Mariners at +22, and the only reason that’s in right now is because they’re leading the incredibly weak American League West. If the Pirates want to make a go of it this year, something tells me that -11 is going to have to invert.
  2. Pitching Superiority – If the Pirates are to do damage to that Run Differential, there’s more opportunity, and talent for that matter, to effect the run prevention side of the equation. For that, they’re going to need to either get their important pieces to start pitching like they are one or they’re going to have to start asking others to assume the roles that are flailing.
  3. Hit a Little More – Just a little. Go from bottom five to top 20 through the course of the remainder of this season and I truly believe it’ll be enough. I don’t care who it comes from, I don’t care who has to sit, I don’t care who has to be demoted, nor should they.
  4. As a Unit, Now is All That Matters – Nobody should be looking to next year. There should be no worry about players getting too few at bats, no worrying about who’s feelings get hurt, no concerns about who is making what, just who is best for the challenge at hand. I hate to keep calling out Ke’Bryan Hayes, but at some point, when you watch Jared Triolo and feel it’s at least an even swap, solid chance a returning from injury Gonzales should take second back and Kiner-Falefa should slide to Third. That would take guts, but he’s earned the seat and I’m sure he knows it.

Baseball is a story.

My wife calls it my “Young and the Restless”. The characters change, the story doesn’t make sense half the time especially if you don’t know the characters and every once in a while they hit you with something sexy that makes you come back for more tomorrow.

Again, you’re welcome to look at the landscape and feel it’s all over. I’ll lean toward the side that still thinks fighting through this stretch with the Padres, and Dodgers they’re going to be playing a lot of teams they should take with more consistency.

I’m weird, I’ll ride this thing out til the end and the next day start talking about how they make it better next year. That’s what I do. If you want to bail and just show up next year when the new chapter starts, have at it, but I that ain’t me.

This has been and will continue to be in my eyes a very positive season. One where the pitching showed up earlier than I ever expected possible, and the hitting took a step back like I didn’t imagine they would.

It hasn’t gone exactly as I expected. It’s also not about me being right. They are exactly where I expected them to be record wise, they just didn’t get there the way I saw it happening.

I can’t wait to see how they close this chapter out, and I hope you’re there with me.

Starter Spotlight: Dethrone The King

8-7-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

Late night last night as the water-logged offense couldn’t get rolling against Padres pitching. Shower, dry off and try to turn the page as the Pirates will face Michael King in today’s affair.

Coming over from the Yankees in the off-season trade which sent Juan Soto to the Bronx, King enters play today with a 3.26 ERA through 124.1 innings pitched – by far his biggest workload of his professional career in his first year in San Diego.

Outside of a slightly elevated walk rate, King doesn’t do any one thing poorly. He’s striking out batters at a solid 28% clip, allows just over 1 home run per 9 innings and induces weak contact at an ELITE level.

Looking at his arsenal, King works with a four-pitch mix that is fairly even in distribution between a low-90s sinker, a mid-90s four-seam fastball, a low-80s sweeper/slider and, his best pitch, a high-80s changeup – which ranks among the best in baseball and is his main pitch dispatched against left handed hitters.

This is a BIG reason for the low average exit velocity of 85.7 MPH – which ranks only behind Braves starters Max Fried (85.5) and Chris Sale (85.6) among qualified starting pitchers. 

The average exit velocity against King’s changeup: 80.7

He typically runs the changeup down and in against those lefty batters so Bucs batters will want to avoid that and try to stay on the heat. He’ll work the 4-seam up in the zone and the sinker low but can hang occasionally and become a BIG target.

The expected slugging for both of the fastballs is above the actual number so key in on these and lay off the junk down.

King is almost certainly going to present a problem for the Pirates today after the water-logged outing last night.

Practice patient at-bats.

Take walks.

Drive the heat.

Let’s Go Bucs!

Starter Spotlight: Cease and Persist

8-6-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

As the Pirates welcome the dangerous San Diego Padres to town, their ace pitcher Dylan Cease will take the ball to start game 1.

Cease is posting arguably the best season of his career over his first year out west with career best strikeout rate (32.3%), walk rate (8%), batting average against (.186), WHIP (0.99) and FIP (3.04).

Oh, and he also threw a no-hitter just two weeks ago, the first of his career and just the 2nd in franchise history.

That isn’t to say he hasn’t hit some bumps this season as his ERA in May (4.08) and June (4.94) were certainly below his expectations but he’s considerably turned things around lately including 3 straight scoreless starts where he compiled 22 innings and allowed just 2 hits in that span while racking up 30 strikeouts to 7 walks.

Weirdly, Cease is essentially a two-pitch pitcher, successfully mixing a high-90s 4-seam fastball with a high-80s slider at a near every clip each.

While Cease adds in a few other options (low-80s knuckle-curve, for instance), these are the two main ones he will bring to the table.

Cease is typically using his fastball early in counts and more often using the slider as the finishing pitch. When facing his slider, opponents are whiffing at a 43.8% rate and striking out 105 times against 141 instances of putting the ball in play.

Overall, the slider has been DISGUSTING so Pirates batters are better served hunting heat upstairs. It’s not a bad pitch for Cease but it is eminently more hittable than the slider with a .218/.326/.394 line and a .319 wOBA against the offering make it the team’s best chance at success.

This is arguably the toughest pitcher the Pirates have faced post-All Star Break but the team has risen to challenges in the past and will need to tread carefully in the matchup today.

Stay on the high heat. Avoid chasing low breaking stuff. Take walks and run up long at-bats early.

Let’s Go Bucs!

Series Preview: Padres (61-52) at Pirates (56-55)

8-5-24 – By Ethan Smith – @mvp_EtHaN on X

The race for October continues and, for the Pittsburgh Pirates, much like the past week, they have an opponent ahead of them in the race awaiting them for six games over the next nine days, this time in the form of the San Diego Padres.

The Pirates are coming off of a series loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks, one many fans, and probably the team, feel they should have won, seeing as the Pirates led late in both losses to the Snakes in that series.

Nevertheless, in a competitive wild card race, the Pirates have to have a short memory and can erase the stench of two series losses to Arizona in a week’s time if they can find a way to best the Padres.

This series will be the first meeting between the teams in 2024, with the Padres sitting four games ahead of Pittsburgh at the time of writing for the final wild card spot. The Pirates are 2-3 versus San Diego in their past five matchups.

As for the past 10 games overall, the Pirates have been a .500 team at 5-5, while the Padres, much like Arizona, have been red hot, coming into this series as winners of eight of their past 10 games, including a no-hit performance from ace Dylan Cease against the Nationals two weeks ago.

Let’s discuss what you should see and expect from Pirates versus Padres over the next three days.

8/5
Padres – Dylan Cease (R) –11-8, 136.2 IP, 3.42 ERA, 174 Ks/43 walks, 0.99 WHIP
Pirates – Bailey Falter (L) – 5-7, 95.2 IP, 3.95 ERA, 64 Ks/28 walks, 1.19 WHIP

8/6
Padres – Michael King (R) –9-6 124.1 IP, 3.26 ERA, 144 Ks/45 walks, 1.16 WHIP
Pirates – Marco Gonzales (L) – 1-1, 29.0 IP, 3.72 ERA, 20 Ks/9 walks, 1.52 WHIP

8/7
Padres – Randy Vasquez (R) – 3-6, 76.0 IP, 4.62 ERA, 50 Ks/21 walks, 1.53 WHIP
Pirates – Luis Ortiz (R) – 5-2, 84.0 IP, 3.21 ERA, 65 Ks/27 walks, 1.18 WHIP

Padres: Manny Machado
The Padres no doubt have star power, and look no further than third baseman Manny Machado, who despite a slow April and May, has been electric for the Padres over the past month.

Machado has a .282/.341/.551/.892 slash with five homers and 11 runs batted in over the past 30 days, including six doubles, so half of his hits have come in the form of extra bases.

Machado has been impressive on the road this season as well, posting a .759 OPS, so he’ll be an anchor for the Padres offense going into this series on a hot streak.

Pirates: Oneil Cruz
Even considering the dreadful series Oneil Cruz had in Houston, he’s been on a tear at the plate the past month.

Cruz has an .897 OPS over the past 30 days and is batting .286 over the past seven, plating 17 over the past month. With newly acquired Bryan De La Cruz and Isiah Kiner-Falefa, Cruz also should see more opportunities to score on the base paths.

This will also be Cruz’s first game versus San Diego, so surely he’ll want to make a strong impression in his debut games versus the Friars.

Padres: Jake Cronenworth
Jake Cronenworth has been a Swiss Army knife for the Padres ever since he arrived, and now at first base, he’s been a defensive commodity for sure, but post All-Star break, his bat can’t say the same.

Cronenworth has a .204/.295/.315/.610 slash with just one home run post All-Star, and he’s second on the Padres in strikeouts in that time as well with 15, trailing Jackson Merrill.

Cronenworth is a left-handed hitter as well, and with the Pirates throwing Falter and Gonzales, this may not be the “get right” series for Cronenworth that he needs.

Pirates: Ke’Bryan Hayes
Much like Cronenworth, the post All-Star performance for Ke’Bryan Hayes is not where he, or well the team, wants it to be at all.

Hayes is second on the team in at-bats since the Pirates left the All-Star break, posting a .212/.255/.212/.466 slash with zero extra-base hits in that time.

Hayes struggles at the plate have been well documented all season, but Pirates fans hope he can find a resurgence from the second half we saw last year before season’s end.

Key Injuries

Padres:
Fernando Tatis Jr. has been sidelined for quite awhile, but now on the 10-day IL, it appears he may make his return sometime next week, maybe even against Pittsburgh.

Meanwhile, Joe Musgrove, Nolan Watson, Wandy Peralta and Stephen Kolek are all sidelined on the pitching side of things for San Diego, with all of them expected back at some point in August, so the Padres, over the next few weeks, should be getting much healthier.

Pirates:
Andrew McCutchen is day-to-day after an injury on Saturday but will likely be available for this series.

Joshua Palacios and Nick Gonzales are both on the 10-day IL.

Jared Jones has been throwing bullpen sessions as his rehab from a grade 2 lat strain continues. He’s expected to return sometime this month for the Pirates.

Team Notes

One thing is for certain, both of these teams can pitch, and as I usually say in my series previews, I think pitching will be the difference in this series.

Pittsburgh doesn’t have their lethal trio they usually would heading into this one, but Gonzales, Falter and Ortiz are more than manageable and can keep the Pirates in these games as they have all year.

Meanwhile, the Pirates get Dylan Cease shortly after a no-hit performance, and with a newly fortified bullpen as a result of the deadline, the Padres become formidable on the pitching side just about every day.

This is an important series for both squads, seeing as the Pirates can gain ground on San Diego while the Padres can try to distance themselves from the pack.

Either way, these teams will likely be in the conversation come September and the waning weeks of the season, so strap in for another competitive series that will no doubt feature some good baseball.