Club's recent success has nothing to do with luck; it's
playing as complete team
The thing about the Pittsburgh Pirates, who won their 11th
straight game Tuesday night, their longest winning streak in more than 20
years, is that they are not getting lucky. "Luck" is always a weasel
word when discussing the success or failure of a baseball team, but what people
are really trying to say when they say "luck" is, essentially,
"variance." You're going to win some one-run games and you're going
to lose some one-run games, and theoretically, it all evens out in the end. But
when you are "lucky," more of those one-run games are falling for you
than against you; the Mariners, in the first half of this season, were a great
example of this. The victories still count, just as much as winning by 10 does.
But if you're winning an unnaturally high number of one-run games, it tells us
something about you. It tells us you're getting a little lucky.
That is absolutely not what the Pirates have done during
this winning streak. Most of their wins have been like Tuesday night's
win over the Indians. They scored two in the first inning and five in
the second, and next thing you knew, they had a 7-1 lead and the game was
essentially over. (The final score was 9-4.) It was not a game in which they
sneaked out a victory. The Bucs hit better than their opponent, pitched better
than their opponent and fielded better than their opponent. They dominated.
It is what they do. Here are the scores of Pittsburgh's
11-game winning streak:
• 2-0
• 6-3
• 7-3
• 2-1
• 6-2
• 7-6
• 12-1
• 6-2
• 9-2
• 7-0
• 9-4
There are only two one-run wins in that streak, and seven
games won by four runs or more. The Pirates have actually won 13 of 14, and
they've outscored their opponents 84-33 in that stretch, which means they're
basically winning games 6-2, every night. In their past five, they've outscored
their opponents 43-9, which, for all intents and purposes, makes them Alabama
and whoever they're playing Texas-San Antonio. The Bucs, for two weeks, have
been the 1927 Yankees.
Understandably, this is getting Pirates fans excited about
their postseason chances. Thought to be obvious sellers a fortnight ago, the
Bucs have now passed the Cardinals into third place in the National League
Central, and are only three games out of the second NL Wild Card spot. (Did you
imagine a point this season where the Pirates would be three games ahead of the
Nationals?) But let's not get too carried away with the future. Maybe the Bucs
will make the postseason, and maybe they won't. (Fangraphs
still says no.) Eleven-game win streaks don't come around often
and we should appreciate them while they happen, not fret about what they
portend for the future. For the past two weeks, there has been no more fun team
to cheer for than the Pittsburgh Pirates. Here is what they are doing so right.
1. THE ROTATION
HAS TURNED INTO FIVE MILES MIKOLAS (MIKOLI?)
That's the way to think of them, not as Max Scherzer or Chris Sale, big
fireballer blasting guys away with strikeouts. The Pirates are simply a quality
start machine. In their past 14 games, Pittsburgh starters have an ERA of 2.47,
and, tellingly, 10 wins from those starting pitchers. Yes, yes, Brian Kenny:
The win stat is silly. But when your rotation makes it through an entire time
through with each pitcher earning a win -- like the Bucs just did -- it is
obviously doing something right. Here are the lines for their starters in those
past five wins:
• Jameson
Taillon, 5 1/3 IP, 6 K, 1 BB, 6 H, 1 ER (12-2 win)
• Nick Kingham,
6 1/3 IP, 3 K, 2 BB, 4 H, 2 ER (6-2 win)
• Ivan Nova,
6 2/3 IP, 2 K, 2 BB, 5 H, 2 ER (9-2 win)
• Trevor
Williams, 6 IP, 1 K, 2 BB, 4 H, 0 ER (7-0 win)
• Joe Musgrove,
7 IP, 2 K, 1 BB, 5 H, 2 ER (9-4 win)
None of those are overwhelming stat lines; heck, only one of
those starts had more than three strikeouts. But none of those pitchers lost
the game for the Pirates. They gave them a chance to win every night. (And
Taillon, of late, has been giving them a lot more than just that.) And win they
have.
2. THE LINEUP HAS
BECOME WHAT THE PIRATES HAD ALWAYS IMAGINED IT WOULD BE
Here's another fun stat: The Pirates have scored six runs in seven straight
games for the first time since 1946. They're launching balls out of whatever
park they're in, with homers in nine straight games, totaling 21 over that
span. And the outfielders are leading them.
Remember a couple of years ago when the Pirates were thought
to have the best young outfield in the sport? Everybody ended up taking a step
back. Gregory
Polanco struggled; Starling Marte got
suspended; Andrew
McCutchen went to San Francisco. In 2018, though, the
outfield has emerged, though not exactly how the Bucs might have predicted.
Marte is back to his pre-suspension form, leading the NL in stolen bases and on
pace to set career highs in homers. Polanco had never taken the step forward
the Pirates were waiting for, but he's now leading the team in homers; he still
isn't a great on-base guy but remember, he is only 26. But the breakthrough has
been Corey
Dickerson, the Rays castoff the Bucs got for free and still
can't quite believe their luck. He has actually improved on his 2017 All-Star
season, with less power than last year but far more production, thanks to a
lower strikeout rate. Check out what those three dudes did by the second
inning last night:
The Pirates'
outfield today: 5-for-6 with two HRs, a 3B, a 2B, 7 RBI. The red-hot Pirates
are hammering the Indians again. It's only the second inning, and Bieber's day
is done.
The Pirates' outfield has been so good that there has been
no place for Austin
Meadows, the once-hot prospect who has actually finally had his
breakthrough season this year. In past seasons, Meadows would have been their
best-hitting outfielder. Now he can't crack the rotation.
3. THEIR DEFENSE
HAS STABILIZED
Just one month ago, excellent blog Bucs Dugout noted how the Pirates,
traditionally a team with a consistent, smart defensive strategy that has been
innovative for years, were struggling in
that aspect, and in fact worst in the NL Central. But that has turned around,
in large part thanks to these outfielders, led by Dickerson, of all people. One
of the reasons the Rays let Dickerson go in the offseason was because of his
defense, with some observers wondering if he was a glorified designated hitter.
But he has 10 defensive runs saved in left field this year, which, in PNC Park,
is one of the toughest positions in baseball. The Pirates are catching
everything you hit to them. With a pitch-to-contact rotation, it is at last
working out the way the Bucs planned for it to all along.
4. THAT SUDDEN
BULLPEN
The Pirates aren't being particularly complicated with their bullpen: Unlike
the rotation, they're just striking guys out and not walking anyone. Pretty
simple. Felipe
Vazquez was the All-Star, and he's been as good as you
would expect, but in the past two weeks, the Bucs have at last nailed down
everybody's bullpen roles. The formula is simple:
1. Get your quality start, six innings or so.
2. Hand the ball to Tyler Glasnow (who
hasn't given up a run in three weeks), Steven Brault, Richard
Rodriguez (a journeyman who has had six straight
appearances without being scored upon), Edgar Santana (who
hadn't given up a run since June 29 before Tuesday night) and,
especially, Kyle Crick (who
has thrown 16 1/2 scoreless innings).
3. Let Vazquez close it out, if you even need him to.
4. Profit.
The Pirates aren't making this overly complex. Get a lead,
hang onto it, and go home.
5. A CHANGE OF
PERSPECTIVE
Again, it was just more than a month ago when the Pirates were
thought to be sellers at the July 31 non-waiver Trade
Deadline, and on July 8, general manager Neil Huntington admitted on his radio
show that they might be "building for
the future" at the Trade Deadline. The Pirates have lost
one game since. Now: "We would love to add." (And they're rumored to
be in on some more bullpen
pieces) As Huntington noted, Pittsburgh has still only climbed
one spot in the Wild Card, above St. Louis, and eventually, as strange as it
might seem to consider right now, the Bucs will in fact lose another baseball
game. The Pirates still have some questions to figure out about their long term
future. But they have some young pitchers coming, they have one of the best
outfields in the sport and, more than anything, they are as hot and happy as
they have been in decades right now, at this exact point. Maybe the Bucs will
slingshot from this run into the playoffs; maybe this is as good as it will get
in 2018. Either way: Teams don't get hot like this very often. When it happens,
it is as purely enjoyable as anything in the sport.
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