If you're a Pittsburgh Pirates fan under 40, you may have spent most of your fandom attending their home games for reasons other than the baseball.
Maybe it is the view from PNC Park, Major League Baseball's best ballpark. Or perhaps it's the monthly postgame fireworks display or a promotional giveaway. Or perhaps it's the latest ballpark food monstrosity, such as this year’s Renegade Hot Dog, a foot-long sausage topped with pulled pork, pierogi and pickles (it’s good if you get one made fresh).
But the game itself? The result? All of that has usually been secondary, merely background noise to a fun night out with friends or family. That is what 11 winning seasons in 45 years and mostly apathetic and negligent ownership does to a fan base. You stop caring. You stop having expectations. Over the past couple weeks, however, you can sense a dramatic shift in attitude toward the team and the expectations around it.
The Pirates are becoming a must-watch team and it is almost entirely due to the emergence of their flame-throwing pitchers, 22-year-old starters Jared Jones and Paul Skenes. The two are not only making the Pirates a must-watch team, they could be turning it into something terrifying for the rest of the league – if management can capitalize on its pair of aces.
Against the Los Angeles Dodgers in the first two games of a three-game series this week, the talent of the Pirates' young pitchers was on full display.
On Tuesday, Jones tossed six shutout innings in a 1-0 Pirates win. On Wednesday, Skenes pitched five innings, striking out eight and consistently topping 100 mph on his fastball in a 10-6 Pirates victory that earned them a series win.
In 11 innings against a lineup full of former MVPs, future Hall of Famers and All-Stars, Jones and Skenes combined to allow three earned runs while striking out 14 and at times looked overpowering. The latter game was the one that underscored the potential of this pitching staff and the lightning bolt of energy it has sent through the fan base and city.
From the moment you walked across the Roberto Clemente Bridge into PNC Park, the game had a different feel from most Pirates games. Fans were not just excited to be at the stadium. They were excited to see the game and a pitcher who is already one of baseball’s most electrifying players.
The excitement carried into the first inning, when Skenes struck out Mookie Betts and Shohei Ohtani on seven pitches. He got the latter by throwing three straight 100-mph-plus fastballs by the 2023 AL MVP, bringing the crowd out of the seats.
— Adam Gretz (@AGretz) June 5, 2024
That Ohtani strikeout set the stage for an electric rematch in the second inning, when the star from Japan got his revenge by clubbing a 3-2 fastball 420 feet for a two-run home run. It was fantastic theater and it briefly made Pittsburgh the center of the baseball universe as one of the game’s future giants faced off with one its current giants. This is where the challenge comes in for Pirates management in both the short term and long term.
Although the Pirates enter play Thursday with a 29-32 record, the club is just one game out of a playoff spot in a watered-down NL wild-card race. Outside of the Dodgers, Philadelphia Phillies and maybe the Atlanta Braves, no team in the NL has been dominant this season, leaving a postseason spot sitting there for the taking. The NL's past two pennant winners (Diamondbacks and Phillies) won just 87 and 84 regular-season games.
If the Pirates make the playoffs, they could potentially be terrifying for an opponent in a short series because of their starting rotation. With Skenes, Jones, Mitch Keller and the rapidly rising Bailey Falter, the Pirates have a rotation that is already among MLB's best. It could carry the team a long way.
It should be noted that the Pirates are hitting .229 collectively (24th in the big leagues) and clearly need help offensively. They already have a cost-controlled, young and healthy pitching staff, so the brass must strike a deal or deals to add the offense.
Excitement is building in Pittsburgh over its baseball team. A playoff spot is there for the taking for the Pirates. Teams like Pittsburgh don't get many opportunities like this.
With a rare opportunity before it, management cannot strike out.
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