Pirates Can’t Hold On To Early Lead Against Colorado: (21-17)

5/10/23 – By Craig W. Toth – @BucsBasement on Twitter

April was fun. We can’t forget that.

Your Pittsburgh Pirates were 20-9 headed into a matchup with the best team in baseball-the Tampa Bay Rays-to kick off the second month of the season.

May…not so much. We have to remember this as well.

After a 1-7 slide-where nothing other than Mitch Keller seems to be going right-we regrettably have to look back on our pre-season projections.

Deep down we probably knew a regression was coming; but, we surely didn’t see the bottom dropping out so quickly.

News & Notes

  • Cutch was clutch during the last two games of this series. Unfortunately, the team results didn’t fall in line with his production. After starting 0 for 3 in the opener, Andrew drove in 3 of the Pirates 4 runs; and took one step closer to 300 career homers.
  • Another Veteran on the roster, Carlos Santana may need a breather. After Ji-Man Choi went down early on, I was wondering how much work Connor Joe-the only other realistic option at position-would get. Don’t get me wrong, Santana has been a godsend at 1st, but he can’t be asked to play 35 of the teams first 38 games, without seeing some sort of regression at the plate. Over his last 15 games, Santana is slashing .235/.328/.314.
  • RISP has been a hot topic as of late; and with good reason. This series the Pirates were 3 for 18 in these situations; good for a .167 batting average. Obviously this matters, however, it also depends on circumstances. You know…like bases loaded with no outs in the bottom of the 6th, and you can’t get one guy across home plate.
  • Rich Hill only lasted 3 and 2/3 innings, while throwing 75 pitches. He definitely wasn’t bad, but relying on the bullpen for 5+ innings, isn’t ideal either. Maybe the defense will turn things around at some point. Hill’s final line: 3.2IP/4H/3R/1ER/2BB/4K.
  • An overwhelming narrative has started to take over the Pirates Socials-initiated by Fans and some Media Members; and although I tackled the topic in a recent Through The Prospect Porthole, I thought I would address it again-due to a lot of misinformation-again tomorrow.

The Pirates have an off day on Thursday before heading to Baltimore to take on the surging Orioles.

For Pittsburgh, Johan Oviedo (2-3/5.59 ERA/1.62 WHIP) toes the rubber against Kyle Bradish (1-1/5.95 ERA/1.73 WHIP) in the orange and black.

Pirates Need To Extend Mitch Keller

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-yqeme-1404199

Craig and Chris discuss the reasons why it is so important to extend Mitch Keller; and no it is not just based off of one start. Plus they get into some plans for the catcher position. 

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

Top 5 Pirates Prospect Performers: The First Week Of May

5/9/23 By Craig W. Toth (aka @BucsBasement on Twitter)

As the Pirates began to struggle over the past week-aside from last night when Mitch Keller was completely awesome-fans eyes began to drift down to the Minor Leagues; looking for any player that could possibly help stop the skid the Big League Club was on.

This practice had become commonplace over the past few years; however, this season it seemed to have escaped the Pittsburgh Pirates, even if it was short lived.

Often the names were-and still are-the ones we would assume; usually based on prospect ranking(s), along with misinformation from the ones that are in a position to educate us on the subject.

The former is completely expected, as we have heard their names; and can easily search the prospect lists that exist, from multiple publications.

Now the later. Well, that is something that has started to bother me more and more lately; which means I will probably write more on the subject at a later date.

No matter the reason(s), the Minors are back on the radar in Pittsburgh. That is until the Pirates happen to go on a extended losing streak again; or any number of players struggle.

1) Henry Davis-C (Altoona)

Obviously the Pirates 1:1 Draft Pick from just a couple years back has been mentioned more than most due to the tear he has been on down in Altoona.

Currently Davis is riding an eight game hitting streak; during which he is slashing .400/.514/.867 with 4 homers, two doubles and a ridiculous 271 wRC+.

On the season he is batting .292 with a 1.057 OPS, 6 homers, a 193 wRC+ and a 21.7% K to 17.4% BB-rate; although, we all know that Davis isn’t with the Curve to work on his hitting.

Catching on a consistent basis is the current goal for Davis and Top Prospect, Endy Rodriguez; even if Endy’s time behind the plate has hit a slight speed bump.

2) Aaron Shackelford-2B/1B (Indianapolis)

With all of the talk surrounding Mason Martin over the past few seasons, and the acquisition of Malcom Nunez at the beginning of August last year, Shackelford’s name is one that may have simply gotten lost in the shuffle.

I mean, he did lead the Pirates Farm System in homers last year with 26, and there was barely a mention of him.

Originally selected in the 14th round out of The Master’s University-a NAIA (National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics) school in Santa Clarita, California-back in 2019, Shackelford got a taste of professional ball with the now defunct Bristol Pirates of the Advanced Rookie Appalachian League that same year.

Across 53 games and 234 plate appearances the former Mustang slashed .274/.339/.491 with 8 homers and 28 total extra base hits; nicely following up his breakout performance of 36 homers during his junior year.

Of course, like the majority of Minor Leaguers, his development would be put on hold in 2020; ultimately reporting to High-A Greensboro to begin 2021.

Upon his arrival, it was immediately apparent that the power was still there; as evidenced by his 22 homers. However, so were the strikeouts that began to appear during his time in Bristol. In 421 plate appearances Shackelford struck out 133 times-or 31.6%-while walking just 36 times-good for a 8.6% BB-rate.

Last season-spent primarily in Altoona, except for 16 plate appearances with the Triple-A Indians-he did hit those aforementioned 26 homers, but he also struck out 29.4% of the time. Meanwhile his walk rate remained constant at 8.7%.

Flash-forward to this season in Indianapolis, where he is currently striking out 25.8% of the time and walking more than respectable 18.3%. Of course this is only in 93 plate appearances, but it is clearly worth paying attention to because the power is still present as well. Hence the 3 homers and 10 extra base hits in a short amount of time.

3) Enmanuel Terrero-OF (Bradenton)

Seeing Terrero’s name on this list-or at the very least being in consideration-has become a foregone conclusion at this point.

On the season, Terrero is slashing .318/.430/.447 with 2 homers, 8 total extra base hits and almost as many walks (16) as strikeouts (19). It should be noted that he has 7 stolen bases on 8 attempts, so there’s some speed there, too.

And, he’s just not on my little radar, as Jonathan Mayo-from MLB Pipeline-mentioned him as a Top 30 Prospect Candidate on the most recent episode of Minor League News And Brews.

4) Tres Gonzalez-OF (Greensboro)

Much like Terrero, Gonzalez has found his way into this conversation nearly every week; especially now with his recent promotion to High-A Greensboro.

During his first series with the Grasshoppers, Gonzalez carried over the success he experienced in Bradenton; going 5 for 19 with a homer.

5) Mike Walsh-RHP (Bradenton)

Drafted in the 9th Round during last season’s MLB Draft out of Yale, Walsh had a very limited track record prior to his Junior year; pitching just 7 innings. Still, he did show out at one of Ben Cherington’s favorite scouting sources-the Cape Cod League-following an uneventful final season with the Bulldogs; striking out 23 in 11.1 innings of relief.

After being selected by the Pirates, Walsh would pitch just a little over 3 innings between the FCL and Bradenton; which did not go very well.

Regardless, things have been a little bit different this year, as he has yet to give up a run over his first 8 appearances; recording 4 saves, striking out 11 and walking 2.

BONUS: Josh Palacios-OF (Indianapolis)

Palacios is not really considered a prospect anymore at almost 28 years of age, with 82 career Major League at bats under his belt.

Nevertheless, we really can’t ignore what he has been doing during his short time in Triple-A-over 60 plate appearances.

For one he is in the midst of a 12 game hitting streak. Only being held hitless in his Indians Debut. And secondly he has shown off some unexpected power by hitting 4 homers in those plate appearances.

Coming into this season he had the calling card of a defense first outfielder, but now he could possibly bring more to the table.

Conclusion

There you have it! My Top 5 Pirates Prospect Performers-plus one-for the first week of May 2023.

Now remember, let me know if I missed anyone, and who your Top 5 would be. And, be sure check back each and every Tuesday during Minor League Baseball Season!

Editor’s Note: After I was done compiling my list, and writing it all up the Pirates made a move.

Top 15 Plus 5 More Update

5-9-23 – By Justin Verno – @JV_PITT on Twitter

And we are off. A quick reminder, this week I only give the numbers to date, next week it YRD and the past week. Let’s get to it.

1–Termarr Johnson-

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBAwRC+BB%K%
A.154/.333/.192.526.038.2907021.2%48.5%
Week

2-Endy Rodriguez-

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBAwRC+BB%k%
AAA.264/.353/.417.770.153.3469611.8%14.1%
Week

3-Henry Davis–

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBAwRC+BB%K%
AA.292/.446./6111.057.319.47419317.4%21.7%
Week

4-Luis Ortiz-

IPERAFIPxFIPWHIPBB%K%
AAA32.12.233.624.410.968.7%22.8%
Week

5-Quinn Priester-

IPERAFIPXFIPWHIPBB%K%
AAA25.25.963.023.741.367.9%35.4%
Week.

6-Liover Peguero–

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBAwRC+BB%K%
AA.244/.337/.337.674.093.3229612.2%18.4%
Week

7-Mike Burrow-(season over)

IPERAFIPxFIPWHIPBB%K%
AAA6.22.707.396.220.908%12%

8-Bubba Chandler–

IPERAFIPxFIPWHIPBB%K%
A24.15.184.835.081.6817%25%
Week

9-Jared Triolo

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBPwWRC+BB%K%
CPX.438/.500/.6881.188.250.54322211.1%16.7%
Week

10-Jared Jones

IPERAFIPxFIPWHIPBB%K%
AA13.22.633.87.4.621.3210.2%23.7%
Week

11-Yordany De Los Santos

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBPwRC+BB%K%
A.258/.372/.363.735.105.3681.1013.7%19.2%
Week

12-Thomas Harrington–

IPERAFIPxFIPWHIPBB%K%
A24.23.654.664.321.308.2%24.5%
Week

13-Kyle Nicolas–

IPERAFIPxFIPWHIPPBB%K%
AA26.25.745.494.271.7310.2%24.4%
Week

14-Colin Selby–

IPERAFIPxFIPWHIPBB%K%
AAA133.463.414.691.2314.3%25%
Week

15-Carlos Jimenz-(NO STATS)

IPERAFIPxFIPBB%K%

MY FIVE

16-Anthony Solometo

IPERAFIPxFIPWHIPBB%K%
A+253.964.013.991.3614%31.8%
Week

17-Nick Gonzales

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBAwRC+BB%K%
AAA.268/.347/.439.786.171.349989.5%36.8%
Week

18-Hudson Head

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBAwRC+BB%K%
A+.256/.330/.476.805.220.3611117.7%29.7%
Week

19-Tsung -Che Cheng

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBAwRC+BB%K%
A+.276/.382/.540.923.264.41014114.6%15.5%
Week

20-Enmanuel Terrero

BA/OBP/SLGOPSISOwOBAwRC+BB%K%
A,318/.430/.477.907.159.43015415%17.8%
Week

A Few quick thoughts-

Decisions, decisions-

Not gonna lie, took me a good while to decide who my 5 were this year and I am likely to change it more this year than I did last year.

Dariel Lopez would surely be included here if he didn’t succumb to injury and lose a whole year. While Burrows is finished for the season I will leave his numbers in place as he’s inside the top 15 not ‘my 5’.

Speaking of “my 5” it’s worth mentioning why I will likely make more changes this year. There are a few guys I wanted to follow this year that aren’t playing just yet. DSL and FSL guys and guys that started late due to injury. Axiel Plaz. Tony Blanco Jr. Andres Slivera. All come to mind.

Not yet cookin’

It’s still really early here but all in all the start to the year seems a little slow. Endy missing time due to a scare, thank goodness he seemingly dodged that bullet.

Gonzo off to a warmer start but the K’s still jump out. (and that’s just to start with)

Davis pushing for an early promo? Hard to argue otherwise, isn’t it? His control of the zone is one of the best I’ve personally seen and I truly believe his bat could play tomorrow at PNC if he didn’t have so much to work on behind the dish.

Jared Jones off to a good start but then hit’s the IL. (personal favorite alert)

But I think Hudson Head has caught my eye. Dude really crawled out of the gate, so much so that he almost was left off the ‘my 5’ list. Am I happy with the OBP of .330? Sure am. How about that .895 OPS? Yep, that looks solid. Is it the wRc+ of .111? Well, that’s not bad but that’s not it. SO what is it? It’s the .220 ISO and even better, the 29.7% K rate. Hudson has had bad K rates since he came into the Bucs system. In no way should Head be back on the top spects list and it’s far too early to get ahead of ourselves with him. But if that rate holds he’s taken a step here for sure. At 22 he’s still young but the Bucs would need to push him aggressively along to get excited on the kid.

Keller, Castro Bust Bucs Out of Slump as Pirates Win 2-0 (21-15)

5/8/23- By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on Twitter

Free from the bombardment of the AL East teams, the Pirates managed to finally find success against a familiar foe. After sweeping the Rockies a few short weeks ago, Pirates were able to break out of their slump behind a stellar start from Mitch Keller and a wall-scraping two-run home run from Rodolfo Castro, which proved to be the deciding factor in the game.

Keller was untouchable from start to finish as he threw 103 pitches (77 for strikes) allowing just 4 hits and 1 walk with 8 strikeouts

News & Notes

  • This is the first time that Keller had pitched beyond the 8th inning. It was the first time a Pirates starting pitcher had gone the distance in 370 games
  • Despite continuing to struggle with runners in scoring position (1-6 in the game tonight), the Pirates managed 7 hits and 4 walks.
  • Ke’Bryan Hayes had another multi-hit game – his third in a row.
  • The team made three outs on the bases, a worrisome trend given they still lead the league in stolen bases but were unsuccessful on all three recorded attempts (Castro was caught for the third out of the 5th inning as part of a double steal).
  • This is the first time this season the Pirates played in a game lasting under 2 hours. Official game time: 1:55.
  • The Pirates hope to keep it going tomorrow night for game 2 with the Rockies. First pitch is scheduled for 6:35PM. Let’s Go Bucs!

Five Pirates Thoughts at Five-ish

5-8-23 – By Gary Morgan – @garymo2007 on Twitter

Sorry everyone.

I’ve never missed one of these, but life happens, and this one had to be late.

Just as well, I mean if the Pirates can take a week off offense, I can be a bit late with a weekly feature.

Let’s go!

1. Defensive Swap

When you lose 7 games in a row, everything you don’t do well is amplified, when you win 20 of your first 29, its kinda incredible how many of those same issues were there all along but lost in the shuffle of winning games.

It’s a bit like the great Sam Kinison once said, “If you have money for rehab, you don’t have a problem yet!”

Well, the Pirates had plenty of wins, so it was super easy to ignore or simply say the middle infield defense wasn’t killing the club.

Rodolfo Castro has been holding down short stop, but we saw last year, it’s simply not a position you want him to have to cover for a stretch of time. Game here or there, fine. Weeks or months? Yeah, you’d rather not. Problem is, everyone else on the roster save maybe Tucupita Marcano also don’t pass the eye test.

Enter Chris Owings. Exit Mark Mathias.

The funny thing is, Mathias was hitting .275 since his call up, yet the offensively struggling Pirates chose to send him down for Owings who can legitimately and instantly upgrade their defense.

He’s a vet and has a long history of defensive performance, but the bat has been paltry. .239 lifetime batting average isn’t something to brag about, but the Pirates need a band aid and this will do for now.

I doubt we’re all done seeing Castro play there, but 6 errors in 7 days isn’t the sole reason they dug this hole, but it sure as hell didn’t help either.

Is this who I’d have called up? It’s kinda hard to argue for anyone else to solve the target issue. Gonzales is striking out at a 36% clip, I just can’t see that. Peguero has almost regressed. Triolo is hurt, I mean for now, yeah, Owings.

Not ideal, but remember, none of this was the plan, they had a stud at this spot. Also, maybe quit trying to move Cruz off SS. The cupboard is rather bare folks. So much for ALL THOSE MIDDLE INFIELDERS!

2. Super Who?

The Pirates will activate Luis Ortiz to pitch tomorrow night’s contest against the Rockies. This is a direct replacement for Vince Velasquez who mercifully doesn’t appear poised to miss a ton of time here.

Is this likely a very temporary call up? Well, it could be, but keep an eye on Johan Oviedo, he’s been touched up for 3 straight outings now, and the slider that was his bread and butter has lost some of it’s sudden and near plate break and he’s never really mastered command of the fastball.

I’m not saying yes 100% he’ll replace Oviedo for a bit, but hey, as long as he’s up here, if he looks great and Oviedo doesn’t?

3. Speaking of Super 2

I’ve done this before, but this stuff is kinda like fishing with a net full of holes. You only catch a few, most get away, in this case, escaping true understanding of what’s really in play when we talk about prospect manipulation.

Players have to accrue three years of Major League service time with one year of service time, meaning 172 days on the 26-man roster or the Major League injured list in order to be eligible for arbitration. Super Two is a designation that allows a select group of players to become eligible for arbitration before reaching three years of service time.

Now, did you notice anything there? Where was the mention of the extra year of control? That’s Super 2 right? Nope.

Super 2 is nothing more than a formula to screw the top 22% of service time earning prospects out of a little money 3 years down the line.

For instance, Luis Ortiz has already been in MiLB long enough this year to be past the point where he could accumulate a full year of service time so at this point you have to ask two questions.

  1. Are the Pirates so cheap that this paltry amount matters? Yes, they sure have been, but it’s a whole lot fewer players than you’d think. Cruz, absolutely. Cutch, yup for sure. Bae, no, not so much. It has to be a sincerely worthy player to purposefully shoot for this. For instance, Jacob Stallings was a Super 2 player, trust me, that was not done purposefully.
  2. If it’s not about the extra year, and the amount is so minimal, why not call them up? Shockingly simple. The Pirates either do truly see this player being so good in his first 3 years feel it ‘s worth it. (It kinda never is enough if you’re a serious team) Or, the Pirates truly believe, the player is not ready for MLB.

You’ll find when a player “matters” meaning a top 5 in the system type, especially number one picks but International studs count too here, teams really hate to send them back. The process can wreck some kids, and teams are always careful with it.

So, “just take a shot, or give him a shot” well, you can, but teams don’t like it. That’s really all I’m saying here, not telling you it’s right or wrong, just that it is. I can think of guys it has destroyed, I can think of plenty of guys it did little more than show them what they had left to learn.

A brief delay at the beginning of the season, 3 weeks to a month is typically enough to clear the extra year hurdle. A guy like Ortiz, well he had some service time last year, so he may need to be sent back down for another couple weeks in order to ensure the Pirates will have him for an extra season.

Again, all teams do this stuff, even the Yankees, Dodgers and Rays. The players and owners both did absolutely nothing to really change this system, aside from a weak incentive plan after all that fighting, so I kinda don’t care who it’s fair to, neither side fought to eliminate it so, it’s the law they’re ok with. Can’t vote for it and claim you hate it.

Ha, appropriate finish as I’m writing from Washington DC.

4. A Series of Fortunate Events

That’s what this season has been, even as the Pirates are currently trying to end their 7 game skid.

All season the stars have aligned and even as they lost, so did the entire division.

It’s now time for the management team to realize this much good fortune is not to be squandered.

This team needs offense, and their best offensive prospect Endy Rodriguez can likely provide some. Even if they don’t feel he’s ready to handle 4-5 starts behind the dish, let’s get his bat up here. Let him learn from Hedges. If he’s not going to hit, he can at least teach.

Keep Delay up here and run 3 catchers. Ship out Andujar and bring up Rodriguez who can ably play all the spots Andujar would have tried to play, and catch him once, twice a week until you and the staff feel more comfortable.

When you get handed this many advantageous things in one season early on, you can’t just sit on your hands. I’m hoping the choice to call up Ortiz is a sign that they’ll do the same to infuse some “special” into this lineup.

Nobody is going to outright replace Cruz, but that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t try.

At this point though, it’s time to ask yourself my two questions from point number 3.

5. Roller Coaster, of Performance

Predictions are like butt holes… well, you know the rest.

Anyway, I went with 74 and yes, during their hot start, I sure as hell did think I undershot it, during this past week, I’ve thanked my mother for instilling patience into my make up, because it sure as hell looks right at the moment.

I will say this much, teams like this are almost always a roller coaster. The vets get tired, carrying a weight beyond what their expectations should be. The kids lose focus periodically, especially when the vets get tired and feel their own game needs their focus at the moment.

This typically sacrifices the little things. Defense, making the right throw, knowing ones responsibility on backups, pushing too far on the base paths trying to ignite something.

When it’s good, its good, and when it’s not, it tends to mostly be not. That’s a fairly young baseball team, and folks, they’re talented enough to believe they can find that groove again. Maybe not a 20-9 stretch, but better baseball is in there.

Truth is, so is the bad baseball you’ve been watching. Management can’t control all the injuries they’ve sustained, and I can honestly say they entered the season with what I felt was more than enough depth to survive just about anything short of an injury to Reynolds, Cruz or Keller. Well, clearly, we didn’t get that lucky.

What they can control is to truly evaluate and make sure at this point, they are taking the chances on guys who could help this Major League ballclub.

That, specifically the Pittsburgh Pirates, not the affiliates, not any one prospect needs to be the focus of everyone who is, well, focused, on this team at 115 Federal.

Pittsburgh Pirates Series Preview

The Pirates host Colorado for three before hitting the road.

When & Who

Colorado Rockies (14-21) at Pittsburgh Pirates (20-15)

Game 1 – (5/8, 6:35 EST)

Probable Pitchers:

For the Pirates – Mitch Keller (3-1, 3.32 ERA)

For the Rockies – Kyle Freeland (3-3, 3.76 ERA)

Game 2 –(5/9, 6:35 EST)

Probable Pitchers:

For the Pirates – TBD

For the Rockies – Connor Seabold (0-0, 5.30 ERA)

Game 3 – (5/10, 12:35 EST)

Probable Pitchers:

For the Pirates – Rich Hill (3-3, 4.54 ERA)

For the Rockies – Antonio Senzatela (0-1, 1.80 ERA)

Team Trends

Colorado comes to Pittsburgh after taking two of three against the Mets in New York. The Rockies have won five of their past six games, and have played convincing games against tough opponents. The Rockies’ pitching has seen a steady improvement over the past handful of games, and it comes at the right time for them with the Pirates still looking to get anything going on offense after disappointing series in Tampa and against the Blue Jays.  

The Pirates have lost seven straight games, and are trending downhill in every direction. In this stretch, the offense has failed to score more than two runs in any game, and when they do get runners in scoring position, they are rarely cashing in. The Pirates are playing terrible defense, which cost the team multiple times in both series against the Rays and Blue Jays. Despite this, the Pirates remain in first place in the National League Central due to some incredible luck with Milwaukee losing nearly as much as Pittsburgh.

Who’s Hot

For the Rockies – Randal Grichuk: Despite the smaller sample size for the season, Grichuk collected hits in each of the three games against the Mets, and will provide much needed help to Colorado now that he is back from injury.

For the Pirates – Ke’Bryan Hayes: Let me be clear, the Pirates’ offense has been terrible as of late. But Hayes had two multi-hit games against the Blue Jays and struck out just once in the entire series. Hayes has been seeing a slight, but steady uptick in his offensive production as the season has progressed, a welcome sign for a player who is known for high-level defense, but inconsistent offense.

Who’s Not

For the Rockies – C.J Cron: Cron had just one hit in the Rockies series against the Mets, going just 1-for-8 over the three games. Cron is willing to take walks, and took three against New York, but did not provide much production in the series.

For the Pirates – Jack Suwinski – Suwinski has gone just 1-for-22 over his past seven games and has struck out twelve times in that stretch. He collected just a single hit, (although it was a homer) against Toronto, but had five strikeouts in the series.

Series Overview & Prediction

The Rockies are playing good baseball, and the Pirates are playing bad baseball. The records don’t matter right now. The Pirates have played some tough competition lately, but going winless in six games against the Rays and Blue Jays says a lot about the competitive level of the team. With nothing working for the Pirates on the mound or at the plate, it’s really hard to see them taking the series, and the way the Rockies look, would it really be a surprise if the Pirates got swept again?

I’ll give the Rockies the series win here. The Bucs’ schedule doesn’t get much easier when they head to Baltimore next, and if they want to put together some positive momentum, now is the time to do it.

Losses Keep Piling Up as Bucs Drop 7th Straight 10-1 (20-15)

5/7/23- By Michael Castrignano – @412DoublePlay on Twitter

The Pirates were swept by an AL East team in back-to-back series as they dropped the final game by a score of 10-1. Roansy Contreras was getting good movement on his slider and curve today but the Blue Jay bats were too much for him, lighting him up for 5 runs off 9 hits, 3 walks and only 4 strikeouts.

On the other side, Yusei Kikuchi got weak contact and quick innings as he lasted 6.1 innings with 4 hits, 0 runs, 2 walks and 3 strikeouts. 

Hard to believe the Pirates had the tying run at the plate in the 8th inning as the Bucs loaded the bases with 1 out and a 5-1 score. Toronto called in their closer, Jordan Romano, who managed to strike out Jack Suwinski and get Miguel Andujar to pop out to 3rd to close out the inning.

Blue Jays had six different players have multi-hit game, totalling 15 hits on the day. A third of those hits came in the 9th inning, as Chase De Jong made sure the game was out of reach, allowing 5 runs in the frame to put the final nail in the series coffin for Pittsburgh.

News & Notes

  • The start of the game was delayed by an hour and 35 minutes due to rain.
  • Contreras managed 14 swings-and-misses on the day but also allowed 11 batted balls with exit velocity of 90MPH+
  • Bryan Reynolds saw his 11-game hitting streak come to an end with an 0-5 day. Following a first inning long fly out to center, he had 4 consecutive at-bats where the ball didn’t leave the infield
  • Rodolfo Castro committed his 7th error on the season – his third in the past four games.
  • Ke’Bryan Hayes had a multi-hit game for the second day in a row. It’s the first time this season that he has achieved that feat.
  • Jose Hernandez pitched a clean 7th inning with 2 strikeouts, lowering his ERA on the year to 1.84. He is exceeding expectations considering his Rule 5 status.
  • The Pirates try to rebound at home tomorrow as they host the Colorado Rockies. First pitch is scheduled for 6:35PM. Let’s Go Bucs!

Pirates Woes Continue Against The Blue Jays: (20-14)

5-6-23 – By Craig W. Toth – @BucsBasement on Twitter

As well as the Pirates were hitting, pitching and fielding over the first month of the season, it’s hard to believe that things have turned so quickly. Sure you had a couple of positive outings from Mitch Keller and Roansy Contreras during the Rays series; but over the past week this has looked like a completely different team.

Some may point to the level of competition as the reason for this, however, it’s not like the Blue Jays were lighting the world on fire when they came to PNC Park for this weekend series; riding a 5 game losing streak after being swept out of Boston.

Still, they have looked like the 1927 Yankees over these past two contests in Pittsburgh; blanking your Pirates 5-0 Friday night, and 8-2 this evening; which tends to happen when you are down 7-0 after the first three innings.

News & Notes

  • Johan Oviedo has allowed 17 earned runs over his last 12.2 innings-across 3 starts. During this time he has also walked 7 and struck out 8; far removed from his 10 strikeout, 1 earned run and 1 walk performance in St. Louis a little over three week ago.
  • Bryan Reynolds now has an 11 game hitting streak. He has hit .400 with 10 doubles and a 189 wRC+ in this stretch. Although, he has not had a homer since 4/7.
  • Prior to the game Derek Shelton announced that both Andrew McCutchen and Ji-hwan Bae are working their way back from dueling ankle injuries.
  • Jack Suwinski broke out of his 0 for 17 streak with one of his signature Clemente Wall homers.
  • The Pirates current losing streak has now reached 6 games; yet, they are 6 games over .500.

The Pirates look to right the ship tomorrow as Roansy Contreras (3-2/4.09 ERA/1.42 WHIP) toes the rubber against lefty Yusei Kukuchi (4-0/4.02 ERA/1.24 WHIP) for Toronto.

Minor League News and Brews with Jonathan Mayo from MLB Pipeline

https://www.podbean.com/media/share/pb-cxgvi-13fe33b

Craig is joined by Jonathan Mayo from MLBPipeline to discuss the state of the Pirates Farm System, Injuries that Have Piled Up, The Next Men Up on the Top 30, Henry and Endy, and the Crews vs. Skenes Debate. 

Craig Toth covers the Pirates for Inside The Bucs Basement, and is a huge Pittsburgh Pirates Baseball Fan; especially when it comes to the Farm System. Listen. Subscribe. Share. We are “For Fans, By Fans & All Pirates Talk.” THE Pirates Fan Minor League Podcast found EVERYWHERE podcasts can be found and always at BucsInTheBasement.com!