Monday, April 15, 2019

3 TAKEAWAYS FROM THE PITTSBURGH PIRATES SERIES VICTORY IN D.C.


3 TAKEAWAYS FROM THE PITTSBURGH PIRATES SERIES VICTORY IN D.C.
What did we learn about the Pittsburgh Pirates in their hard fought series victory over the Washington Nationals this past weekend?
This past weekend was a successful one for the Pittsburgh Pirates. In their first series of the season that was not against a National League Central Division foe, the Bucs traveled to the nation’s capital to play the Washington Nationals. Following an extra innings victory on Friday night and a hard fought one run victory on Sunday afternoon, the Pirates took two of three from the Nats over the weekend. These victories improved the Pirates record to 8-6 this season, and gave the team their first series victory in Washington since 2013.
Earning a series victory in the nation’s capital did not come easy for the Pirates. But, in life, often times anything worth having does not come easy. How hard the team had to fight over the weekend made the series victory a little extra enjoyable.
Following the series victory over the Nats the Bucs are now 2-2-1 in their five series played this season. On their way to taking two of three from the Nats, the team did a little bit of everything over the weekend. So, what are three takeaways from the Pirates series victory at Nationals Park?
THE BULLPEN IS STILL SCUFFLING
We will start with the negative to get it out of the way quickly.
Entering the season the bullpen was expected to be a strength for the Pittsburgh Pirates. A big reason for this was set up men Keone Kela and Richard Rodriguez. Well, over the weekend the early season struggles of both Kela and Rodriguez continued.
Kela’s lone appearance in the series came on Friday night. With the Bucs leading 3-2 in the bottom of the 8th inning Kela was given the ball. He retired three of the four batters he faced, but the lone base runner he allowed came in the form of a game-tying solo home run by Anthony Rendon.
In 5 2/3 innings pitched this season Kela has now issued three walks and he has allowed three home runs. In 2018, Kela allowed just five home runs all season (52 innings pitched).
As for Rodriguez, on Friday night he inherited a runner on third with just one out situation in the bottom of the 7th inning. He stranded the runner, and ran his scoreless outing streak up to five consecutive games. However, Saturday did not go as well for Rich Rod.
With Kela being given the day off, Rodriguez was tabbed to pitch the 8th inning with the Pirates leading 2-1. After retiring the first two batters of the inning Rodriguez allowed back-to-back home runs. This led to a 3-2 Nationals victory.
Like Kela, the home run ball has been an issue for Rodriguez this season. After allowing just five home runs in 69 1/3 innings pitched in 2018, Rodriguez has already been taken deep four times in 6 2/3 innings of work this season. Not coincidentally, the Pirates are 0-3 this season in games that Rodriguez has allowed a home run.
The bullpen can still be a strength for the Pirates. Closer Felipe Vazquez has looked as good as ever this season, and Nick Burdi is emerging as a high leverage situation option. Additionally, the team could get Kyle Crick back from the injured list as soon as Tuesday.
That said the Bucs still need Kela and Rodriguez to get back on track. Especially Kela, who, when he is right, is a dominant reliever. There is a reason the team paid such a hefty price to acquire him from the Texas Rangers last July.
Josh Bell and Colin Moran may be turning a corner
One of the biggest positives of the first five series of the season has been the play of Josh Bell and Colin Moran. In order for the Pirates to return to the postseason it was vital that both players take the next step as hitters in 2019. So far, both have.
Bell’s hot start comes after a good four month stretch to finish 2018. From June 1st through the end of the season he slashed .267/.378/.422 with a .155 ISO and a 122 wRC+. The biggest difference so far this season has been the power.
60 plate appearances into the season Bell is slashing .314/.390/.627 with a .314 ISO and a 157 wRC+. Additionally, his extra base hit rate is a career best 16.9%. If Bell continues to hit this way, the Pirate lineup will be a lot more fierce than many expected this season.
Joining Bell on the breakout train so far this season is Moran. After losing the third base job to Jung Ho Kang in spring training, Moran has bounced back and capitalized on Kang’s slow start to the 2019 season.
Moran is slashing .308/.400/.615 with a .308 ISO and a 157 wRC+ 30 plate appearances into the season. Like Bell, Moran’s hot start comes after a strong finish to the 2018 season. During the final six weeks of the 2018 campaign Moran slashed .321/.375/.513 with a .192 ISO and a wRC+ of 137.
Due to the way they finished their 2018 campaigns there is reason to believe that Bell and Moran’s hot starts may be them turning the corner as hitters. If this proves to be true, then that will go a long way toward catapulting the 2019 Pirates into contention.
THIS TEAM CONTINUES TO SHOW THEIR HEART AND FIGHT
Friday night the Pirates scratched a run across the board in the top of the 8th inning to take a 3-2 lead. After the Nationals tied the game in the bottom of the 8th, the Bucs were able to win it in the 10th when a three-run rally was capped off by a pinch hit home run by Moran.
On Sunday, the Bucs rallied again late. With the game tied in the 9th inning Jason Martin came through with a go-ahead double that scored Bell. This gave the team a 4-3 lead they would not relinquish.
The 2019 edition of the Pirates have been the battling Bucs thus far. A lot of the credit for this falls at the feet of manager Clint Hurdle and his coaching staff. Typically when a sports team is a group of fighters like this one has been it stems from the culture created by the coaching staff.


NEW YORK ISLANDERS VS. PITTSBURGH PENGUINS


MY 3 TAKEAWAYS FROM GAME 3
The New York Islanders marched into PPG Paints Arena and took Game 3 from the Pittsburgh Penguins to grab a 3-0 series lead. Here’s a look at three takeaways from Sunday’s game.
The Pittsburgh Penguins have been put on the ropes by the New York Islanders. In a must-win Game 3 for the former, it was the latter who came out on top 4-1. And it’s the Isles who hold a 3-0 series lead in their best-of-seven series in the 2019 Stanley Cup Playoffs.
Even a rowdy home crowd at PPG Paints Arena couldn’t will Pittsburgh to victory. Much like in Game 2, the Isles imposed their will on the Pens. This is shocking, considering how great Pittsburgh played down the stretch.
Skill is the name of the game in the NHL today. This makes Pittsburgh’s struggles even odder. We’re not talking a run of the mill team. The Pens are a team who have recently won back-to-back Stanley Cups and are a regular postseason fixture. You’d think they’d be able to come out on top of a less skilled Islanders team. But this hasn’t been the case.
Let’s take a look at three takeaways from Game 3.
3. PENS HAVE NO SPACE
The Penguins are most dangerous when they are able to use the full ice to their advantage. It’s hard to stop them for an entire 60 minutes. The Isles deserve a ton of credit for not giving them any space to work with. They’ve gotten under the Pens’ skin so much, even when Pittsburgh gets quality chances, they’re gripping their sticks too tightly to get anything done.
This series was always going to come down to which of the conflicting styles of play proved to be more dominant. I admittedly thought the Pens were a good bet to come out on top because of their experience. But man, I, once again, was wrong about the Islanders.
2. EBERLE’S ARRIVAL
The Islanders struggled to score goals this season, ranking 21st out of 31 teams. Jordan Eberle‘s struggles certainly played a role in it. The usually consistent goal scorer was inconsistent, only scoring 19 goals and 37 points. Both were well below Eberle’s averages. In fact, it was his lowest goal total since his rookie year and his lowest point total in a full season.
For the first time since Eberle’s incredible World Juniors tournaments in 2009 and 2010, he’s showing the clutch goal scoring that made him a WJC legend. He struggled during his first taste of the playoffs, posting just two assists in 13 games.
This led the Oilers to trade him to the Islanders. It’s safe to say Edmonton got the short end of that deal. With the Isles, Eberle is showing why the Oilers were probably a bit silly to trade a consistent goal scorer just because he had 13 bad games.
He’s been leading the Islanders throughout the Stanley Cup Playoffs. He has a goal in each of their three games, including his Game 2 game-winner. Eberle’s Game 3 goal was an extremely critical one. It came less than 30 seconds after the Penguins scored to take a 1-0 lead. Should we really be surprised the WJC hero has finally become the postseason hero he was destined to be?
1. ISLANDERS HAVE KILLER INSTINCT
You need more than skill and grit to win the Stanley Cup. “It” is also needed. What is “it”? It’s a variety of things, but a huge component is a killer instinct. You need to be able to handle moments appropriately and have the cold-bloodedness needed to put teams away. Game 3 wasn’t pretty, but the Isles showed their instinct.
PPG Paints Arena can be a dangerous place to play. And after Garrett Wilson‘s first-period goal, the crowd was rocking. The Isles’ response was necessary and it came courtesy of Eberle’s goal less than 30 seconds after Wilson’s goal.
It didn’t stop there. Less than a minute of the Islanders’ first goal, Brock Nelson scored to give them a 2-1 lead. This was a lead the Isles did not relinquish. In the second period, they didn’t let Pittsburgh get back in the game, outshooting them 16-8.
Even when Pittsburgh started getting the crowd back into it in the third period, Leo Komarov put the nail in the coffin with a goal of his own. Anders Lee‘s empty-net goal was just icing on the cake.
The Islanders aren’t going to beat anyone because of their skill. Perhaps that’s good for this bunch of misfits. Everyone has to buy in in order for the team to have success. This Isles team is all-in for their head coach Barry Trotz. They’re going to be a tough team for anyone to beat.



MARTIN HITS RBI DOUBLE IN 9TH, PIRATES STOP NATIONALS 4-3


PITTSBURGH 4, WASHINGTON 3
WHEN: 1:35 PM ET, Sunday, April 14, 2019
WHERE: Nationals Park, Washington, District of Columbia
TEMPERATURE: 73° 
UMPIRES: Home - Kerwin Danley, 1B - Mark Carlson, 2B - Scott Barry, 3B - Nic Lentz
ATTENDANCE: 22347


Jason Martin had an RBI ground-rule double with two outs in the ninth inning off reliever Wander Suero as the visiting Pittsburgh Pirates beat the Washington Nationals 4-3 on Sunday, taking two of three games in the series.
Josh Bell led off with a walk off loser Suero (1-1) and took second on a groundout. He then scored on the Martin double to left that bounced into the Pirates bullpen. The winning pitcher was former Nationals reliever Felipe Vazquez (1-0), who delivered two scoreless innings.
Vasquez fanned Howie Kendrick with the bases loaded for the second out in the ninth before getting hot-hitting Anthony Rendon for the final out on a fly ball to center.
Washington tied the game 3-3 in the third on a run-scoring groundout from Rendon and an RBI single from Juan Soto off Pittsburgh starter Jameson Taillon, who allowed three runs in six innings with four strikeouts.
The Pirates took a 3-1 lead in the top of the third as Bell had an RBI double to drive in Adam Frazier. Pittsburgh had a chance to add on against Max Scherzer, but Washington center fielder Michael A. Taylor threw a laser to retire Bell at the plate for the third out when he tried to score from second on a single by Colin Moran.
Adam Eaton led off the last of the first with a single and scored on a double by Kendrick as the Nationals cut the lead to 2-1.
Bell and Moran had RBI hits in the top of the first for a 2-0 lead against Scherzer, who threw a no-hitter against the Pirates at Nationals Park on June 20, 2015.
This time Scherzer gave up seven hits and three runs in eight innings with seven strikeouts. He got an extra day of rest after being hit by a batted ball on the leg in his start on April 7 at New York against the Mets.
Rendon, who entered the game batting .412, had a single in the sixth to extend his hitting streak to a career-high 13 games.
Scherzer moved into 36th place on the all-time strikeout list as he passed Hall-of-Famer Jack Morris. The right-hander now has 2,484 strikeouts in his career.
TRAINER'S ROOM
Pirates: OF Gregory Polanco (left shoulder) had two hits and drove in two runs Saturday in his first rehabilitation appearance at Triple-A Indianapolis. ... RHP Dovydas Neverauskas (oblique strain) had two strikeouts in a scoreless inning Saturday for Indianapolis. He's thrown three scoreless innings during three rehab appearances at Indianapolis and Class A Bradenton.
Nationals: Martinez said 1B Matt Adams, who twisted his ankle Saturday while stepping on Pittsburgh RHP Chris Archer's foot, was available to play Sunday.
ARCHER DROPS APPEAL
Archer dropped his appeal and began serving a five-game suspension for setting off a benches-clearing altercation on April 7. Archer threw a fastball behind Cincinnati's Derek Dietrich, who had stood and watched a long home run in his previous at-bat. Archer, who pitched seven innings Saturday against Washington, will make his next start April 21 at home against San Francisco.
UP NEXT
PIRATES: Pittsburgh has Monday off. It begins a two-game series at Detroit on Tuesday as RHP Joe Musgrove (1-0, 0.00 ERA) starts against the Tigers for the first time.
NATIONALS: After an off day Monday, RHP Stephen Strasburg (1-0, 5.40) starts Tuesday as Washington begins a three-game series at home against San Francisco.

TOP GAME PERFORMANCES
STARTING PITCHERS
PITTSBURGH

WASHINGTON
Jameson Taillon
PLAYER
Max Scherzer
No Decision
W/L
No Decision
6.0
IP
8.0
4
STRIKEOUTS
7
7
HITS
7
4.50
ERA
3.38

HITTING
PITTSBURGH

WASHINGTON
Josh Bell
Player
Adam Eaton
2
Hits
2
2
RBI
0
0
HR
0
4
TB
2
.667
Avg
.500

TEAM STATS SUMMARY
TEAM
HITS
HR
TB
AVG
LOB
K
RBI
BB
SB
ERRORS
Pittsburgh
8
0
12
.242
13
8
4
3
0
0
Washington
11
0
12
.306
22
8
3
3
1
0


SCORING SUMMARY
INNING
PIT
WAS
Pirates
1st
Bell doubled to deep right center, Frazier scored.
1
0
Pirates
1st
Moran singled to right, Bell scored.
2
0
Nationals
1st
Kendrick doubled to deep center, Eaton scored.
2
1
Pirates
3rd
Bell doubled to right, Frazier scored.
3
1
Nationals
3rd
Rendon grounded out to third, Eaton scored, Kendrick to second.
3
2
Nationals
3rd
Soto singled to center, Kendrick scored.
3
3
Pirates
9th
Martin hit a ground rule double to deep left center, Bell scored.
4
3

FINAL SCORING SUMMARY
FINAL
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
R
H
E
Pittsburgh
2
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1
4
8
0
Washington
1
0
2
0
0
0
0
0
0
3
11
0

Pittsburgh
Hitters
Pos
AB
R
H
RBI
BB
K
LOB
Avg
Adam Frazier
2B
3
2
2
0
1
0
1
.296
Starling Marte
CF
4
0
0
0
0
2
4
.211
Francisco Cervelli
C
4
0
0
0
0
1
3
.196
Josh Bell
1B
3
2
2
2
1
1
0
.314
Colin Moran
3B
4
0
2
1
0
0
1
.308
Melky Cabrera
RF
4
0
0
0
0
1
2
.390
     Pablo Reyes
RF
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.053
Jason Martin
LF
4
0
1
1
0
2
0
.353
Erik Gonzalez
SS
3
0
0
0
1
1
0
.214
Jameson Taillon
SP
2
0
1
0
0
0
0
.143
     Nick Burdi
RP
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.000
     JB Shuck
PH
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
.273
     Felipe Vazquez
RP
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
.000
Totals
33
4
8
4
3
8
13

Batting
2B - Adam Frazier (4), Josh Bell 2 (5), Jason Martin (2)
TB - Adam Frazier 3, Josh Bell 4, Colin Moran 2, Jason Martin 2, Jameson Taillon
RBI - Josh Bell 2 (12), Colin Moran (8), Jason Martin (2)
2-Out RBI - Josh Bell 2 (4), Colin Moran (3), Jason Martin (2)
Runners left in scoring position, 2 out - Francisco Cervelli (10), Felipe Vazquez (1)
GIDP - Starling Marte (3)
Team LOB - 5

Pitchers
IP
H
R
ER
BB
K
HR
ERA
Jameson Taillon 
6.0
7
3
3
1
4
0
3.43
Nick Burdi 
1.0
1
0
0
0
1
0
4.05
Felipe Vazquez (W 1-0)
2.0
3
0
0
2
3
0
0.00
Pitches-Strikes - Jameson Taillon 80-54, Nick Burdi 20-14, Felipe Vazquez 43-24
Ground Balls-Fly Balls - Jameson Taillon 8-4, Nick Burdi 1-1, Felipe Vazquez 1-2
Batters Faced - Jameson Taillon 24, Nick Burdi 4, Felipe Vazquez 11
Washington
Hitters
Pos
AB
R
H
RBI
BB
K
LOB
Avg
Adam Eaton
RF
4
2
2
0
1
0
2
.300
Howie Kendrick
2B
5
1
2
1
0
1
3
.533
Anthony Rendon
3B
4
0
1
1
1
0
5
.400
Juan Soto
LF
4
0
1
1
0
1
3
.250
Ryan Zimmerman
1B
4
0
1
0
0
1
3
.205
Yan Gomes
C
4
0
0
0
0
1
3
.237
Wilmer Difo
SS
3
0
1
0
0
1
0
.184
     Victor Robles
PH
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
.283
Max Scherzer
SP
3
0
1
0
0
1
1
.182
     Wander Suero
RP
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
.000
     Brian Dozier
PH
1
0
0
0
0
1
1
.159
Michael A. Taylor
CF
3
0
1
0
1
1
1
.250
Totals
36
3
11
3
3
8
22

Batting
2B - Howie Kendrick (3)
TB - Adam Eaton 2, Howie Kendrick 3, Anthony Rendon, Juan Soto, Ryan Zimmerman, Wilmer Difo, Victor Robles, Max Scherzer, Michael A. Taylor
RBI - Howie Kendrick (5), Anthony Rendon (17), Juan Soto (10)
2-Out RBI - Juan Soto (3)
Runners left in scoring position, 2 out - Anthony Rendon 2 (5), Ryan Zimmerman (6), Yan Gomes 2 (6)
GIDP - Adam Eaton (1), Max Scherzer (1)
Team LOB - 9
Baserunning
SB - Adam Eaton (3, 2nd off Taillon/Cervelli)
Fielding
Outfield Assists - Michael A. Taylor (Bell at Home)

Pitchers
IP
H
R
ER
BB
K
HR
ERA
Max Scherzer 
8.0
7
3
3
1
7
0
3.33
Wander Suero (L 1-1)
1.0
1
1
1
2
1
0
6.75
IBB - Erik Gonzalez (by Suero)
Pitches-Strikes - Max Scherzer 98-71, Wander Suero 23-14
Ground Balls-Fly Balls - Max Scherzer 11-4, Wander Suero 2-0
Batters Faced - Max Scherzer 30, Wander Suero 6