Bubba Chandler left his start early on Friday, after dealing with control problems.
Chandler walked his first two batters, then issued three more walks with...
The Pirates have Gold Glove third basemen in Ke'Bryan Hayes and Jared Triolo. They've got another candidate in the system in power hitter Jack Brannigan.
Valentin Linarez had one of the biggest recorded velocity jumps in minor league baseball last year.
Baseball America tracked the year-over-year four-seam velocity gainers from...
At the start of the 2023 international signing period, the Pittsburgh Pirates added David Matoma as their first signing out of Uganda. The right-handed...
The Pirates' minor leaguers today went up against Toronto's in two class A level exhibition games. (The level designations mean little at this stage,...
Today's spring training game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadelphia Phillies allowed us to see all of the players battling for bench spots on...
The Pittsburgh Pirates have claimed left handed pitcher Garrett Olson from the Seattle Mariners today. Olsen should compete for a left handed bullpen spot....
Moving on to look at some of the pitchers in the Pirates' minor league organization, going generally from the lower levels to the upper levels.
Luis Heredia -- R/R, 6' 6", 185 lb Heredia is the 16-year-old Mexican phenom prospect, who was signed last year. He received the highest bonus ever given by the Pirates to an international prospect, but remember that under the Mexican League rules, his Mexican team got 75% of that money. That still left enough money for Heredia to recently buy a house in Bradenton and have his mom come to live there with him. Heredia reportedly threw 6 different pitches in Mexico, but the Pirates are having him concentrate on the fastball, curve, and change-up, with emphasis on control and command. Heredia has been spending a lot of time observing the players in big league spring training camp, and the Pirates have been impressed with his level of maturity for his age. At 16, he has a lot of work to do, clearly, but the Pirates are very excited about an amazing amount of potential. There was some debate as to whether Heredia should start his pro career in either the Dominican or Venezuelan Summer Leagues (with other players his same age), or whether he should get right into the Gulf Coast League. He has been pitching against older players in Mexico, and the DSL/VSL would probably not offer him much competition, but the fact that the Pirates did not dissuade him from buying a house in Bradenton is telling.
Logan Pevny -- R/R, 6' 3", 190 lb Pevny was the Pirates' 49th pick in the 2010 draft. This New Jersey student was a hot-hitting shortstop in high school, and began pitching only in his senior year, almost as an afterthought. After signing, Pevny began his pro career with the GCL Pirates. He made three appearances. The first one was one inning, and he struck out 2 batters. In the second, he gave up a run on a hit and 3 walks in 1.2 innings. In the third, he went 2 innings, and allowed 2 runs on 3 hits and a homer. After that, he went onto the DL. Pevny spent the off season doing a lot of working out, and also doing some teaching with little kids. At age 19, he's back and ready to go this spring, though, probably heading back to get in more work in the GCL.
Orioles 13, Pirates 3 Indianapolis area native C Jake Fox beat up on the Pirates' pitching this afternoon in Bradenton, with two booming home runs and 4 RBI. The first homer capped a 6-run 3rd inning, when Pirates' starter Ross Ohlendorf gave up four singles and a double before the homer. Fox struck again in the 7th -- Scott Olsen gave up a double to DH Matt Wieters, followed by Fox's second homer. Olsen surrendered a single and a walk after the homer, and he was relieved by Mike Dubee. Dubee struck out the first batter he faced, then gave up an RBI single, before ending the inning with a fly out. The Orioles added 3 runs in the 8th off Joe Beimel. A double, a walk, and a single loaded the bases, then a single and two ground outs drove in the runs. Former Indy Indian C Michel Hernandez singled for the Orioles in the top of the 9th, and scored on an RBI triple off reliever Sean Gallagher. Daniel McCutchen pitched 2 scoreless innings for the Pirates, allowing 3 hits.
While the Orioles were busy posting 20 hits, the Pirates managed 8. Two of those were by 3B Pedro Alvarez, who also had the Pirates' only extra base hit, a double in the 7th, which was ruled a ground-rule double. That made a difference, because 2B Neil Walker had opened the inning with a walk. He raced around and crossed the plate on Alvarez's double, but then was called back to third base when the umpires ruled it a ground-rule. Walker was left standing on third base, when a strikeout and a ground out ended the inning.
The Pirates did score one run in the 2nd inning. 1B Lyle Overbay began the rally with a single lined into right field. RF Matt Diaz grounded to short, forcing Overbay out at second, but Orioles' shortstop (and another former Indy Indian) JJ Hardy made a throwing error on his relay to first, allowing Diaz to reach second base. Diaz advanced to second on a fly out, and scored on C Jason Jaramillo's RBI single. LF Jose Tabata led off the 5th inning with a walk, and moved to second base on Walker's ground out. CF Andrew McCutchen plated Tabata with a single up the middle. Overbay reached base on a catcher's interference call, then Diaz brought in McCutchen with a line drive single into right field.
Also getting into the game: LF John Bowker, 3B Andy Marte, Corey Wimberly in center field, RF Miles Durham, RF Steve Pearce, 2B Josh Harrison, pinch-hitter Pedro Ciriaco, 1B Garrett Atkins, C Dusty Brown, and SS Josh Rodriguez. Durham entered the game to play right field in the top of the 8th. In the top of the 9th, he crashed into the wall trying to catch the ball that turned out to be a triple. Durham was down for a few moments, but was able to get up and walk off the field under his own power. Pearce took over for Durham in right field, then singled in the bottom of the inning. Josh Rodriguez also singled in the 8th inning, and Josh Harrison worked a walk in the 9th.
The rest of the Pirates' middle infielders.... So much of what is going to happen with these players is going to depend on what the Pirates elect to do about their back-up infield roster spots. Ciriaco? Rodriguez? Wimberley?
Brian Friday -- R/R, 5' 11", 180 lb
Friday was the Pirates' 3rd round draft pick in 2007. He reached AA Altoona in 2009 and was their regular shortstop, but did not have as good a season as he' hoped, committing 25 errors in 102 games and hitting .265 with 7 homers and 46 RBI. Friday was promoted to Indianapolis to begin 2010. He began the season hitting a solid .270 with 6 RBI in April. That slid to .242 in May, but he homered twice and had 11 RBI. Friday got hot in early June, going 10-for-26 (.385) in the first 9 days, which raised his overall average to .277. But then Friday was clipped by a base runner sliding into second base. The ankle sprain he suffered kept him on the Disabled List in the middle part of the season. When he returned, his hitting had suffered, and Friday hit just .233 over the rest of the season. Friday struck out 69 times over the season, but those were about evenly distributed between before-the-ankle-injury (36 times in 50 games) and after-the-ankle-injury (33 times in 43 games). Friday played most of his games at second base for the Indians, though he also got in a bit of time at shortstop. The 25-year-old Friday was invited to the major league camp for Spring Training, but he was reassigned to the minor league camp on Monday. The Pirates have indicated that they will want Friday to be the regular second baseman at AAA Indianapolis in 2011.
Yesterday I previewed the 2011 Bradenton Marauders infield, looking at players who could open the season with the Pittsburgh Pirates' high-A affiliate, and looking...