SHORTSTOP, THIRD BASE AMONG SPOTS TO BE DETERMINED BEFORE OPENING DAY
The Pirates' 8-1 win over the Red Sox on Sunday afternoon
very well may have been an Opening Day dress rehearsal, just with St. Patrick's
Day-themed white and green caps instead of the more familiar Pittsburgh black
and gold.
With Opening Day starter Jameson
Taillon on the mound, the Pirates sent out a lineup that
they could potentially use against the Reds on March 28.
Adam Frazier, 2B
Starling
Marte, CF
Corey
Dickerson, LF
Josh Bell,
1B
Francisco
Cervelli, C
Lonnie
Chisenhall, RF
Jung Ho Kang,
3B
Erik Gonzalez,
SS
Jameson Taillon, RHP
But the Pirates reported to LECOM Park on Sunday morning
with 49 active players in Major League camp, a few roster spots left to fill
and a handful of starting jobs still officially unsettled. That means the front
office and coaching staff have some work to do over the next week before
breaking camp and leaving Florida.
While the Bucs begin paring down their roster, let’s revisit
some of their most interesting position battles.
SHORTSTOP
Neither candidate has a track record of success in the
Majors, but Gonzalez appears to be the favorite considering how highly the
Pirates have spoken of him. After a slow start to the spring, he has backed up
their words over the past few days. Gonzalez went 3-for-3 on Friday then hit an
RBI double, walked, stole two bases and played a clean game at shortstop on
Sunday.
Kevin Newman has
also shown some promise this spring after a rough debut last season, making
more hard contact at the plate while living up to his reputation as a solid
defender at shortstop. The former first-round Draft pick is batting .276 with a
.739 OPS this spring, and he has played error-free defense.
THIRD BASE
Kang or Colin Moran?
Kang has received plenty of attention this spring for
showing up in great shape and mashing a team-leading five homers, his only hits
thus far. Kang bobbled a ball and made a wild throw in the first inning on
Sunday for his second error of the spring, but he made four excellent plays in
his last start on Friday night and started two double plays on Sunday. Moran
has committed four errors in 28 chances, but the Pirates believe he’ll be able
to get to more balls this year by lining up deeper at third.
Only time will tell if Kang can get back to being the player
he was for the Pirates in 2015-16. If he can, the job is likely his.
BENCH
Jacob
Stallings will make it as the backup catcher while Elias
Diaz takes time to get back in game shape. The reserve third baseman, Kang or
Moran, will also have a spot on the bench -- and will likely be asked to pick
up another position to increase his versatility.
After that, it gets a little more complicated. Non-roster
veteran Melky Cabrera has
hit well this spring and should fit as a fourth outfielder. But considering
Cabrera’s defensive limitations, the Pirates might need someone else to back up
Marte in center field. Will that be super-utility man Pablo Reyes or
non-roster invitee JB Shuck?
Reyes is getting every chance to prove himself, and Shuck has also had a nice
spring after adjusting his swing and approach at the plate last year.
If Reyes makes the team and looks capable at shortstop, do
the Pirates need to have Newman (or Kevin Kramer)
on the bench as another backup middle infielder? Or would that spot be better
utilized on a bigger power threat like non-roster outfielder Patrick
Kivlehan or corner infielder/outfielder Jose Osuna? Osuna has
had an uncharacteristically quiet spring, while Kivlehan has shown why the
Pirates moved quickly to sign him this offseason.
FIFTH STARTER
The Pirates haven't shied away from saying that
right-hander Jordan Lyles entered
Spring Training with the inside track for the final spot in their rotation, and
general manager Neal Huntington said last week that Lyles hasn't done anything
to fall off that track. Lyles will pitch four innings in a simulated game on
Monday, ensuring he gets his work in after leaving his most recent outing early
due to right side cramping.
Pittsburgh is still intrigued by the changes Lyles
made last season, and Lyles feels he has benefited from working
with Cervelli this spring. Nick Kingham and Steven Brault,
the other two candidates, have each put together strong starts and ugly outings
-- with little in between. They should begin the season as Pittsburgh’s sixth
and seventh starting options, even if they break camp in the bullpen.
BULLPEN
Four spots are set: closer Felipe
Vazquez, setup man Keone Kela and
high-leverage right-handers Kyle Crick and Richard
Rodriguez. It also seems clear now that the Pirates will begin
the year with seven relievers, not eight like last season, because there’s less
need for an extra arm with six off-days on the schedule before the end of
April.
There are 13 pitchers in camp competing for those final
three spots, then: Jake Barrett, Nick Burdi, Rookie Davis, Michael Feliz, Geoff
Hartlieb, Clay Holmes, Francisco
Liriano, Tyler Lyons, Brandon
Maurer, Dovydas
Neverauskas, Brandon
Waddell, Brault and Kingham. From that group, they will likely
want at least one left-hander and at least one pitcher who can work multiple
innings.
Kingham is out of Minor League options, so if he’s not on
the roster, another team will likely claim him on waivers. Burdi, a 2017 Rule 5
Draft pick enjoying a strong spring, must stay on the roster for the first 60
days of the season or be offered back to the Twins.
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