I made the following post on Facebook last week. I thought that it was a perfect encapsulation of the Pirates season, and I saw no reason to reinvent the wheel when writing this post, so here goes.
"So we took ourselves down to PNC Park on Thursday to catch the Pirates final home game of the season, a 5-2 loss to the Brewers (for the record, the Pirates were 5-5 in the ten games that I attended this year). The really sad part was that when the Bucs fell behind 3-0 in the fourth inning, you just knew that there was no chance, zero, that they would be able to overcome that deficit and win the game. In his always riveting post game presser, Sheltie said of his team that "we just have to get better." Sheltie has been saying that for five years now , and the team has not gotten better.
- Number One on the positive side was the arrival, less than a year after he was taken as the first pick in the first round of the Draft, of pitcher Paul Skenes. He started in the All-Star Game, finished 11-3 with a 1.96 ERA, and 170 strike outs (11.5 per 9 IP) in 23 starts and 133 IP. When he pitched, he was must see, and he attracted huge crowds, not only at PNC Park, but on the road as well. He was taken out of games (got to watch those innings limits) not once, but twice, after pitching no hitters through six innings. He received a standing ovation in a game he pitched against the Cardinals in St. Louis. He had a dominating presence on the mound, and he appears to be a genuine Ace #1 starter for years and years to come. We in Pittsburgh will fully enjoy watching and cheering for him for the next four to six seasons before he becomes unaffordable for our penny pinching home team.
- Before the arrival of Skenes in June, another rookie, Jared Jones, showed the signs of being an ace pitchers. He can throw 99 mph routinely and accumulates strike outs in bunches. A mid-season trip to the injured list slowed him down a bit, but he did have some strong appearances in September. Then throw in flashes of greatness from Mitch Keller, and positive seasons for Luis Ortiz and Bailey Falter. The Pirates problems are many going forward, but starting pitching does not appear to be among them.
- Brian Reynolds had another good season. .275 BA, 24 HR, 88 RBI, leading the team in all three categories.
- Andrew McCutchen had 20 HR and 50 RBI as a 37 year old DH, and he's, well, ANDREW MCCUTCHEN.
- Joey Bart hit .265 with 13 HR and 45 RBI and established himself as the guy to beat out at Catcher come 2025.
- Former first round pick Nick Gonzalez hit .265 with 49 RBI in 94 games while playing well in the field at 2B, SS, and 3B. He appears to be a solid player.
- Oneil Cruz has 21 HR and 76 RBIand was moved from SS to CF in mid-August. He has a lot of raw talent, but continues to make some head scratching mental errors, as well as the physical ones.
- The Bullpen, led by two time All-Star David Bednar, that crashed and burned as the summer wore on.
- Henry Davis.
- Jack Suwinski
- Ke'Bryan Hayes
- Too many games with starting line-ups with multiple guys hitting below .200
- Knowing that when the team fell behind by three runs or more, there was a seemingly 99% probability that the game was effectively over.
- Blown leads (see Bullpen). How many leads did the Pirates have and then give up during that horrid stretch after the trade deadline, including that infamous ten game losing streak that effective ended the season?
- Using Rowdy Tellez as a relief pitcher three times in eleven games during blow out losses. Using a position player once to mop up in a blow out loss is funny. Doing it three times in eleven games is an embarrassment. I would have fired Shelton on the spot after that.
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