SOLID STARTERS AND LIGHTS-OUT BULLPEN HAS PIRATES THINKING PLAYOFFS
The Pirates’ path to the postseason from 2013-15 was paved
primarily by elite pitching. In terms of staff ERA, they ranked third in the
Majors in 2013, eighth in ’14 and second in ’15.
The Bucs believe they have the makings of another formidable
rotation and a lights-out bullpen this year, which is why they’re optimistic
about their chances of getting back to the playoffs.
Pitching wins games and the Pirates like their pitching. The
Pirates coaching staff think their pitching puts them in a position to win
every night
The key players are set to return from the staff that posted
the Majors’ fourth-best ERA in the second half of last season. There will be
questions about the last spot in
the Pirates’ rotation and some of the final jobs in their
bullpen, but they feel confident that the front of their rotation and the back
of their bullpen will form the core of a winning team.
The rotation is fronted by Opening Day starter Jameson
Taillon, Archer, Trevor
Williams and Joe Musgrove.
While they expect their bullpen to lock down every lead they get, they’re
taking it upon themselves to work deep into games even in an era of openers and
shorter starts.
The Pirates starters haven’t sat down and put down a
checklist of stuff, but they have talked about wanting to take the ball,
wanting to pitch innings and wanting quality starts. The Pirates starters are
going into this season with an attitude that they want to take the ball. When
it’s their turn, they want to pitch and go deep in games.
They’ve shown the ability to do so. Taillon pitched 191
innings over 32 starts last year, and he worked at least six innings in 21 of
those outings. Archer topped 200 innings each year from 2015-17 before injuries
and an ineffective August dropped him below that total last season.
Williams completed six innings in 18 of his 31 starts last
season -- and nine of those came over his last 12 starts, while he was
recording a 1.38 second-half ERA. Musgrove must prove his health after making
19 starts in his first full season back in a big league rotation. But he
carried the load when he was on the mound, working six innings in all but five
of his starts.
That’s where the back end of the bullpen comes into play.
Pittsburgh struggled seemingly without end to find the right middle-relief mix
last season, but the late-game pieces fell into place around July. That’s when
manager Clint Hurdle began turning to the quartet of Richard
Rodriguez, Edgar Santana, Kyle Crick and
closer Felipe Vázquez.
The Pirates lost Santana for this season after he underwent
Tommy John surgery in September, but they acquired an even more experienced
strikeout artist in former Rangers closer Keone Kela.
Whenever they have a lead after five innings, the Pirates
can turn to Rodriguez, the unexpected success story of 2018 who held lefty
hitters to a .439 OPS. Or they can give the ball to Crick, the former
first-round pick who limited right-handers to a .475 OPS. Then they can call
upon Kela, who struck out 66 while posting a 3.29 ERA in 52 innings last
season.
After that comes Vazquez. The All-Star lefty reported to
Spring Training in better shape than ever, touching 101 mph and baffling
hitters with a legitimate four-pitch mix. There’s a reason they call him
“Nightmare,” after all.
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