Starter Spotlight: Can They Get The Sweep?

7-21-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

A comeback win Friday.

A dominant pitching performance on Saturday.

What is in store for the final game of the series today?

Pirates will face off against rookie Tyler Phillips with a potential sweep of the best team in baseball on the line.

Phillips has posted a 4.50 ERA over his first 10 major league innings but his minor league numbers have been fairly sub-par.

He was a 2015 draft pick by the Texas Rangers in the 16th round – 468th overall – out of Bishop Estate Prep in Pennsauken, NJ.

The Rangers DFA’d Phillips in 2021 before he was claimed by the Phillies but his overall numbers – 4.33 ERA and 1.32 WHIP through 675.1 minor league innings – are a tad uninspiring.

Given the mostly minor league career to-date, there’s not much readily available data on Phillips.

It appears he primarily uses a low-80s sweeper and mid-90s sinker, working both down and away from RHH.

He also mixes in a low-90s 4-seam running high in the zone with a low-80s curve dropping down on hitters. It’s a small sample size but the off-speed/breaking stuff are the far superior offerings.

Phillips has some stark reverse splits in his brief MLB career but that’s been prevalent in his minor league numbers as well as each step has seen him fare worse against RHH than LHH.

Bucs bats should be looking for the elevated sinker and be patient at the plate. Although he was praised for his control when he was drafted, Phillips has seen an increase in walks as he has elevated through the minor leagues while he has seen a near equal decrease in his strikeout numbers.

Lay off the sweeper, attack the heat and break out some brooms today.

Let’s Go Bucs!

This Pirates Team Has a Lot to Do, but They’ve Already Earned One Thing, Their Swagger

7-20-24 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

48-48 at the All Star Break, with 66 games remaining, the Pirates had reason to feel good about what they had accomplished on the way there.

It had been built on pitching, specifically starting pitching and at different times this season the bullpen and the offense have been the anchors that prevented the club from making the most of out that special unit.

At times one of those other units would show up and the Pirates would tend to find a way to win, but it always felt like they were lucky to survive more than taking it to anyone.

And then it started to take shape in mid-June. The bullpen cleaned itself up and got healthy, the hitting started to get more consistent with infusions like Nick Gonzales, and Joshua Palacios, as well as patience paying off with guys like Oneil Cruz and Rowdy Tellez.

Now, they’ve largely been firing on all cylinders for the best part of a month and it’s culminated in this 6 game winning streak that spanned the All Star Break and has taken the first two games of this series against the Philadelphia Phillies.

The MLB account on social media is all over the Pirates right now. See, nationally, they’re the team with Paul Skenes and when they see our stadium full, they aren’t counting how many of them are rooting for Bryce Harper.

Don’t get me wrong, I know the perpetual thin ice that the Pirates are skating on. They’re a 4 game losing streak from losing the buzz they’re building up, I’m also kinda not of the belief it’s coming this time.

There’s a belief in that room. An air of belief that they have enough in this room to be scary.

While we fans continue to pull for the club to augment this roster with at least another bat, the guys in that room, all they know is they have enough to come to the ballpark every night believing they can win.

Swagger.

That strut you see from a confident baseball team. They look like they can’t wait to get to the bat rack, even when they’re struggling against an opponent, you get the impression as long as the starting pitcher does their job, they’ll figure him out.

This isn’t to say they’re perfect, or they don’t need to add, nothing silly like that. Instead, it’s to say this team believes they’re in this, and they’re playing a whole bunch of teams who think they have stake to the same claim.

They’re playing their best baseball of the year and they’re missing some big pieces on the IL still, they’re likely to add help, and if you can’t feel something happening here, chances are you’re still in your mom’s basement telling yourself “Damnit, I was right”.

The vibe with the fans and the team are real, and so is the fact that all the talent they’ve brought in along this hellscape of a journey is starting to make it’s way to, and mature at, the major league level.

I told you years ago, there was no shortcut for this. We had to see the suffering for a chance to see the reward, well, consider this time and place the very beginning of a long stretch of baseball that matters in the Steel City.

This team is young, and clearly not as put together as a bunch of teams, including the Phillies who they just secured a series victory from, but they can pitch with anyone and tonight, they scored all their runs off two Phillies All Stars who give up homeruns about as often as I consider jogging on the treadmill fun.

Beating the Phillies doesn’t make them real. Beating the White Sox certainly didn’t either, but if you stop complaining about what they aren’t for a few minutes and really look at your team, I think you’ll see a team that is on the rise, and can go into any series thinking they have every chance to win it.

6 in a row, 8 of 9 with young stars on the rise. A unit of players fully entrenched in being Pittsburgh Pirates for the next half decade minimum. They’re having fun, they believe in each other, and this fan, well, I’m there too.

I can’t wait to see what the next 64 games bring and there isn’t a damn team in the league that wants to play your Pittsburgh Pirates right now, bet that.

Starter Spotlight: Take A Chance On Sanchez

7-20-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

After a surprising comeback victory last night, the Pirates are on the fun side of .500 for the first time since April 24 and just 0.5 games back of the final wild card.

But, the season doesn’t end today and still, we fight on, as the Pirates look for their 6th straight win facing All Star southpaw, Cristopher Sanchez.

Last time around, Sanchez went 6 frames of 4-hit, 2-run (1 earned) ball with 3 walks and 6 strikeouts.

With a 2.96 ERA that is 11th best in MLB but somehow just 3rd best in his own rotation, Sanchez has provided solid production over his 103.1 innings of work this season.

Sanchez is a pitch-to-contact arm who limits hard contact. His barrel rate (4.9%) is the 4th lowest in that category and average exit velocity (87.4 MPH) is 14th best.

He also racks up a TON of ground-balls, ranking 3rd among qualified starters in GB rate at 59.9% while also posting the best chase rate among starting pitchers at 35.7% – mostly leading to batters softly rolling over the ball.

He features a 3-pitch mix: a mid-90s sinker and both a changeup and slider in the mid-80s. He works low in the zone with all of his offerings but has one clear BEST pitch.

His changeup has been ELITE this season, with opposing hitters having no chance against the pitch. His oBA (.166) is 3rd lowest in MLB with minimum 100 plate appearances for the pitch while his oSLG (.185) is the lowest among all changeups in baseball.

Given the dominance by Sanchez’s changeup, Bucs batters will want to lock in on heat. The sinker is thrown nearly half the time (47.7%) and has been hit at a .343 clip while slugged at a .436 rate, only generating swings-and-misses 10% of the time – compared to 38.5% for the changeup and 29.5% for the slider, for that matter.

Attack hanging sinkers, lay off anything offspeed and get to Sanchez early. Team managed to beat up on one of their aces in Nola last night. Let’s see if they can do it again.

Let’s Go Bucs!

Know Your Enemy – July Edition

7-20-24 – By Corey Shrader – @CoreyShrader on Twitter

Here are your end of the first half tiered NL Central rankings and the Standings.
Tier 1
Milwaukee
Tier 2A
St. Louis
Tier 2B
Pittsburgh, Cincinnati, Chicago

National League Central Standings Win Loss
Milwaukee Brewers: 55-42
St. Louis Cardinals: 50-46
Pittsburgh Pirates: 49-48
Cincinnati Reds: 47-51
Chicago Cubs: 47-52

The Brewers have gone wire to wire looking like the top club in the division. Pretty much
everything else has been a wild ride from month to month. Perhaps no Central division
ballclub has had a bigger slide in esteem than the Chicago Cubs. The Cubs are pretty
largely underachieving while their hated rivals Cardinals are very solidly overachieving
at the moment. Zooming in on things like run differential, team offensive & defensive
fWAR, it is within the realm of possibility that the Cubs are still the second best team in
the division by the end of the season. Chicago’s underperformance, in my estimation,
looks like something of a mirage and a hard luck streak.

Cincinnati is also presenting some clear opportunities for making an upside case in the
second half. They have a top 5 run differential in the NL and a top 5 pitching staff in the
NL (by fWAR). The offense has been middling and defense downright poor.

The second half looks like it is going to be just as wild with even more standings
shuffling to come.

Now let’s have a closer look at the Enemies.

Milwaukee Brewers

Lineup
Christian Yelich – I feel like a bit of a broken record, but Christian Yelich is still really good. He
catches TONS of unwarranted heat and accusations of being washed, but that is just plain
wrong. For the year his wOBA is sitting at an elite .401 and his wRC+ is at 161, his highest
since the 2018 & 2019 supernova seasons he posted. I wouldn’t anticipate him matching those MVP type seasons, he is well on his way to putting up something similar to his 2016, 5.3 fWAR type of season.

Willy Adames – Adames has consistently been the Brewers best overall player in 2023. Those
whispers of him being dealt this offseason seem more ridiculous by the month now. He is a high quality defender and a steady producer with the bat. While he is not going to win any batting titles, he is going to have a legitimate chance to post a 30 homer season with above average production and strong defense. Just a plain good ballplayer.

William Contreras – Overall Contreras had a great 1st half. His performance from the beginning of June however has been on the poor side. The wRC+ & wOBA have dipped to below league average for the first stretch in the season. Given that his approach still looks good and the defense played well, it is more likely than not that Contreras just simply had a bad month and nothing more.

Brice Turang – Turang is officially having his coming out party as a real starting caliber
MLB player. While his June was not that spectacular, it was solid nonetheless. He piles up
steals (30 at the break) and plays very strong defense. Turang is the Milwaukee version of 2023 Nico Horener.

Jackson Chourio – Well since June 1 we have seen more of what we’ve expected to see from
the kid. He sported a .350 wOBA/127 wRC+ while blasting 4 homers, 8 doubles, scoring 21
runs, and driving in 19. All in all Chourio appears to be making the appropriate adjustments that teams want to see from young players. His approach looks good, 8.7/18.3 BB/K% since the start of June, and the speed & defense have been very strong on top of that. I think we are seeing the groundwork being laid for a legitimate star player.

Garrett Mitchell – Garrett Mitchell has returned from the shoulder injury that limited him to just 19 games last season. He has only made 33 PAs in 10 games so far, but I think that Mitchell is something of a possible second half X-Factor. He’s got a power/speed blend that is exciting. He will be a player to watch should he get steadier playing time.

Pitching
Freddy Peralta – Freddy’s surface stats are not extremely overwhelming (4.11 ERA, 6-5 W/L),
but the underlying data shows him to be a borderline staff ace still. Peralta remains one of the better strikeout pitchers in the league and he has elicited weaker contact overall this year than his previous two seasons. The ERA will most likely come down some, but he doesn’t need it to be sub-3.00 for him to post near top of the rotation stats.

Robert Gasser – A great debut for the young man, but unfortunately he went down with an
elbow injury. Gasser underwent Tommy John surgery and will be out for a long duration.
Trevor Megill – No Devin Williams, no problem. Megill is proving himself to also be one of the
league’s best closers. He has elite K stuff supported by a monster four seam fastball and a
knuckle curve that has a 64.9(!!) whiff rate. I almost can’t imagine them removing him when
Williams returns…

Tobias Myers – Easily the Brewers best starter since the calendar flipped to June. In 7 starts
Myers went 5-1 with a 1.79 ERA and a 0.93 WHIP. I’m not sure he is quite this good, his 3.98
xERA is probably more accurate to his skill level rather than his current 3.13 ERA. Make no
mistake, Myers looks like a real rotation piece.

Colin Rea – Much like Myers, Rea had a great June. In 8 appearances (6 starts) Rea went 5-1
with a 3.77 ERA and 1.04 WHIP. Unlike Myers, I do not think we should expect this to continue this way for too long. Great June for him either way, though. Big part of their success.
Jared Koenig – An incredible 13.2 IP as of June 1. Koenig was a man possessed posting 2
wins, 3 holds, 17/5 K/BB, a 0.66 ERA, & a 0.80 WHIP. He has been a premium bullpen arm all
season.

Aaron Civale – The Brewers acquired Civale right before the break. His results have been
interesting so far in 2 starts for the Brewers. Pirate fans saw him duel Paul Skenes on 7/11/24
where he looked very strong. In his only other start with the Brew Crew he matched up with the Dodgers and despite some wildness and the longball (3BB and 3 HRs in just 5 IP), he flashed some intriguing K stuff on the back of his cutter and sweeper. While he did not get as many whiffs against the Bucs, these two pitches looked strong there too. He will be one to monitor.

Minor League Check In

Eric Bitonti – A 3rd round selection in 2023, Bitonti has big power. One of the best hitters in the Complex League. Watch his swing and you see a little bit of Matt Olson. Long way to go to get there, but impressive 2024 so far.

Jesus Made – Made is a name to watch as he moves up the MiLB ladder. Just 17 and
dominating the Dominican Summer League.

Luke Adams – 2022 draftee, Luke Adams is in A+ and, for me, is one of the more underrated
prospects in the game. His swing is unconventional, but the power/speed/approach is really
compelling. Could be rounding into one of the premier low BA, high OBP, power/speed threats in the minors.

Cooper Pratt – Another 2023 draft pick. Playing as a 19 year old in A ball, Pratt made the
Future’s Game for the Brewers. He is a major helium prospect right now.

Josh Knoth – Selected with the 33rd overall pick in 2023, Knoth is in A ball at the tender age of 18. Some inconsistent results at times, but his strikeout potential is tantalizing.

K.C. Hunt – Hunt was originally drafted by the Pirates in 2022. He did not sign and instead went to play college ball at Mississippi St. After going undrafted in 2023, the Brewers signed him as UDFA. He had an interesting but not spectacular 2023. But in 2024 he is shoving. Across A and A+ he has a 2.12 ERA, 0.86 WHIP, 91/14 K/BB, and a 6-1 record. Still at an age appropriate level, when he jumps to AA and this continues, his stock will absolutely take off.

St. Louis Cardinals

Lineup
Willson Contreras – Contreras missed a good amount of time but his 88 PAs before the break
were good on the back of a .385 wOBA and 153 wRC+. Batted ball data is still strong. He is a
very good player.

Brenden Donovan – By fWAR Donovan was the Cards best player in the period we are
examining. His triple slash of .318/.372/.450 is impressive. Not a basher, but he has definitely
ticked up in his game power ability. His versatility and new found pop make him a really
interesting player.

Alec Burleson – Preseason I was all in on Burleson being good. He proved me right before the
break. He jacked 12 homers, 8 doubles, stole 5 bases, slashed .292/.328/.569, with a .377
wOBA and 147 wRC+. His lack of defensive value will cap his fWAR, but he looks like a nice bat first player for the Cards.

Masyn Winn – Winn is establishing himself as a good young MLB caliber player. The production hasn’t been too great (.300 wOBA/95 wRC+) but he is laying the foundation of a good player for a 22 year old. Even with the offensive still developing, his defense is proving valuable on the back of an incredible arm, a league leading 14 DRS, impressive range, and a solid 2 OAA.

Michael Siani – Speaking of defense, Siani is that guy in center. He is top 5 in DRS and second
in OAA among all primary CFs. The bat leaves a lot to be desired, but the defense is
remarkable.

Nolan Arenado – Continuing our defense first theme, Arenado can still play a useful hot corner. While he is a diminished version of his former self, the defense and simple hit tool made him a valuable contributor since June 1 where he accumulated a 0.8 fWAR despite his production being well below career norms.

Pitching
Sonny Gray – A definite impact free agent signing for the Cards. Gray is on track to come close to matching his AL CY Young runner up effort from 2023. From June to the break alone Gray put up a 1.6 fWAR good enough for 3rd best in the National League in that time. He was a bit of a hard luck loser though pitching to a 2-4 record during this time. Make no mistakes, he is one of the best pitchers in the NL and an ace.

Miles Mikolas – Mikolas seems to be on track to turn in a traditionally solid Mikolas type
season. Nothing particularly flashy, but an innings eater with near plus control of a kitchen sink type of arsenal. I expect that his final line is eerily similar to 2023 when we look back at end of the season.

Ryan Helsley – Utterly dominant. Paces the MLB with 32 saves. Third best fWAR among all NL relief pitchers with a 1.3 mark.

Ryan Fernandez – An incredible June to All Star break with a 0.83 ERA, 1.02 WHIP, and 8
holds.

Kyle Gibson – The 5.15 ERA since June 1 is deceptive as Gibson’s underlying metrics show
him to be a much better pitcher than that in his 36.2 IP during that span. 2 very poor outings
skewed the end line. He is getting lots of groundballs and the sweeper has been very, very good again in 2024. Not an ace or even a top 3 SP, but Gibson is a steady back end rotation piece.

Minor League Check In

Tink Hence – Tink is having a great revival to his status as “elite.” Just a reminder that even
very good prospects, especially pitchers, do not always develop linearly.

Quinn Mathews – From A ball all the way to AA in 2024. Mathews is perhaps the biggest MiLB
breakout pitching prospect in the league. He is just getting his feet wet at AA now. If he
continues to roll there, he will begin cracking into top 50-75 overall kinda esteem.

Darlin Sandlin – Yet another Cardinals pitching prospect worth watching closely. In A+ right
now and looking like a certified guy. His fastball looks to be a premium “modern” metric pitch. I implore you to go find a video of him throwing. It just looks “different” when it leaves his hand.

Chase Davis – Davis stunk until May ended. Once it became June, things began to change. His
swing decision became better, his quality of contact became better, & his production became
better. On June 1 he had a .279 wOBA & 69 wRC+. From June 1 until July 19, he put up a .428
wOBA & 161 wRC+.

Chicago Cubs

Lineup
Ian Happ – Happ was very good before the Break. He went for 9 homers, 12 doubles, 5 swipes, and a .407 wOBA/167 wRC+. All in all he is having a strong year and is on pace for a career year.

Cody Bellinger – Bellinger was having a solid stretch of play hitting .281 with a .309 wOBA/100 wRC+ before succumbing to a broken left index finger.

Nico Hoerner – I came into this expecting to hate on Hoerner, but his season really is not that
far off of his 2023 performance. He currently has a .306 wOBA/98 wRC+. In 2023 he finished with a .322 wOBA/102 wRC+. It would not be surprising at all to see him finish about the same in 2024.

Christopher Morel – I have been talking about the “Christopher Morel Experience” all year and
we saw it yet again in June. The surface line is kind of gross, but he still produced 8 HR on a
.309 wOBA/100 wRC+ despite a .206/.300/.397 triple slash. His xStats paint a different picture and they are being dragged down by a well below normal BABIP.

Michael Busch – As of the Midsummer Classic break Busch was leading the Cubs in fWAR,
wOBA, & wRC+. He has some strikeout to his game (31% K on the season), but that is just the
type of player that he is. He’s got 12 homers on the season and is prone to hot/cold streaks. But the offseason acquisition looks like a success for the Cubbies.

Pete Crow-Armstrong – PCA has been rather underwhelming with the stick. The batted ball
stuff isn’t TOO gross with a just below MLB average EV and dead on average max EV. So
really there is a lot of room for growth here yet. His defense and speed are the carrying tools
right now. He leads the MLB in CF DRS, is top 10 in OAA, and is 99th percentile in sprint speed.

Seiya Suzuki – Seiya is a good offensive producer. His June marks of .378 wOBA/147 wRC+
were second best on the Cubs. Before the break he popped 8 homers, 8 doubles, and 3 triples. As long as he can stay on the field Suzuki should have a very good chance to replicate or surpass his 2023 fWAR.

Pitching
Justin Steele – Justin Steele has regained his 2023 form. His June to break line is stellar; 54 IP,
8 starts, 7 quality starts, 50/11 K/BB, 2-1 record, 1.67 ERA, 0.89 WHIP, and a 1.7 fWAR. He
has been the second best NL Starter since June 1 with that 1.7 fWAR performance. He is an
ace.

Shota Imanaga – Imanga has come back down to Earth after taking the league by storm early
this season. His performance has dropped back to that of a mid-rotation piece, but he still has 2 above average to plus offerings. The splitter, and sweeper both have xwOBA’s against below .260 which he deploys against LHH and RHH’s to keep them off of his four seam. What we appear to be seeing is the League adjusting to Imanaga after his meteoric debut. We will not get to see how he responds to that adjustment.

Jameson Taillon – Old pal Jameson has been very sharp in 2024. His main secondary
offerings have all been very sharp. And on top of that his control has been strong with a sub 5% BB rate on the season. Taillon always seems to be limited by the amount of innings he can stay on the mound for, but he is settling in as a reliable back end starter for the Cubs.

Luke Little – Luke Little is a mountain of a man. He’s got to look mighty imposing toeing the
rubber at 6’8”, 220+lbs. He throws gas and has a lethal sweeper that he slings at batters with
some of the league’s best extension (7.3 feet) that makes them play up even more. He
generates poor contact against and on the year batted balls against him have had a negative
launch angle. Relief pitchers are hard to predict, but he’s got the appearance and stuff to be a
good one for a long while.

Hector Neris – Neris put up 2 wins and 7 saves in 14 appearances since our last KYE. Those
results are nice, but they have come with some other issues attached. A very unpalatable BB
rate of 15.9% makes his performance incredibly unpredictable. Simply put, he is not a reliable
back end reliever.

Minor League Check In

Yohendrick Pinango – After romping through A+ ball, Pinango has slowed down in AA. Still a
player to watch for me. But there appears to be adjustments necessary.

Kevin Alcantara – Having a solid, but not flashy 2024 at AA so far. The tools are still loud and
the K% dipping down to 26.2% on the season. This may portend big things for The Jaguar in the second half.

Owen Caissie – Cassie is in AAA and playing well. He is almost ready to make a splash for the
big club. The K% is on the higher side, but he can get on base and has real big-boy power. He
sort of reminds me of Twins mega prospect Emmanuel Rodriguez. Caissie is underrated and
has a very high ceiling.

Matt Shaw – Taking care of his business at AA. 10 homers, 20 steals, getting on base, etc. He
should be up sometime in 2025. He is an elite prospect for me.

Cade Horton – Opened in AA and cruised. Made it to AAA and has not adjusted. Also shut
down for up to a month with a lat-strain.

Cincinnati Reds

Lineup
Elly De La Cruz – ELDC led the Reds with a 2.1 fWAR prior to the Summer hiatus. A strong
triple slash of .271/.351/.548, .381 wOBA, and 143 wRC+. He also went for 8 homers, 9
doubles, 5 triples, 27 runs scored, 19 RBI, and 14 steals. Without a doubt Elly is one of the most electric players in baseball. There is an absolute possibility that he can post a 30/70 season in 2024.

Matt McLain – McLain has been out all season so far. But reports have stated he will begin a
rehab assignment in mid-August.

Jonathan India – What a stretch of good play for India. From June to the break he went for a
.422 wOBA/177 wRC+, 5 homers, 16 doubles, 29 runs scored, 20 RBI, and a slash line of
.341/.421/.570. This production was good enough for the 6th best fWAR in the NL for this
period. The 1.9 fWAR here accounts for the bulk of his season fWAR of 2.4. This just goes to
show what a blazing hot month can do for a guy’s cumulative body of work.

Spencer Steer – Steer is a pretty underrated hitter. Some of that is due to him being a lousy
defender. Since his value is so reliant on the bat carrying the profile. The bat did its part before the break. .364 wOBA/131 wRC+. I wouldn’t have known without looking at it myself, but Steer may have the quietest path to 30/30 that I can ever recall.

Tyler Stephenson – Stephenson more or less doubled his season production numbers in the
month plus before the break. He is hitting the ball hard and the approach is really kind of sound. Not a standout, but definitely a starting caliber catcher.

Reece Hinds – How about this 7 game stretch to start a career; 28 PAs, 5 homers, 3 doubles, 1
triple, 7 runs, 11 RBI, 2 steals, .423/.464/1.192, and a 1.657 OPS. All coming on the back of a
.769 ISO, .673 wOBA, and 341 wRC+. The batted ball profile is crazy to support this sample. He went full Aristides Aquino. Don’t expect this to continue (obviously), but you need to pay
attention when someone comes out and does this and the batted ball data is also strong. Let’s see where this goes, I guess.

Pitching
Hunter Greene – Hunter Greene has taken another step forward in his progression toward ace
status. Somehow he has yet to turn 25 years old despite him being around for what feels like
forever. He has had a terrific 1st half and finds himself firmly in the top 10 pitchers in the NL by fWAR, top 6 in Ks, top 7 in ERA, & top 8 in WHIP. In 2024 he continued to refine his arsenal by adding a new offering; a splitter. While he primarily relies on his main two pitches (four seamer & slider) the development of the splitter might just take him to the rarified air of the “Ace” tier. Greene has always had weighty expectations placed on him largely due to draft and prospect pedigree and now he is beginning to live up to them. He has been a textbook case of pitching prospect development requiring patience from fans and organizations alike.

Andrew Abbott – Abbott is quietly having a very successful sophomore season. There seems
to be a lot less buzz around Abbott in 2024 and I’m not completely certain why that is. Perhaps it is because his rookie debut went so well that people tend to notice that kind of performance more from a new kid on the block. Either way, he is more or less repeating what he did last year just but with less strikeouts. He did see the K% tick back up over 20% since June began, but that came with an accompanying rise in BB%. To me, Abbott looks like he will at minimum be a good 4 or 5 SP. Given his relative early stages of his Major League career, there is definitely upside for more there too. It needs to be said that there is a gulf between his surface stats and underlying peripherals. His 3.50 xERA and 4.90 FIP lead me to believe the true talent level is really somewhere in between those two figures and not so much his current 3.39 ERA mark.

Frankie Montas/Carson Spiers – Montas and Spiers had solid, but unspectacular runs before
the break. Both hurling low 4.00’s ERAs with modest strikeout numbers. Neither one really
deserves a full blurb, but they were 2nd and 3rd in pitching fWAR for the Reds since June 1.

Alexis Diaz – Diaz is still struggling with command, but he did clean it up some in June. The
ERA was gold at 1.93 and he secured 8 saves in 14 appearances. We will need to monitor this
trend going forward. He may be getting back on track here.

Minor League Check In
Rhett Lowder – Lowder has made it up to AA and the surface stats are not very impressive.
The underlying numbers look much better. There is more work to be done, but he looks to be on the path of a premium pitching prospect.

Sammy Stafura – The Reds 2nd round pick in 2023, Stafura exploded onto the scene at the
Complex League this summer. He quickly earned a promotion to A ball and has mostly
continued this good performance there. A fun prospect that has a chance to average to above average tools across the board.

Jay Allen II – Allen II was an early breakout call for me and his production has kept up for the
most part. His hit tool has begun to regress however as his average is down to .226 on the
season. He is getting on base at a good clip (.384 OBP) and producing (.372 wOBA/129
wRC+).

Sal Stewart – Stewart is a really good hitting prospect. He has been playing 2B and 3B at A+.
Just 20 years old, but proving to be too advanced for the level at this point. His power has ticked up and if it continues trending this way, Stewart will be a slam dunk top 50-100 prospect sooner than later.

Until Next Time

I think that about does it for the June to All Star Break/First Half wrap up edition of Know
Your Enemy.

The second half in the NL Central is going to be must-see-TV. With the way teams are
grouped in the standings any imaginable outcome remains within the realm of
possibility. I know that I can’t wait to watch it unfold and then look back and see the who
& why with you all!

Evaluating the Pirates’ Free Agent Signings

7/19/24 By Drew Cagle – @cagles_bagels on X

As the Pirates exit the All-Star Break and begin a potential playoff push in the second half, the team is seeking pieces on the trade market. However, the most valuable improvements might just come from those inside the Pirates’ clubhouse. I decided to look back on how the team spent money in the free agent market this past offseason, to take stock of where each player is, and how they might fit into the team down the stretch of this season.

Rowdy Tellez, 1B

Early on, Rowdy Tellez was perhaps the most polarizing of this list, but things have changed. Fans watched as his platoon at-bats were slowly relented to surging Connor Joe. Countless times he looked lost up there at the plate, looking at middle-middle fastballs for a called strike three multiple times.

Things started to turn around on a weekend trip in Toronto at the start of June. Tellez entered the series against the Blue Jays slashing a woeful .175/.239/.222. He put together a 4-for-9 series, which included a 3-for-4 game and 3 RBIs in the Sunday matchup.

In the month and a half that has followed, Rowdy has looked like the capable power bat he was brought in to be. No longer has his $3.2 million salary been the butt of jokes in Western PA. A .321 average and .933 OPS in the time since the Blue Jays series has raised his overall batting average over 60 points, up to a respectable .243.

Heading into trade season, Tellez has quieted the doubters, and given the Pirates valuable production at the plate and in the field. Where first base was once looked at as a severe need for the club, now Ben Cherington can negotiate from a position of strength, and is not required to make a move in this department.

Andrew McCutchen, DH

Coming off of a solid 2023 campaign that saw him have an above-league average OPS of .776 but have the end of his season cut short due to a partially-torn achilles, Pirates fans were excited about McCutchen’s next home run, which would be his 300th. They had to wait until an April 14th four-bagger in Philadelphia.

Andrew McCutchen has sat in the leadoff spot and served as the designated hitter for almost the entire season, and has kept that OPS around league average once again. Some tough BABIP (Batting Average on balls in play) luck early in the season caused his numbers to suffer, but he has bounced back to be an everyday contributor for the team. He’s not what he once was, but that’s not what his $5 million salary suggests. Even if he’s struggling, McCutchen is a necessary veteran to have in the locker room for a team that still has youngsters trying to find their footing, such as outfielder Jack Suwinski.

Martin Perez, SP

Brought in for starting pitching depth, and on the back of a World Series title with the Texas Rangers, I’d say that I expected more from Martin Perez. He’s missed time with some smaller injuries, but has been a solid innings eater. That’s especially useful when Derek Shelton and company are looking to monitor innings from Paul Skenes and Jared Jones.

With an ERA at 5.15 and FIP at 4.66, it has been an uneven year from the southpaw, to say the least. He’s lost his last five decisions. He’s allowed more than five hits in six of his last eight starts.

Perez’s days with the Bucs may be numbered, as he could be dealt to a contender to fill a spot starter or bullpen role. The next couple of weeks will be critical for not only the Pirates’ immediate future, but Perez’s as well.

Aroldis Chapman, RP

Now baseball’s all-time leader in strikeouts by a left-handed reliever, Aroldis Chapman was another signing who had a less than stellar start to the season. The velocity was (and still is) there. The control has been his bugaboo at times. 32 walks in 34.2 innings tell that story.

He’s been better in June and July, save a blown save against the Mets on July 7th. Over his last 15 appearances, he’s recorded an improved 3.52 ERA, 9 walks, and 22 strikeouts in 15 ⅓ innings.

Though I’m still not 100% confident in him when he enters ballgames late, especially 1-run affairs, I can see the positive trajectory that he has been on. There’s an outside shot that he’s dealt at the deadline, but I’d like to see the Pirates stick with Chapman-Holderman-Bednar as the 7th-8th-9th combo.

Yasmani Grandal, C

Grandal made his Pirates debut on May 4th, following a bout with a foot injury. I understood the move to acquire Yasmani Grandal when they did over the winter. Add a veteran catcher with some defensive prowess to pair with a still-young Henry Davis. They did this before with Austin Hedges, and received some international bonus pool money in return at the trade deadline.

However, Grandal’s tenure with the team has been perplexing, to say the least. His bat hasn’t produced, slashing only .178/.207/.502. And even more troubling, he’s had gaffes in the field as well. The most well-known of these came when he lobbed a ball back to the pitcher’s mound, allowing a steal of home plate, but there have been other dropped foul tips and catcher’s inferences that have soured his reputation with Pirates fans. He’s a potential roster casualty, especially should the team want to bring Davis or Jason Delay back up.

Josh Fleming, RP

Josh Fleming is perhaps the most unremarkable of the bunch, only appearing in 24 games this season. Derek Shelton tabbed him as an opener in his most recent outing in Milwaukee. Having missed some time with injury, it hasn’t been smooth sailing for Fleming as a contributor in the bullpen. His 3.99 ERA has been fine, but nothing more. Given his sample size, he’s likely a send-down candidate, should the Pirates want to go a different direction.

Michael A. Taylor, CF

When Michael A. Taylor came over from the Washington Nationals on a $4 million deal, I was excited about it. A former Gold Glove-winning center fielder who had flashed his power (21 homers in 2023) was exactly what the Pirates needed. Unfortunately, he’s fallen short of his billing, hitting a mere .203 with a pair of home runs.

As an expiring contract, he may well be a trade chip at the deadline for this Pirates club, as well. I could see a team acquiring him for his glove, and seeing what they can get out of him at the plate. If not, he’ll likely remain a Pirate until his glove is not above-average (less likely) or his bat is even less playable (more likely).

Series Preview: Phillies (62-34) at Pirates (48-48)

7-19-24 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

Nothing like starting out with arguably the best team in baseball out of the break right? The Pirates don’t get to coast into the last chapter of the season the way they entered the break, instead they’ll stare down what looks like the 4th hardest schedule in baseball.

If they manage to sneak into the Wild Card in 2024, they’ll have earned it.

That’s really how the team should look at it, it’s a challenge to be sure, but if you want to claim you belong in the tournament, you should absolutely expect to hang with and yes beat the other teams in position to get there themselves.

So…

Enter the Dragon…

7/19
Phillies – Aaron Nola (R) – 11-4, 119.2 IP, 3.38 ERA, 116 Ks/27 walks, 1.03 WHIP
Pirates – Martin Perez (L) – 1-5, 73.1 IP, 5.15 ERA, 57 Ks/25 walks, 1.62 WHIP

Phillies – Christopher Sanchez (R) – 7-4, 103.1 IP, 2.96 ERA, 87 Ks/28 walks, 1.21 WHIP
Pirates – Luis Ortiz (R) – 4-2, 66.2 IP, 2.84 ERA, 57 Ks/19 walks, 1.16 WHIP

7/21
Phillies – Tyler Phillips (R) – 1-0, 10 IP, 4.50 ERA, 12 Ks/0 walks, 0.90 WHIP
Pirates – Marco Gonzales (L) – 1-0, 22 IP, 2.45 ERA, 15 Ks/5 walks, 1.23 WHIP

Phillies:
Trea Turner is on another planet right now. In his past 30 games, how about .362 average, a .400 OBP, a .614 SLG, and why not pop 9 homers while you’re racking up your 46 hits. If I broke it down to his last 15 or 7 the numbers only grow. Pray the All Star Break cooled him off.

Pirates:
It’s been Bryan Reynolds for a minute here. Sure Rowdy has hung around and contributed but Reynolds does it every day. The calendar flipping to July didn’t slow him either. Past 30 games, 10 homeruns, .328 average, .379 OBP and a .623 SLG. He’s in one of those spots where Bryan looks like a top 5 outfielder in baseball.

Phillies:
Bryson Stott has largely struggled for the past month. In his last 30 games, a sample size of 109 at bats he’s hitting .229 and struck out nearly a quarter of those bites at the apple. .229 might not qualify as “cold” on the Pirates, but for the Phils, yeah, he’s it.

Pirates:
I’m sticking with Jack until they either demote him or he turns it around. His past 30 he’s hitting .167, with 4 homeruns, 28 strikeouts an OBP of .247 in 84 at bats. That’s not starter level playing time, but it’s far too close to it for that kind of production.

Key Injuries

The Pirates are still without Jared Jones, Ryan Borucki and Bailey Falter, but are lucky to find themselves in position to see them as reinforcements more than gaping holes left behind in their wake.

The Phillies are of course without All World catcher J.T. Realmuto, Taijuan Walker and Spencer Turnbull. Fairly healthy units really for this time of year.

Things to Look For

The main hope here is that somehow taking a week off playing has slowed the Phillies down to merely human. There’s nothing about facing this team that on paper looks favorable to me except potentially facing a rookie pitcher on Sunday.

If I have a glimmer of pre playing hope, it’s that coming out of a break, it’s a lot easier to practice hitting velocity than it is to hit crafty breaking stuff and the Pirates are throwing two guys who do that well in this series.

The Pirates bats have to gear up for Aaron Nola and Christopher Sanchez to start and man, it’s hard to see them just jump back to the mediocre hitting club they had become before the break, but, that’s why we play the games.

The Phillies have too many players to pitch around anyone, but far too often the Pirates manage to keep Harper, Schwarber and Turner in check only to let Bryson Stott or Brandon Marsh destroy them. The intensity can’t change when the expected easier spots pop up in this lineup, they’re just too good.

Starter Spotlight: No Love From Nola

7-19-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

Heading home for Yinzerpalooza to host the Phillies after the break and, while we won’t have to face some of the big members of their rotation, we are leading off against their mainstay in stalwart Aaron Nola, who has built an impressive track record of success over his 10-year MLB career.

Nola has been the picture of consistency year-in and year-out. He enters play tonight with an 11-2 record and 3.38 ERA over 119.2 innings this year.

He also has 14 quality starts and has allowed 3 or less runs in 16 of his 19 appearances this season.

Over his career, Nola has faced the Pirates 9 times with mixed results as he has posted a 3.98 ERA over 54.1 frames vs Pittsburgh.

He’s never been a “hard-thrower” by any means, as his fastball sits low-90s while utilizing a high-70s knuckle curve as his main pitch.

Both the curve and four seamer have been plus pitches for him with a run value of 8 and 6, respectively.

Nola works the curve down in the zone and attacks hitters high with the heat – but, he changes things up with his sinker, which has not performed as well against opponents as oBA of .284 and oSLG of .474 are both significantly higher than what he sees from his first two offerings.

In fact, outside of the curve/4-seamer, Nola becomes much more of a mortal as his changeup and cutter both have an xBA of .330+ and an xSLG of .520+ against them.

Nola is tough and will attack the zone, work the big swooping curve and keep hitters off-balance. Pirates hitters need to identify the curve early and try to hold off on it, choosing to punish the hanging sinker or changeup/cutter combo.

Holding a 4-game win streak heading into play tonight and a likely sold-out crowd loaded with fans across the state. Get on Nola early and give the team a chance to keep that streak rolling.

Let’s Go Bucs!

The Long Road Ahead

7-18-24 – By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on X

I won’t lie, it’s been nice taking the past few days off from writing and (for the most part) baseball stuff.

But, starting tomorrow, baseball is back in action and your Pittsburgh Pirates have a 48-48 record, sitting just 1.5 games back of the final wild card spot. That’s the first time they have been .500 or better at the break since 2016.

That’s great!

That’s amazing!

Now what?

Well, over the remainder of the season, the Pirates have the 4th hardest schedule, including an downright GAUNTLET in the coming weeks.

Is this recent run of success sustainable as they enter the toughest battles of the season?

Phillies

Starting off this weekend with arguably their toughest series in the second half, they play host to the MLB-best Philadelphia Phillies – who are currently 62-34, had the most All Star selections of any team in baseball (8) and have created the most dominant pitching in baseball.

As of today, their rotational fWAR of 11.6 is head and shoulders above the next best starting pitching corps in baseball (Atlanta – 9.8) while their bullpen’s fWAR of 4.7 is only 2nd to Cleveland (4.8).

The combined efforts have resulted in a team ERA of 3.42 with an MLB-best 877 strikeouts, backed by Cristopher Sanchez, Ranger Suarez and Zack Wheeler – all of whom have a sub-3 ERA.

That’s…really good. And, in case you forgot, they have some SERIOUS bats too as their team wRC+ of 112 is 6th best in baseball with the 4th most runs scored (477) and 3rd best team batting average (.259).

Bryce Harper, Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber and Alec Bohm are each posting a 130 wRC+ or higher as part of this disgusting offense.

While the Pirates split the series last time around, even on their home turf, it is going to be tough coming out of the break to battle the Phillies.

Cardinals

They’ll stay at home for another 3-game set facing division-rival St. Louis Cardinals., who inexplicably have rebounded from a 71-91 record last year to a much-improved 50-46 mark at the break.

I’ll admit, I am still at a loss to explain how this team is good. Maybe that’s the Pirates-fan bias? Maybe it’s because their rotation is the oldest in baseball with only baby of the group, 34-year old Sonny Gray, holding an ERA+ above 100 (125).

Someone asked me the other day why they have been doing so well and the only thing I can figure is that the back end of their bullpen has been VERY good with Ryan Helsley leading MLB in saves (32) and Jojo Romero and Andrew Kittredge both top 3 for holds with 26 and 25 respectively.

The Cardinals have also benefitted from a relatively easy first half schedule as they have struggled mightily against the teams they needed to beat, posting a combined 4-13 record against division-leading Los Angeles Dodgers, Milwaukee Brewers and the aforementioned Phillies.

They have some strengths but even if they make the playoffs, they are not well-positioned for a long-run.

Diamondbacks

The National League pennant winners from last season were a surprise to make the post-season and even more of a surprise to see their Cinderella Story run lead them remarkably close to Arizona’s second title in franchise history.

Alas, they fell short and, even with some off-season additions, they are struggling to keep in the race as they posted a 49-48 record in the first half despite former Pirate Kevin Newman getting a not insignificant amount of reps in their middle infield this season.

He’s actually not doing too badly. Good job, Newman!

The team’s pitching, a strength last year led by Cy Young Finalist Zac Gallen and Merrill Kelly, has struggled to replicate that success. Gallen and Kelly have only combined to throw 101.1 innings thus far thus season due to numerous injuries and the team ERA (4.80) ranks only ahead of basement-dwellers in the Oakland Athletics, Miami Marlins and Colorado Rockies.

Off-season acquisitions Jordan Montgomery and Eduardo Rodriguez have not helped in that regard as Montgomery has a 6.44 ERA through his first 65.2 innings in the desert while Rodriguez has been sidelined all season with a left shoulder strain.

They have managed to keep plugging along thanks to an offense which ranks 9th in OPS (.736) led by 1B Christian Walker and 2B Ketel Marte, who have combined for 38 doubles and 41 home runs this season.

And this is in spite of a very slow start by 2023 Rookie Of the Year, Corbin Carroll, whose .635 OPS in the first half is over 230 points lower than his .868 mark last season.

Astros

I don’t think anyone entered the 2024 season expecting the Houston Astros to not be competitive.

The core of Jose Altuve, Kyle Tucker, Alex Bregman and Yordan Alvarez were still firmly part of the team.

They made a big free agent splash by inking LHP Josh Hader to a record deal to be a lock-down arm paired in the back-end of that bullpen with Ryan Pressly.

Sure, the rotation has looked shaky at times but what could go wrong?

On May 11th, 39 games into the season, they were 14-25 while Hader (5.29 ERA) and Pressly (5.65 ERA) were struggling to lock-down the 8th and 9th innings.

Since then, they have rebounded to the level you expect from them as Hader (2.88 ERA in 25 IP) and Pressly (2.42 – 22.1 IP) have helped the Astros post a 36-21 record since then.

The offense has chugged along as its typical resilient self. Even with Tucker on the shelf with a right shin contusion since June 4th, Houston has the 8th best wRC+ (110) and lead MLB in team batting average (.262).

Additionally, the rotation – which has been a mixed bag for the team the past few years – has seen a strong sophomore showing from Hunter Brown, who has a 2.36 ERA over his last 10 starts, as well as a surprisingly strong first half from Ronel Blanco (2.56 ERA in 109 IP).

This has helped Houston post the 3rd lowest rotational ERA since May 12th at (3.50) – just behind the Pirates, who have a 3.41 ERA in that time.

There’s rarely a good time to face the Astros and we are staring down that fate to end the month of July.

Oof!

That’s a stretch of 12 games in 13 days over 3 cities/states and a combined opponent record of 211-174 (a .548 win%), and that’s not including another series at home against Arizona and 3 games hosting the San Diego Padres before heading west for 3 in LA versus the Dodgers and 3 in San Diego.

This is the BIGGEST test of the season for this team. Can they rise to the occasion or will they falter under the pressure?

Only time will tell.

Let’s Go Bucs!

Steel City Pirates Q&A – All Star Break Questions…

7-17-24 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

Good questions, had a good time answering them, thanks!

Lets Go.

Question 1

Who would you have pitch the three games this weekend against Philadelphia? Do you throw Skenes this series or against St. Louis? – JGor492

I know this isn’t where fans have their headspace right now, but I’m taking the easy inning relief here with Paul. It’s not fun to talk about, but it is a reality and they can buy him almost 10 days of relative rest without “skipping” him.

They also have an opportunity to set their rotation up a bit better.

The Phillies are a wagon, I won’t go so far as to say it doesn’t matter who you throw against them, but instead I’ll say the Pirates have 2 guys you expect to give you a great shot, and 4 guys you hope do.

Against the Cardinals, listen, I know they have a better record, but they have a -38 run differential, the Pirates don’t have a starter I’d shy away from.

So I get the logic of trying to make sure Keller and Skenes go in Philly. I think I prioritize the rest personally though.

I’d start out with Marco Gonzales, for one thing, he’s just started getting himself built back into handling innings, and it’s a really bad time to have him sit longer than normal. He’s also not a bad foot forward against a team that’s demolishing fastballs, just coming off some down days. I like the idea of crafty that day.

I’d then move to Keller who had a short outing last time out, got an All Star snub and should be chomping at the bit.

From there, Martin Perez or Luis Ortiz would be my series finisher and I’d lean Ortiz, he’s shown a lot this season, I’d like to see him get a shot at working through that lineup and see just how convicted he is about throwing strikes.

In St. Louis, I’d use all three. I’d start with a 6 man rotation coming out of the break, so against the Cards I’d go some variation of Perez, Skenes and Priester, even if Priester is with an opener.

Another way they could go, they could use Priester as a backer for Perez, he’s scuffled, but it’s really hard to have the flexibility of planning for two starters, while also planning to let either of them run a bit if they get going. In other words, Perez could go 5-6 and then Priester is not likely closing out the game and he’ll get fewer innings. Might not be the best use of the tools they have at hand.

I guess if I were mapping it out, Gonzales, Keller, Ortiz, Perez, Skenes, Priester for me. I don’t look at deciding where Skenes pitches as choosing the series I “want” to win though.

Question 2

Is Cherington making moves? What should we expect at the end of the month? – Shawn Wheeler

I know at the very least they plan to add a bat. They’ve said that, I’ve been told that, and it’s painfully clear it’s what they’re missing most.

Couple things about this “bat”…
– They aren’t married to it being a lefty or a righty specifically
– They aren’t pinning themselves to one position but they’d prefer an outfielder
– They’re looking for a starting level player

What should we expect? Well, them to find someone, minimally, who meets at least some of those criteria. If they can’t get one player who does all that, they might get two.

Lastly, they are not afraid to use options or move veterans to make room. Bringing in an outfielder or two might mean optioning Jack and trading/cutting Michael Taylor. Just an example of what I’m getting at.

I won’t predict any big moves because I don’t really believe any I like are out there. I wouldn’t be in on Robert Jr. or Jazz personally. Both have injury history, both have at least in my opinion hustle issues, and both of them will require star payment to acquire, for me, I need to be more sure than I am about those two in order to get on board.

If they go that route, don’t get me wrong, they’d improve the team, I just think I’d rather go after a smaller name like Doyle from Colorado. I bet I’d get the same punch (if not more) for way less prospect cost, simply by not being under the microscope.

End of the month, they will on paper look like they changed for the better, even if only marginally.

Question 3

I have 2 questions…

1) I’ve been waiting to see German on the club all year. I’m I expecting too much from him?

2) everyone is talking about them being buyers. Who do you think they will be willing to move and what return do you expect? – Greg Roland

Well Greg, before I start, the Pirates just released Domingo German, but I still think it’s worth explaining what they were thinking, and maybe where you were off. I think maybe you were underestimating how much work he had to do both on and off the field to prove to the Pirates and MLB he’s worth redeeming. His contract was designed to give him a fair shake, in exchange for the Pirates getting a very cheap top end pitcher in 2025 if he capitalized on it.

They paid him 1.5 million this year on a minor league deal. He’s not on the 40-man so the Pirates couldn’t call him up unless they cut someone else. He has a 2.5 million dollar club option for 2025, meaning it’s was entirely up to the Pirates whether they want him or not.

A lot would have had to happen to see him used in 2024. I think you’d have to have 2 more injuries to starters and even then you might see Ashcraft and a bullpen game instead. Nah, to me, German was a very late season innings eater or an offseason decision if they wanted to bring him to Spring or not.

The unmentioned here, he’s played 11 games and had a 5.00+ ERA. He’s wasn’t exactly pushing either brother.

Now question 2, Kinda talked about the return I expect in The Question 2, not your question 2. Who they’d part with? Perez, Grandal, M. Gonzales, Olivares, Taylor, I mean, those guys are all possibilities. If you want me to start listing off prospects, man, I’m just not gonna do it.

I’ll instead tell you, they only have maybe 2 or 3 guys they won’t move, and they could probably still play in most conversations. Bubba Chandler, Termarr Johnson are probably not available, and if I had to guess, they probably wouldn’t want to move Thomas Harrington either.

Question 4

Only asking because I don’t recall it ever being mentioned: What is Andy Haines’ supposed strength as a hitting coach? A lot of guys, you hear about hands-on approaches or great communication skills, but all you hear about Haines is “he works hard.” So do washing machines. – Nick Cammuso

First, the National Lampoon reference is noted and appreciated, if you know, you know. He’s supposedly very good at organizing and presenting information to players. Now, I’ve had this characterized to me as “information overload” unsolicited from at least 3 prospects over the past couple years, but for more seasoned hitters, it’s very welcome information that they look forward to getting both about their competition and their own swing mechanics.

That’s another thing he’s supposed to excel at, swing mechanics. None of us are in on any of this, including the people who actually get paid to cover the team. Nobody who isn’t directly in that room knows 100% how this process goes, especially in season. For instance, Rowdy Tellez showed up to camp already trying something different than he did before he was signed. I stress that part, Rowdy showed up like that. Then Rowdy decided sometime in May to talk to his Dad and some old trusted coaches who encouraged him to revert to what he used to do. Haines was blamed for making him suck, and blamed for taking so long to let him find help to not suck. Truth, Haines had told him his new tweaks weren’t working too.

I hate this stuff Nick, because it always comes across like I’m cool with Haines or whatever, I hope I’ve said often enough, I’m not, I’m just also not a guy who is going to claim he has no value at all. I still think they need better hands on options at the MLB level, but I’d also say, this is the first year they’re actually trying to have more of this “information overload” presented to players in the lower levels more frequently. The hope being, it helps in their adjustment struggles.

It’s like hiring a guy to pick up trash in the city, you know he isn’t real good at emptying the truck at the dump, but he can pick it all up just fine. Rather than hire someone to help do the actual dumping, they’re just ok with him missing the hole once in a while and having a bunch of office workers shovel up the mess.

Like doctors, First, do no harm. I feel pretty good about this one, he’s not hurting guys, he just isn’t really helping them either. His suggestions are just that, guys don’t go to the plate doing what they don’t want to do. Except Yasmani bunting of course.

The overall philosophy, well, they’ve already changed it. Derek Shelton stepped in and told his guys to get more aggressive up there, I think you’ve seen, they listened. Even that isn’t to say Haines said don’t swing and Shelton said swing, it’s instead to say, guys, we’re leaning too far into being patient and it’s hurting your chances to produce. It clicks for some and confuses others.

They need to improve this area. To me, they can do that and keep Haines if they like in some capacity. I don’t have to be 100% right to the degree he’s unemployed, I just know I’m right enough that they have to make some kind of change even if it’s just structurally.

Question 5

The Pirates have extended a player each of the last 3 seasons. Do you think that trend will continue this off season? – Robert Hagelin Jr.

I do Robert. I think there would have been two had David Bednar not gotten hurt this Spring as a matter of fact. I still think they’d like to extend him, although I’d advise against it, so I for sure think they could have another this offseason.

I also think they’ll approach Paul Skenes about buying out his arbitration and popping a couple years on the end.

Aside from that, who might you want? Cruz? I mean, I could see it, but I’m not sure how you write up the value. He might not feel he’s had a chance to be himself 100% and they might feel he’s close enough to that figure that he’s not worth what perhaps they thought even last season. Still, there could be a conversation here, there’s no doubt the bat is top 3 on the club currently and I don’t see him getting nudged aside.

So, yeah, probably.

Question 6

What’s your opinion on the idea mentioned of trading draft picks? I’ve always thought it was odd teams could trade CB picks, but not regular ones. – Longbeards

I’ve always thought this should be on the table, and I also understand why it isn’t. For one thing, with the slotting system it could invite more party games than they want played with bonus pools. That spending room would have to travel, and you could get back to having some top picks demand over slot because the team picking 8th acquired the number 13 pick and they have more available to give the guy. If it’s a big enough player that could be worth burning that 13th pick with say a late first round profile and now we’re right back to “signability” remember talking about that every draft?

That said, it works in other sports, difference being, they all have a salary cap system to prevent anyone from being incapable of being in it almost immediately. For those sports the best of the best draft picks have instant impact, for MLB that list is like Paul Skenes and Wyatt Langford in like the last 25 years.

I’m ok with it in principle, I’d be much more open to it if they had more controls on spending though. The other side of this, I don’t see people doing it a whole lot.

Let’s say the Angels are trying to trade Mike Trout and the Pirates in this brave new world can move their number 1 pick in 2025 and 2026 along with say a AA good prospect pitcher and the Angels picking up 20% of his salary. Great deal right? Well, maybe not for the Angels. As it stands now, the Pirates probably settle in at like 14-17 for a pick, now give them Mike Trout (in our happy little world he’s healthy sometimes, it’s right behind the Bob Ross bushes) and suddenly, they aren’t a team finishing there are they? You erode the pick value and in MLB there is a huge drop from top 10 to next 10 at least in scouting confidence.

Teams like the Dodgers would probably sell them instead of lottery tickets, if teams want to essentially get a Comp B pick cause they’re almost always 25 and up. Some years you’d want to trade back I’d imagine, like if the Pirates had the number one overall this year, I’d beg them to do it, my luck though, they’d have traded their 2023 pick in 2022 and Skenes would be on the Rockies.

Question 7

What have you heard regarding team efforts at “internal improvements”? – Douglas Smith I mean, aside from hiring a new top dog in amateur scouting director Justin Horowitz? That’s really the biggest thing they’ve done, but it’s also not a position that you’re going to hire and immediately see results, the dude just participated in his first draft for the Bucs. If nothing else, that says we aren’t happy with our scouting in some aspect. Certainly not pitching right?

Secondly Doug, it’s like this. You know how Nick Gonzales didn’t look like he was ever going to bust through last year and this year he looks like he at least has a good chance of hanging onto second base?

Internal improvement.

Know how Kyle Nicolas and Carmen Mlodzinski are kinda killing it in the pen now.

Internal improvement.

Know how Oneil Cruz couldn’t walk last year and now he can at least jog enough to have yinzers call him lazy?

You guessed it, Internal improvement.

When Henry makes it back this year or next…

Yup.

Doug, we get caught up in these silly buzz words and we decide what they mean to us or what we should see when “it” happens and we forget there’s a whole bunch of stuff that happens on the way there.

You’re talking Gigantic overarching premises here. Like walking into an elevator with 12 accountants and saying, man, how about that economy huh? It doesn’t work that way.

Ben Cherington was expected to clean house when he came in, and he replaced several positions, but before he could really dig in, COVID hit.

They stood pat.

COVID Ended, they felt they still needed to make changes, they did, albeit less than originally planned. The next year, the final bits and pieces. And now, a changing of the guard at the top of scouting.

They also made some changes internally to try to drag the hitting program up to where they have the pitching program. Not unlike what I mentioned about Andy Haines’ information trickling to the minors more often, but fans are never going to be ready to admit, they simply don’t have as much offensive talent as they do pitching talent.

Internal improvement may piss you off to hear, but you’re literally watching it every day. Every time Quinn Priester takes a positive step on the mound, every time Nick Gonzales shows off his “inferior range” to field a ball on the short stop side and still nail the runner, you’re watching internal improvement.

If you’re keeping a ledger of those who regress to balance the scales, have fun, that number outweighs those who succeed everywhere, even the places where they look to be churning players out ever offseason.

It’s also like turning the Titanic, you don’t just turn 45 degrees with a flick of the wheel. Every small adjustment changes things potentially a lot. You make those adjustments like ripping off a band aid at first and carefully as you can after that if only because this stuff snowballs and you catch good while tossing the bad in the wastewater.

Question 8

This time of the season always a ton of trade speculation etc.

Also, a lot of salary talk etc.

Given the extremely high failure rate of their recent top picks(Swaggerty, Tucker, Craig, Newman to a lesser extent)has anyone heard of a change in direction with drafting and development? – Neil Davidson

Well Neil, there’s nobody left who makes decisions on drafting or development who remains from that era. I also just mentioned to Doug in his question earlier, they just hired a new scouting director.

You could have gone back and started naming all of Littlefield’s as well, I’d have the same answer. They’ve had a lot of swing and misses, but I can’t blame them for failing to develop 4 guys who have done absolutely nothing anywhere else either. That’s just poor drafting. Many of which fans called out at the time.

I’m just not ready to hang them at the gallows someone else earned. Feel me? We now have Nick Gonzales, Carmen Mlodzinski, Paul Skenes, Jared Jones and Henry Davis who have all made it to MLB, four of them have stuck. The one who didn’t is absolutely nowhere near done getting chances. They’re doing ok turning the draft into MLB help but bluntly, we’re just getting to the point where we can truly evaluate it.

Nobody has a 100% hit rate, that’s just real life, but every year from here on out, more and more the players coming up will be draft picks by this regime. I personally think we need to see it play out a bit longer before we decide it’s the same as the last. I’m already leaning that they’re better.

Question 9

Who is the next extension? Can they do just 1 without causing trouble with others (especially among the rookie types)? – Jack Mycka

I kinda answered this one up there, but the second part is interesting. I don’t think we’ll have the Gerrit Cole problem with Paul Skenes, but I also think he’s the only one who might have a case for being miffed. I wrote in 5 thoughts why I thought they should go after a Skenes extension and avoiding this feeling is a big part of why.

Question 10

Do you agree with this if the Pirates had handled Henry Davis right, he would be the first string starting catcher and someone like Endy or Joey Bart would be the second or third string? Then, on days when he’s not catching, he’s DHing because Cutch should not be what feels like he is the full time DH? That it should be Davis, Davis, Cutch, Cutch, Reynolds, Reynolds DHing? How do you think they could have handled Davis better? – Neal Kokiko

First, this isn’t a question as much as implanting your idea of an alternate universe like Ancient Aliens and then going “isn’t it possible?”.

Yeah, I’m sure that saying a team that selects a catcher 1:1 hopes that he one day becomes their perennial starting catcher.

If Endy weren’t hurt, it’s my belief they’d still have signed a veteran catcher and Henry would have probably had to beat Endy in Spring.

I wouldn’t rule that out, because Endy barely hit all of 2022. I expect Henry to push back, in fact, I expect Henry to make it back this year.

Bluntly, Joey Bart isn’t here if Endy isn’t hurt.

Henry is young. He flew through this system because he can hit minor league pitching. The only thing I can say I’d have done different is I’d have made him fall in the minors and recover before calling him up, thing is, that potentially never would have come.

His story isn’t written. His development isn’t over. Who is the long term starting catcher? Who the hell knows? They have options and when you’re building a baseball team, that’s kinda the goal. Get you more than one avenue.

If it take Hank a year to catch on, and it costs him the Catching position, hey, thems the breaks. If Endy’s injury cost him his shot at it, well, it happens.

This stuff isn’t the conglomeration of wishful thinking and boneheaded decisions fans want them to be. They’re real people, doing something really hard. Something that far more fail to do than succeed.

Henry is 24 years old. Joey Bart is 27 and was drafted with every bit the same pedigree as Davis, the Pirates just picked him up off Waivers. Now he’s the starting catcher here.

Try to paint that as a plan for anyone involved.

Question 11

Is there anyway Marco plays himself I to the Pirates picking up his option? Even if for offseason trade – Adam Yarkovsky

I doubt it Yark. The buyout is reasonable at 3 million and I don’t think I see a 12 million dollar arm do you?

Even if he was crucial for the next say 10-14 starts he gets, is he worth a mil a start? It would take something Bailey Falter first part of the season like, and even then, Bailey is cheap and under team control for a lot longer.

I suppose if they really like him and that’s kinda what they planned to spend anyhow, they could go that way, but I think it’s much more likely they bail.

Question 12

Along the lines of Greg’s question, I only count seven teams that will be sellers at the trade deadline: Blue Jays, White Sox, Angels, and A’s (and perhaps the Tigers) in the AL. Nationals, Marlins, and Rockies in the NL. The other 23 clubs should be buyers. How does this situation impact the trade approach from the Pirates? – Dale Merchant

I think there will be more than that Dale. A five game losing streak and it’ll push another team into this talk.

That said, I question how “seller” these sure fire sellers are. The Rockies have pieces to sell, they also have said they don’t want to move them. The White Sox have two big chips and some fringe players they could move, they also have some really nice players coming and could just sit until the offseason but move guys like Pham.

The A’s aren’t going to move guys like Miller or Bleday, they’re trying to time up being good with moving into Vegas, but they have some guys that could be chiseled away. Blue Jays are on record saying Vladdy and Bichette are staying.

Point is, a shallow pool might be more shallow than it looks.

I think the Pirates are likely going to have to look for someone being used in a bench role they feel has more in them (which sometimes looks like Brian Giles and sometimes looks like Edward Olivares) or, they need to be willing to pay more than other teams to convince a guy into being available.

It’s certainly not a great time to have a long shopping list. Fortunately what they need most is pretty generic. An outfield bat. They could get more picky than that, but bare minimum, they need something that should be available.

If they needed say a Starting Pitcher, man, there isn’t much.

Question 13

How many different writers do you employ? – FStover1
What makes you cover the Pirates? Where did your love for them come from? – James Littleton

James continuing conversations we started on the golf course and never finished here a bit…

Employ is a mighty strong word for a completely free site. We currently have 8, 9 if you count me. Some write a lot, some write very specific and seasonal things, some just like to be in the group chat I think.

I mean, I started because I made friends with some writers, specifically Michael DeCourcey from The Sporting News and Dejan Kovacevic from DK Pittsburgh Sports. They read some stuff I wrote and critiqued it, but also both told me to do something with this. I then met Jared Smith, a guy trying to get a local Sports Illustrated Pirates Page started and I reached out. Worked there for about a year, met Craig Toth and when it closed down, we started this site up. Now, that’s my story. Why the Pirates? Well, DK told me focusing would make me better, and looking back now, I totally agree. Second, I thought the coverage of the Pirates was by leaps and bounds the worst in the city, so why not try to work in that desperate space?

It’s hard to find people who not only want to write, but want to write about the Pittsburgh Pirates, have something to say, be literate enough to at least have autocorrect help them put something together, and have them meet a standard of being fair in coverage. Oh, and do it completely for free.

The people that write here like Ethan Smith, Michael Castrignano, Josh Booth, Jud Verno, Joe Boyd, Corey Shrader, heck even Douglas Smith wrote some really cool Bradenton history for us. Drew Cagle just joined recently, he’s a Senior focusing on Digital Communications and already has his own blog, just looking for another avenue to get some bylines out there. Has some cool ideas for how he wants to proceed.

They’re special people. When I get on here and start crowing about everything we do on this site, it’s because we put something new and in my opinion quality, out just about every day about this Pirates team, with a diverse group of voices and we all do it because we love the Pittsburgh Pirates and want fans to be able to hear about their team in a thoughtful way.

That’s it. You read, you click, you don’t, great. We do it because we think it’s important. It’s free so if you reply and don’t read, I can just reply DERP.

I’ll add, many of us, Ethan, Michael, Josh and Myself have podcasts that we do make some measure of bank for, so the site offers another avenue to push those shows and give people a reason to listen to what we have to say by writing too.

Right now, I really like watching the skill sets kinda dictate who does what.

Like Michael is super good at looking at stats and tendencies, he’s also a pretty even handed editor. So, he’s the Co-editor and he’s gravitated to his almost daily Starting Pitcher Spotlights that really should be more aptly called If the Pirates are gonna beat this sucka, here’s how. Ethan loves just gobbling up news or lists or even opinion, he’s a great catch all and he uses the site to try to help him build out his daily Locked on Pirates show. Thinking up topics is the single hardest part.

Josh is a stats guy and he loves diving into them with some volume so he’s done his Trendline feature monthly.

Corey lives on the West Coast and he pays a lot of attention to the league at large, so he focuses on trade pieces and digging into what the Pirates competitors do, all the way into their systems. That distance really helps him stay objective about some deals that names alone would shut us off to.

Jud is a tireless trade nut. Like, he never stops thinking about them. The day after a mythological World Series victory he’d be in the chat suggesting trading someone at peak value. He brought us Joe Boyd who actually has some chops writing about other sports and they started the Two Guys Talkin’ Trades pieces on our site which Corey has stepped in to help with now. Joe still pops by for his yearly comp piece after the draft we all love so much.

Who knows, maybe Craig will even come back one day if he ever gets itchy to write again.

Why? You interested? lol

Question 14

We’re two weeks away from the trade deadline. Will be see Ben Cherington make a trade soon or will we have to wait until closer to the deadline? – Voice from the Graves

I know they’re talking. I also know they’re talking to some teams that aren’t 100% sure what they’re doing yet.

They’re looking for a bat, and they’ve been pretty publicly vocal about it. I have no doubt they’ll get one. Now, as to the timing, if it were up to them, tomorrow. This isn’t the same as selling rentals, that almost always comes close to the deadline.

Feels to me like a few teams will emerge as suitors for Jazz and Robert, then the other teams will get serious about the offers they have going out for the next wave of players they might want.

I have heard some specific names like Randy Arozarena, Taylor Ward, Lane Thomas and Brent Rooker but nothing I could classify as close. Just hearing the names though, should tell you the kind of pool they’re looking to splash around in.

Breaking down each Pirates offensive position group at the All-Star break

7-16-24 – By Ethan Smith – @mvp_EtHaN on X

The 2024 MLB All-Star break is upon us, which means we have just 66 games remaining in the MLB season – crazy how fast things move nowadays.

The Pittsburgh Pirates, for now, have positioned themselves well, sitting at 48-48 and just 1.5 games out of the final NL Wild Card spot entering the break, thanks to four consecutive wins in a row and two series victories over Milwaukee and the Chicago White Sox, the longest winning streak in MLB.

With that standing has come plenty of trade deadline discussion, wondering what Ben Cherington and the front office have planned before the July 31 deadline and just how management decides to improve this roster, or if they even do at all.

Some position groups have played much better than others to this point, hence why the team “needs” are pretty clear and apparent to even fans like myself and you.

So, let’s take a look at each offensive position group, what it’s offered the Pirates to this point, or lack thereof, and how things could shake out over the last few months of the season.

Catcher

The catcher position has been a talking point since the off-season.

A season-ending injury to Endy Rodriguez changed the landscape of the catching position for the Pirates before the season even began, and like another young catcher, Rodriguez still has a ton to prove as well, but it suddenly left a gap at the catcher position.

Henry Davis was labeled the unquestioned starter before the season began, and with the addition of Yasmani Grandal, that was your expected group. Fast-forward to present day, and things look drastically different.

The Pirates made a mid-season addition to acquire Joey Bart from the San Francisco Giants, who has had success, although he’s dealt with injury. Davis has been on-and-off the injured list and hasn’t produced when he’s been healthy, leaving the catching position in a state of flux.

The group itself ranks 26th in MLB in WAR(-1.0), ranking just above the Rangers, Cubs, White Sox and Marlins. Of course WAR takes defensive output into account as well, but when you move to the offensive side of things, it’s not great, at all.

The catching unit ranks 26th in OPS(.599), 27th in OBP(.266) and 25th in SLG(.333), so to say the offensive production from the catcher position has been bad would be an understatement.

As mentioned with the WAR number, it takes defense into account as well, and that number is inflated by a 14 DRS from the catching group, so it’s actually been a solid defensive unit all things considered.

Adding to the catching group at the deadline wouldn’t be the worst decision, the only problem is the availability of catchers at this deadline, with Danny Jansen and Elias Diaz being the most likely candidates to be moved.

On top of that, Bart, Davis and Rodriguez are all young, controllable assets at the position, so adding onto that could create a unique problem contractually for the Pirates moving forward.

The hope is that Davis comes up again at some point and truly contributes with the bat, and if Bart can continue to stay steady and be an average bat near the bottom of the order, than I think you’d like that tandem much more than what you’re currently seeing.

First Base

The first base position was labeled a massive need for the Pirates a few months ago, with production at the position being carried by Connor Joe amidst Rowdy Tellez’s struggles.

Now, Tellez has been raking since the calendar turned to June, while Joe has taken a step-back, but collectively, they’ve actually been quite good together.

The first base group ranks 14th in OPS(.727), 11th in batting average(.252), 16th in OBP(.314) and 17th in offensive WAR(0.5), so although it’s a mostly middle-of-the-pack group, it’s a much better group than what we saw in the first two months collectively.

Even more surprising is how good the group has been defensively, posting a 7 WAR, which ranks second in MLB behind the Braves and Giants.

Now, both Tellez and Joe are not what you would consider long-term options, but for now, they’ve been fine, and if the Pirates decided to search for a long-term first baseman, I wouldn’t be shocked nor upset.

The story of the first base position will continue, for now, to be told by Tellez and Joe, and if they can continue to be at least average, that’s a good thing for a Pirates team that thought very differently about first base a month or two ago.

Second base

Second base became an immediate talking point in Spring Training upon the return of Oneil Cruz, who’s injury in 2023 opened up a ton of playing time for the ample, youthful options the Pirates had at their disposal.

Jared Triolo won that “battle” out of Spring, with Nick Gonzales joining the fold and since taking over the position in May, while Ji-hwan Bae was even featured in small stints.

Collectively, the Pirates second base group ranks 22 in MLB in offensive WAR(0.7), led mostly by Gonzales, who is and should remain the Pirates second base option moving forward.

Where the worry comes in is defensively, as the group ranks 29th in MLB in DRS(-10), but if the offensive production continues, specifically from Gonzales, second base should be an area of strength despite the defensive woes.

Third base

Outside of Triolo featuring at third base due to injury, Ke’Bryan Hayes has and will continue to be the guy at third base.

The 2023 Gold Glove winner entered 2023 coming off an insane second half of 2023, looking to enter 2024 with momentum, but he hasn’t quite pulled it all together.

Hayes slashes .244/.297/.311/.608 with 3 HR and 21 RBIs right now, numbers you’d like to see improve, specifically the OPS number.

As of late, Hayes has played much better, slashing .328/.339/.362 in his last 58 at-bats, so he’s picked it up, especially after collecting a hit in all three games versus the White Sox before the break.

Hayes is on a lengthy extension, and his defense will always be there, hence why the Pirates collectively at third base lead in DRS(25), with the next closest team being 12 DRS away, but the cherry on top will always be his potential offensive production, and as a middle-of-the-order bat, you’d hope Hayes finds consistency in the batter’s box in the second half like he did last season.

Shortstop

Like third base, shortstop has been manned by one player, Oneil Cruz.

Cruz entered 2024 after missing virtually all of 2023 due to injury, with plenty on his plate to produce entering his first full season of work for the Pirates.

He’s done well, flashing Statcast numbers left-and-right, slashing .246/.299/.438/.737 with 14 HR and 44 RBIs on the season, including seven stolen bases.

There have been minor injury concerns for Cruz at points in the season, but nothing that has sidelined him for a length period. We’ve seen Triolo feature at shortstop on days when Cruz needs a day off, but its Cruz’s position until he says otherwise.

The defense of course is a massive question mark, even though I think Cruz has done fine handling himself there. He tends to rush himself at times and make poor throws or decisions, but he’s also done well at ball tracking and finding the right spots to be in at baseball’s premier position, but a -17 DRS at shortstop is still concerning.

For Cruz, it’s all about the bat, always has, always will be, and he isn’t going anywhere, and his production will surely get better with each plate appearance.

Outfield

Bryan Reynolds has had a stellar season, hence why he got his second All-Star selection, and he’s been the glue that has kept the outfield from being a unit that would be considered among the worst in baseball.

Center field ranks 29th in MLB in offensive WAR(-0.2), 29th in strikeouts(114), 27th in OBP(.267), 28th in SLG(.297), 28th in batting average(.206) and 29th in wins above average(-1.3), so it hasn’t been a good group at all.

Right field isn’t much better, ranking 25th in wins above average(-1.1), 23rd in OPS(.666), 29th in SLG(.339) and 7th in OBP(.327).

We’ve seen the Pirates try to find anything that works in the outfield that works outside of Reynolds, with Jack Suwinski, Michael A. Taylor, Edward Olivares, Connor Joe, Ji-hwan Bae and Joshua Palacios all seeing time at the other outfield spots, but nothing has produced like the Pirates would like, seeing the outfield group become a massive need ahead of the deadline.

I’d argue center field is the biggest of the needs the Pirates have, but the availability, like the catcher position, of players is limited, so the Pirates may need to get creative if they want to solve their center field woes.