The Green Weenie
"Somehow we have developed this large contingent of know-it-all baseball fans who bay like wounded coyotes at any mention of wins, losses, RBI or batting average. I never know whether I should blame myself for this or not.." (Bill James)
Saturday, July 18, 2026
7/18 Through the 1950s: Kiner #100, Grays Under FF Lights, Three Amigos, Bonus Ball, Game Days, Carey Rumors, HBD Windy, Al, Hippity, Mayor & Bill
7/18 From 1960: On Top, Charlie Gems, King Slam, 11 Straight, Roberto-Gibby, Game Days, The Hat Axed, ASG, Skenes Signed
1964 - The Milwaukee Braves got blown out at County Stadium, losing 8-2 to the Pirates, paced by Bob Bailey and Roberto Clemente’s three hits to back Bob Veale’s seven-hitter. Despite the loss, Braves legend Warren Spahn reached a career milestone. Seven of Pittsburgh's 15 hits came against the southpaw, who lasted just 3-2/3 frames, but he managed to complete his 5,000th MLB inning, putting him in an elite group; he still ranks eighth all-time in IP (sixth since post-1900) and joined a club with just a dozen other 5K workhorse members. The Hall-of-Famer usually fared pretty well against the Buccos; he defeated them 49 times over his two-decade career.
1967 - Harry “The Hat” Walker was fired as manager amidst reports of team dissension when the Bucs started out 42-42, despite winning 182 games and finishing third in back-to-back seasons. Old standby Danny Murtaugh returned to the bench in his stead until the year’s end.
1969 - Roberto Clemente ruined Bob Gibson’s day as the Bucs defeated the Cards at Forbes Field, when Arriba’s two-run homer and productive bouncer plated three of the Pirates' runs in a 4-1 victory. He remained a burr in Gibby’s side; his three-run homer at St. Louis did Gibson in 3-0 the week before, the first two long flies he had ever hit off the ace. Dock Ellis was the recipient of Arriba’s largesse as the Docktor scattered seven hits in a complete game victory.
1971 - The Bucs won their 11th straight game when they swept a DH from the Dodgers, 3-2 and 7-1, at TRS. The Pirates took the opener when Gene Alley opened the ninth with a triple and plated on Gene Clines' tapper. Dave Giusti got the blown save/win in relief of Bruce Kison. Luke Walker had a no-hitter going into the ninth inning during the second game, losing the no-no on a homer by Joe Ferguson. Richie Hebner and Milt May went long for the Buccos.
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| Dave Giusti - photo via Mainline Autographs |
1973 - Willie Stargell went 4-for-4 with a double and a homer, Rennie Stennett went deep and Bob Robertson doubled in a run as the Pirates defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 3-2 at Three Rivers Stadium. Dock Ellis won the mound battle against Tommy John, with Dave Giusti coming on for the save. The two men of the hour, Willie and Giusti, got their league letters notifying them that they had made the All-Star team. The Bucs pranked Giusti; he had been bypassed for AS honors the past couple of seasons despite strong credentials, and his teammates hid his notification and then razzed him about missing the boat again until they finally disclosed the good news.
1986 - Rick Reuschel made the 400th start of his big league career a winner, allowing three runs in seven innings to earn a 12-7 decision over the San Diego Padres at Three Rivers Stadium. UL Washington led the way for the Pirates, going 3-for-4 with four RBI, Jim Morrison collected three hits with three RBI and Sid Bream had three knocks and scored twice. The game was a laugher at 10-0 in the fifth; the Friars scored four times in the ninth off Barry Jones to save some face. Big Daddy would finish his 19-year career with 529 starts and 214 victories.
1987 - Pittsburgh rallied for a pair of eighth inning runs to drop LA 4-2 at Dodger Stadium. Doug Drabek won his first game since April 19th and got beaned in the process while SS Felix Fermin, called up 10 days before and batting .316, fouled a bunt off his thumb and was lost for two months. The Dodgers jumped ahead 2-0 on a first inning, two-run shot by Pedro Guerrero before Fermin’s two-run single tied it in the second. It was zeroes until the eighth, with the main excitement being DD’s beaning in the seventh by Orel Hershiser. It wasn’t a payback pitch; Drabek was served an inside curve and ducked right into it. As Bob Hertzel of the Press wrote, Doug was “...probably the first player in baseball history to be hit in the head with a knee-high breaking ball.” He shook it off, although Barry Jones came on to work the last two innings for the save as the Pirates plated a pair in the next frame on three singles, a walk and passed ball. Bobby Bonilla led the batsmen with three hits and scored twice. Pittsburgh was its own worst enemy during the match, stranding 10 runners, hitting into a double play and going 0-for-2 in steal attempts.
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| Jim Leyland - 1989 Veryfine Juice |
1989 - After a 17-4 loss to the San Diego Padres at Jack Murphy Stadium, Jim Leyland held a closed door team meeting and per the Pittsburgh Press’ Bob Hertzel, “...informed his team that it was, in no particular order, selfish, dumb, unprepared, a disgrace and probably unkind to animals.” Despite this being a team family trip, he also called for an afternoon practice before the next game, spoiling any last minute outings with the clan. The Pirates didn’t seem to take much umbrage at the wake up call, nor did it seem to have much effect - they were 13 games under .500 before the chat, lost 9-1 the next night and then finished the year that same 13 games under. But Leyland was playing the long game, and was doing the groundwork as the Pirates went on to win the next three division titles between 1990-92, claiming at least 95 victories per season.
1990 - Jeff King hit his first career grand slam and added five RBI to lead the Pirates to an 11-2 win over San Francisco at Three Rivers Stadium. Sid Bream and Chico Lind also chipped in with long balls. Doug Drabek allowed two runs in eight innings while improving to 11-4.
1998- Turner Ward and Kevin Young homered back-to-back in the first inning as the Pirates raced to a 4-0 lead v Montreal at Olympic Stadium. Ward’s blast was a two-run shot, KY followed with his solo shot and Aramis Ramirez later singled home another tally to give Jon Lieber lots of elbow room before the Expos even got to bat - and that was with Tony Womack getting picked off first. It was more than enough support as Lieber went the distance, spinning a 90-pitch five-hitter as the Pirates defeated the Expos 5-2.
2000 - The Bucs snapped a six-game losing streak with an 8-6 win over Los Angeles at Dodger Stadium. The Pirates scored five times in the first two innings, but the Dodgers came back with a six-spot in the third frame. The Bucs finally prevailed thanks to three RBIs each from Jason Kendall and Wil Cordero, both of whom also homered. Five Pirate relievers combined to toss seven innings of scoreless three-hit ball to cement the win, which went to Jose Manzanillo.
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| Wil Cordero - 2000 MLB Showdown |
2009 - Charlie Morton went seven innings of three-hit ball to stop the San Francisco Giants 2-0 at PNC Park. Matt Capps made the finish exciting, putting runners on second and third with an out in the ninth frame, but came back to get a whiff and grounder to preserve the win. Ryan Doumit scored and had an RBI to provide a spark to the otherwise listless attack.
2011 - The Pirates took a 2-0 decision at PNC Park against Cincinnati as Charlie Morton tossed a three-hitter against the Reds. The Bucs played small ball in the fourth inning for the win. Chase d’Arnaud and Neil Walker led off with singles, with The Kid taking second behind the play when the throw targeted d’Arnaud hustling into third. Andrew McCutchen’s tapper drove in Chase with one run, Matt Diaz’s sac fly scored Walker, and that was it for either squad’s lumber.
2012 - The Pirates spent their final day tied for the top of the NL Central after taking a 9-6 decision from Colorado at Coors Field as Garrett Jones, Pedro Alvarez, Casey McGehee and Rod Barajas homered for the Bucs. Pittsburgh collapsed like a house of cards after that, going 28-43 the rest of the way to finish with 79 wins and their 20th straight losing campaign.
2023 - The Pirates signed first round and first overall draft selection Paul Skenes, RHP from Louisiana State. His bonus of $9,200,000 broke the signing record set in 2020 by IF Spencer Torkelson, who inked his $8,416,300 deal with the Detroit Tigers. Still, it was under the $9,721,000 slot value of the selection, leaving the Pirates with plenty of room for a couple of yet-unsigned Top 10 picks and a pair of high school players who were taken in the later rounds. The money didn’t help - so far, with Skene’s exception, it’s been a fairly nondescript class.
Friday, July 17, 2026
7/17 Through the 1970s: Dock's 13, Roberto Rocks, 1,000 For Ralph, Duelin', Hans Day, Lotta Wins, Gotta Score..., Game Days, Cobra ASG-MVP, HBD Jerry, Chummy & Jim
1866 - RHP Jim Handiboe was born in Columbus, Ohio. Jim’s big league stay consisted of a season with the American Association Alleghenys in 1886, where the 20-year-old put up a 7-7/3.32 slash, going the distance 12 times. That gave him an OPS+ of 100, making him the poster boy for a league-average pitcher. Apparently the team thought he needed a little more seasoning; Jim toiled in various whistle stops until 1901, retiring at age 34.
1873 - RHP George “Chummy” Gray was born in Rockland, Maine. His tale is that of a AAAA pitcher getting his moment in the sun. After back-to-back 20 win seasons, Gray tossed a no-hitter with one walk for Buffalo in 1899. He got his reward when the Pirates brought him up for the last month of the season. Gray went 3-3/3.43 in nine games, completing six of his seven starts. Chummy then rattled around the minor leagues for a few more years, but never again returned to the majors, eventually hanging up the spikes after the 1901 season. He passed away in 1913 at age 40 in Rockland of TB.
1888 - The Pittsburgh Alleghenys lost, 2-0, to the Philadelphia Quakers, dropping a three-game set at Exposition Park by 1-0, 1-0, and 2-0 counts. The middle game was the most frustrating when a ninth-inning hit-and-run single followed by an unpopular safe call at third led to the game’s only run. The Pittsburgh Press described it this way: “ …the umpiring...looked to be decidedly against the locals in the ninth inning. Twice it looked like Andrews (Quaker CF Ed Andrews who scored the game winner) was out. The first time on strikes (and)...again in deciding him safe at third when Billy Kuehne (Alleghenys’ 3B) had touched him fully two feet from the base. It looked as though another serious mistake had been made in favor of the visitors by the tenth man...There is little wonder that the indignation of the crowd knew no bounds but let it be said to its credit no act of violence was done.” For his part, the ump was indignant at the fans’ reaction and said he called the game in good faith while Philly manager Harry Wright claimed the “locals had no business to kick.” The Alleghenys batsmen then shook their lethargy, going on to win 11-of-13 while averaging 5-1/2 runs per game, although they were whitewashed 20 times during the year.
1890 - For the first time, two eventual 300-game winners were opponents as Tim Keefe of the Giants faced Pittsburgh's Jim 'Pud' Galvin in a Players League (which was considered a major league) match-up. New York easily beat the Burghers, 8-2. O’Keefe did his part, tossing a four-hitter (The Pittsburgh Press wrote “the wonder is that the Pittsburgs were allowed to score at all.”) while Pud was rattled for a dozen knocks. They met again in 1892, and after that, the next time two 300-winners battled was in 2005 when Greg Maddux met Roger Clemens.
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| Pud Galvin - 2005 Pioneers Of Baseball |
1907 - “The veteran Vic Willis was on the slab...and he tied knots in the home bunch from first to last. He allowed but two hits, one a scratch...” per the Pittsburgh Press, and he led the Bucs to a 2-0 win over Christy Mathewson and the New York Giants at the Polo Grounds. Matty only allowed four hits, with the Pirates not lighting up the scoreboard until the eighth inning with an unearned run. The insurance marker came in the ninth frame when Ed Abbaticchio bounced a drive off the wall; it caromed into a dirt pile by the fence and it took two Giants to eventually dig it out. By the time the excavated ball was quarried and made it back to the infield, Abby had rounded the bases.
1908 - It was Honus Wagner Day at Exposition Park, and before the game, players from both teams lined up to honor him. He was speechified, then gifted with a $700 gold watch and an Elk’s pin with a diamond worth four bills. The tribute was originally scheduled for the 16th, but Hans asked that it be moved so it wouldn’t conflict with the annual orphan’s picnic. The Boston Doves won the game 4-0 behind ex-Pirate Tommy McCarthy’s five-hitter. It could have been worse - the Doves tacked on six more runs in the eighth, but the game was called because of darkness before the Pirates could bat, nullifying the six-pack. Hans finished the game equally in the dark by going hitless.
1914 - In one of the great pitching duels of early baseball, Babe Adams lost to the Giants Rube Marquard, 3-1, in 21 innings at Forbes Field. Babe surrendered 12 hits without a walk; it’s the longest outing without a free pass in MLB history. New York’s Larry Doyle's inside-the-park home run was Babe’s downfall. The key play was when Honus Wagner was called out for interference in the sixth inning. He slid into third and headed home when the ball disappeared from view; it ended up tucked in his uniform. Wagner was, per the Pittsburgh Press “...trying to hide a ball and score off the trick...” and ump Lord Byron rang him up for the subterfuge. As the Press reported “...the decision caused a mighty howl, which was participated in by many of the players and by Manager Fred Clarke, who applied a flow of profanity to the umpire, which was anything but pleasing to the disgusted spectators. Clarke’s language on this occasion...will not win ball games.” The Pirates appealed Byron’s call of Hans' suspected hidden ball trick (he apparently pleaded that the ball got caught up in his flannels) to the league with no luck.
1930 - OF/PH Jerry Lynch was born in Bay City, Michigan. Lynch started (1954-56) and ended (1963-66) his career in Pittsburgh, spending the seven middle years with the Cincinnati Reds. He hit .263/45/188 as a reserve Pirate outfielder and primo pinch hitter. Lynch had 116 pinch hits during his 13-year big league tour with 18 HR, and is still high on the hit lists for PH.
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| Jerry Lynch - 1964 Topps |
1939 - Newly acquired Bucco outfielder Chuck Klein made his first appearance back in Philadelphia since leaving the city where he spent 10 years as a player. He celebrated the homecoming by jacking a pair of homers to lift the Bucs to a 7-4 win at Shibe Park. The Bucs released Klein in August and he returned to his old club, retiring in 1944 as a Phil.
1952 - Ralph Kiner hit a two-run shot in the ninth frame to walk-off the Phils at Forbes Field, giving the Bucs a 4-2 victory and sweep of a twin bill. He also joined the 1,000 hit club; he would end his career with 1,451 knocks. The blast off Karl Drews made a winner out of Ted Wilks, who tossed a scoreless inning in relief of Woody Main. Clem Koshorek and Pete Castiglione joined Ralph by banging a pair of hits. The Pirates took the opener, 2-1, behind Cal Hogue’s four-hitter. Catfish Metkovich singled home rookie Dick Groat in the third frame to knot the score, and Groat drove in Clyde McCullough two innings later with the game winner. It was a rare twin win day as doubleheaders weren’t the clubs’ strong suit; they swept just three in 23 double dip tries.
1966 - The Pirates swept a twin bill from San Francisco at Forbes Field, 7-4 and 7-1, to vault over the Giants into first place behind the pitching of Steve Blass and Tommie Sisk. Matty Alou and Donn Clendenon collected four hits during the DH, with Clendenon homering. In a wild race, the Bucs would finish third with a 92-70 slate, three games behind the Dodgers.
1970 - Roberto Clemente led the Bucs to a 4-3 win over the Cincinnati Reds at Forbes Field with three hits, falling a double short of the cycle. He tripled and scored the tying run in the sixth, homered for the eventual game winner in the eighth, and threw out Tommy Helms at the plate in the ninth. Dave Giusti, the Bucs third pitcher, ran his record to 8-0 with Roberto’s help.
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| Roberto Clemente - 1970 Topps Super |
1971 - A deserted Forbes Field was lit up by a fire under the right field stands. It was the second blaze and left such severe structural damage that its demolition, already scheduled by its new owners, Pitt, began almost immediately. Now the former ballyard’s footprint is the site of Posvar Hall, with home plate still showcased in the building and a bit of the brick & ivy wall still remains standing.
1971 - Dock Ellis won his 13th straight game without a defeat over the Padres at Three Rivers Stadium, 9-2, with Bob Robertson’s three-run homer providing all the scoring the Docktor would need. Manny Sanguillen had four knocks and Roberto Clemente added three more raps to aid the cause. Dock’s next outing would be a no decision before the Dodgers ended his streak.
1978 - The Pirates bullpen imploded in the ninth inning at TRS, allowing San Diego to score three runs to tie the game at six as they rallied from a fourth-inning 6-1 deficit. The Padres tacked on another run in the 10th frame to take the lead, but the Bucs weren’t quite done. With Rollie Fingers on the hill, Bill Robinson reached on an error and Willie Stargell singled through a shift before Rennie Stennett’s rap tied the game. Ken Macha, who ran for Willie, and Stennett tagged and moved up a base after Ed Ott’s line out to left. San Diego decided to not walk Manny Sanguillen with lefty John Milner on deck, and The Roadrunner made it a bad choice by banging a ball off the left field wall for a long single and walkoff win, with the dub credited to Kent Tekulve.
1979 - The National League won its eighth straight All-Star Game, 7-6, at the Kingdome in Seattle. Pittsburgh’s only representative, Dave Parker, threw out runners at home & third and was named the game's MVP. The Cobra went 1-for-3 with an RBI and was intentionally walked once. Future Bucco Lee Mazzilli tied the game in the eighth inning with a pinch-hit home run and then put the Senior Circuit ahead in the ninth frame by drawing a bases-loaded walk to finish as the MVP runner-up to Parker. This ASG was the only one ever played in the Kingdome; by the time the Midsummer Classic returned to Seattle in 2001, the Mariners were playing in a new yard, Safeco Park.
7/17 From 1980: Record Rally, Alex Trips, 5 For KY, Streakin', Game Days, Loaiza-TVP, Felipe & ASG, Termarr #1, Youth Served, HBD Brian
1983 - The Pirates whipped the San Diego Padres at Jack Murphy Stadium by a 5-4 score, concluding their best-ever west coast trip by taking 9-of-10 games. The Buccaneers ran their winning streak to eight games to reach .500 on the season. The Corsair attack was powered by Jason Thompson, who had three hits, including a homer, and three RBI. Dave Parker and Dale Berra also chipped in three knocks to key a 13-hit outing. Lee Tunnell took the win and Kent Tekulve picked up the save. Pittsburgh kept on keepin’ on against the left coasters; right after the trip, LA, SF and SD came calling to TRS and the Bucs took 8-of-11.
1988 - The Pirates ran their winning streak to nine games when they held off the Giants, 5-4, at Three Rivers Stadium. Pittsburgh jumped out to a 3-0 lead in the second inning on a Mike Dunne RBI grounder and a two-out, two-run knock by Darnell Coles. San Francisco used a pair of homers to tie it up before the Bucs regained the lead in the eighth frame on Barry Bonds’ long ball, stroked with two outs and two strikes, to take a 5-3 edge. Jim Gott finished it up, though with some drama - a pair of walks (one intentional) sandwiched around a double narrowed the gap to one run, then he survived Harry Spilman’s long drive to center that Andy Van Slyke had just enough room to corral to save the win for Jeff Robinson. The streaky club lost the next day, took three in a row, then dropped 15-of-23 on the way to a roller-coaster 85-75 campaign.
1998 - The Bucs traded RHP Esteban Loaiza to the Texas Rangers for RHP Todd Van Poppel and 2B Warren Morris. The Pirates plugged Van Poppel into the rotation to replace Loaiza while Morris was considered the key as a lefty-hitting, power-bat second baseman. It didn’t work out quite as planned. TVP lasted 10 weeks for Pittsburgh while Morris was released after the 2001 season. Loaiza pitched for another 10 seasons (albeit with seven teams), topped by a 21-9/2.90 campaign with the White Sox in 2003 when he was an All-Star and Cy Young runner up. TVP pitched through 2004 while Morris played for six more organizations, with his only MLB stops at Detroit in 2003 plus an ‘02 cup of coffee with Minnesota, before playing his last pro game in 2005.
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| Estaban Loaiza - 1998 Donruss |
1999 - In a wild 13-10 win over the Cleveland Indians at Three Rivers Stadium, Kevin Young homered twice to drive in five runs and Al Martin also went yard two times to plate three more; both had three hits, as did Adrian Brown. The teams combined to bang out 32 hits and together burned through 13 pitchers during the game, played in front of 43,299 fans, many from Ohio for the weekend. The Bucs led throughout the contest, though the Tribe cut the lead to a single run in the sixth and two in the eighth, to net Kris Benson the win, saved by Mike Williams.
2003 - The Brewers and Bucs exchanged grand slams in a 7-5 Milwaukee win at PNC Park. Ex-Bucco John Vander Wal clocked a first-inning salami off Kris Benson; Craig Wilson pounded a pinch-hit grannie in the fifth off Wayne Franklin, but to no avail as it was already 7-0 Brew Crew at that point.
Thursday, July 16, 2026
7/16 Through the 1960s: Splish Splash Starg, Carlos Da Man, Bomb's Away, Happy Jack's Run Ends, Chief Rolls Threes, Knot Hole, Game Days, Teke Signs, HBD Howdy
1885 - In perhaps the earliest “knot hole” day promotion in the City, William Nimick, part-owner and president of the Alleghenys, announced in the Pittsburgh Sun Telegraph that all Saturday games at Recreation Park (nee Union Park) in Northside would feature dime admissions for children. The yard was the Alleghenys home until 1891, when the team moved to Expo Park. The concept was carried over to Forbes Field games. (S/O to @19thCenturyBucs).
1894 - SS James Howard “Howdy” Caton was born in nearby Zanesville, Ohio. He spent his four year MLB career (1917-20) with Pittsburgh, hitting .226 as a reserve infielder. Howdy never did hit a homer, but he did leg out 16 triples. After his Bucco tenure, he played for local teams in the Midwest League including his hometown Zanesville Greys squad for several years and had a day job as a city worker for Zanesville. Howdy also answered to the nickname Buster.
1902 - “Happy Jack” Chesbro had his franchise-record 41-inning scoreless streak come to an end during his 9-1 win over Boston at Expo Park. His stats were still flashy - his record to date was 15-2/1.97 while he finished the year with a 28-6/2.17 mark for the pennant-winning Pirates. Ginger Beaumont was a homer shy of a cycle and Kitty Bransfield also added three hits as Pittsburgh banged out 15 knocks. Every Buccaneer in the lineup scored, had an RBI, or posted both.
1910 - Chief Wilson had three hits, including two triples, and the Bucs scored three times in the eighth off Christy Mathewson to sweep a four game set from the NY Giants at Forbes Field by a 6-3 score. With two outs in the eighth frame, Fred Clarke and Honus Wagner banged back-to-back doubles for the lead. The insurance markers came on a John Flynn RBI knock followed by Bill McKechnie’s drive that glanced off a glove to score Flynn. Deacon Phillippe got the win.
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| Chief Wilson - 1910 Tip Top Bread |
1918 - The Bucs sent reserve 3B Gus Getz to Indianapolis of the American Association for minor-league vet SS Roy Allam. It ended up a minor deal. For the Pittsburgh-born Getz, it was the end of his seven-year MLB career. Ellam auditioned for the shortstop spot but hit just .130 in 26 games, and the stint was the last of his brief big league career (he played 10 games for the Reds).
1920 - Lefty Earl Hamilton pitched 16 shutout innings before running out of gas and losing 7-0 to the New York Giants. NY’s Rube Benton went the distance for the win at Forbes Field, tossing a seven hitter. The game featured outstanding defense, with the Pittsburgh Press citing “remarkable work in the field” and “fielding thrills” provided by both nines. It spotlighted Pirates birthday boy SS Howdy Caton’s lunging grab behind second and spin-a-rama toss to first to retire Frankie Frisch as “the greatest play witnessed on the local lot in several years.”
1950 - The Bucs scored three times in the eighth and once in the ninth inning to edge the Boston Braves 6-5 at Forbes Field. Ted Beard (whose ball hit the right field roof and bounced over it, making him the first batter since Babe Ruth in 1935 and just the second in Forbes Field's 41-year history to clear the stadium's 89-foot-high roof), homered. Then Gus Bell went long after Ralph Kiner was intentionally walked with two down in the eighth to tie it. Earl Turner cracked another two-out dinger in the final frame to win it for Hank Borowy. Pittsburgh dropped the opener of the twin bill, 9-5. MLB set a record of 37 HR launched on this day; the Bucs contributed five long balls to the cause - Bell (2), Beard, Turner and Danny O’Connell’s blast in the first game.
1953 - Pittsburgh’s happy feet and a day by Carlos Bernier snapped the Pirates 10-game losing streak with a 5-2 win over the Milwaukee Braves at Forbes Field. In the fourth, the Bucs set up shop when Eddie O’Brien and Danny O’Connell inadvertently ran a double steal. Caught off base after a missed bunt, O’Brien redeemed himself by dancing into third after the Braves tried to pick him off at second, with O’Donnell steaming into second during the festivities. Bernier singled them both home and went to third on Paul Smith’s knock. Smith stole second without a throw, and then Carlos stole home, drawing a wild throw to the plate during his dash that allowed Smith to come around, too. Bernier later tripled and scored to help Bob Friend to a complete game victory.
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| Carlos Bernier - 1953 Topps |
1960 - The Bucs jumped ahead of the Cincinnati Reds, 2-0, in the first inning, but found themselves down 5-2 going into the seventh at Forbes Field. Maz’s homer tightened it up and Don Hoak’s two-out, bases-loaded single an inning later tied it. The Pirates came all the way back when pinch hitter Dick Stuart, batting for reliever Earl Francis, drilled a walkoff homer over the left field fence with an out in the ninth for a 6-5 victory. Francis, who worked two scoreless frames, claimed the Pittsburgh win.
1969 - Willie Stargell cannon-balled a pitch 495’ into the municipal swimming pool behind Jarry Park Stadium in the eighth inning as the Bucs beat the Expos, 8-7. The Pirates scored three times in the eighth and three more times in the ninth to claim the win. Roberto Clemente had a two-run, two-out single in the final frame, followed by the eventual game-winning knock, a Richie Hebner single that scored Stargell. Chuck Hartenstein got the save, even though he gave up a ninth-inning homer (the Expos hit four long balls), to close the victory for Joe Gibbon. It was a win, but not one of the team’s finer outings - they committed three errors, hit into four double plays and lost a run when Manny Sanguillen left third base too soon on a tag. Fun fact: The Expos later presented Willie with a life preserver to commemorate “all the swimmers he chased out of the pool” (christened as “La Piscine de Willie” - Willie’s Pool) with his Jarry Park blasts.
1969 - Pirates scout Dick Coury signed 22-year-old RHP Kent Tekulve as an undrafted free agent out of Marietta College. The contract was offered following a tryout at Forbes Field, where Tekulve didn’t pitch during the audition but in a private bullpen session after the main event, per Bob Hurte of SABR, and then was sent to Geneva farm club. Teke was a late bloomer, not cracking the Bucco roster until 1974, but made up for lost time - he tossed for a dozen years for the Pirates, making 722 appearances with a 2.68 ERA, 70 wins and 158 saves as a rubber-armed reliever. He put together a 16-year MLB career with 1,050 outings and a line of 94-90-184/2.85, working 90+ games three times and once pitching nine straight games before hangin’ up the mitt at age 42. (His retirement was 20 years to the day after he signed his first pro contract, on 7/17/89). Tekulve then worked for the Wild Things, as a Bucco scout, and finally a broadcaster before having a heart transplant in 2014 and retiring in 2017. He joined the Pirates Hall of Fame in 2023.
7/16 From 1970: Duelin' Doug, Dual Dave, Robby Rocket, TRS Opens, Game Days, Fraze Dealt, Skenes & ASGs HBD Ildemaro
1972 - Reliever Dave Giusti had a day every reliever dreams of as he got a win and save in a twin bill against the Astros at TRS in front of 49,341 fans. Giusti worked 2-1/3 IP, giving up two hits and fanning a pair in twin 3-2 Bucco wins. His victory came in the 10th inning after Bob Moose started the opener and he got the last out of the nightcap to save Bruce Kison’s win.
1978 - The Bucs swept the Phillies by 3-2 and 10-6 scores in a Three Rivers Stadium twinbill, but the big news was that Dave Parker was back. The Cobra missed 15 games with a broken cheek suffered in a collision at home, but sporting a variety of masks (a goalie mask when at bat and football face bar attachment for his helmet in the field), he returned to action. The Cobra drew an intentional walk in the 10th inning of the opener, setting up Bill Robinson’s game-winning knock, and his triple in the seventh frame of the nightcap tied the score and triggered an eventual five-run outburst to break the game open. Parker went on to take the NL MVP title, but the team was a couple of bricks shy, finishing second with 88 wins, 1-1/2 games behind Philly.
1992 - Doug Drabek scattered four hits, and supported by a pair of two-out RBI hits - a homer by Andy Van Slyke and a single by Alex Cole - led the squad to victory as the Bucs defeated the Chicago Cubs 2-1 at Three Rivers Stadium. The win kept the Pittsburgh lead over the Baby Bruins and Cards at six games in the NL Eastern Division as play resumed after the All Star break.
1999 - The middle men of the Pirate order - Brian Giles, Kevin Young and Ed Sprague - each banged a homer and together drove in a total of eight runs while scoring seven times in an 11-3 win against the Cleveland Indians at TRS in front of 43,519 mixed-city rooters. The Bucs ran away and hid from the Tribe early; they were up by a 10-0 count after four frames. Francisco Cordova got the win, lasting into the sixth before three relievers carried the game home.
2002 - Brian Giles and Jack Wilson drove in all seven runs in a 7-3 Bucco win against the Astros at Minute Maid Park. Giles produced a homer and sac fly while Wilson collected three hits, including a triple, as the Pirates’ Josh Fogg outlasted Houston’s Roy Oswalt for the dub.
2024 - Paul Skenes took his lil' hop over the foul line, toed the rubber and worked a clean first frame (his scheduled allotment), ceding only a walk on a pitch that looked suspiciously close to strike three in his first ASG start at Globe Life Field. He became the first player in MLB history to earn an All Star nod the year after being drafted No. 1. The game went to the AL, 5-3, par for the course. Boston CF Jarren Duran smacked a two-out, two-run homer in the fifth off Hunter Greene to overcome LA's Shohei Ohtani's earlier three-run blast (Sho-Time became the first MLB player who has both an AS win and homer). The Pirates Bryan Reynolds started in left field and went 1-for-2 while Bethel Park HS/Waynesburg U/Oakland's Mason Miller earned the win. Earlier the NL topped the AL in the Futures Game, 6-1. The Bucs were repped by Altoona RHP Bubba Chandler, who spun one scoreless inning, and Greensboro 2B Temarr Johnson, who went 1-for-2.
2025 - The Pirates traded UT Adam Frazier to the Royals for IF (primarily shortstop) Cam Devanney, 28, who was optioned to Indy. Cam was hitting .272/18 HR for the Royals’ AAA Omaha club, but has never played in the show, spending the last six years in the Milwaukee/KC systems w/.253 career BA. He's an insurance policy should Isiah Kiner-Falefa land elsewhere before the deadline ends. IKF stayed, and Cam got a September callup, hitting .139 in 14 games. He’s now playing in Japan.














