Chris Stratton started the Pirates off on the right foot - photo Jennifer Stewart/Getty |
Samuel Reyes, Pablo's little bro, posted another zero for the Buccaneers. The 'Burg batters, eh - five of the next six fanned. But the one who didn't, Andrew Susac, walked with one gone, scooted to third on Ke'Bryan Hayes two-down flare into short right and tied the game when Jason Martin rolled one up the middle. Pedro Vasquez toed the slab and worked a 1-2-3, two-whiff frame - Pittsburgh has struck out 10 and the Yankees 14. And that was it; the game ended 3-3 thanks to some two out lightning and a thoroughly used up complement of pitchers. The two teams worked a total of 17 twirlers, each spinning at least a frame.
Edgar Santana worked his first frame since 2018 - photo Pittsburgh Pirates |
Notes:
- Jake Stallings had a single, double and was nicked by a pitch. Ke'Bryan Hayes also had a pair of knocks. And that was about it - the Bucs only had two more hits, drew three walks and were HBP twice.
- Archie was supposed to take his first bow tonight, but was scratched with a stiff neck, with the skip made just as a springtime precaution rather than a necessity per Archer & the team. Chris Stratton got the call instead; he was already scheduled as part of the team's rotation against the Yankees.
- Shelty gave a couple of regulars some playing time today - Fraze, Bryan Reynolds, J-Bell and Stalls got their first outings of the spring. The Yanks pretty much sent out their A team.
- Quick take: Pirates pitchers loved Stall's game-management last year, and seem to be on the same page with Luke Maile early on. They're also pretty heads-up in the field and on the bases; hopefully, the fundamentals will carry on during the season.
- Lonnie Chisenhall officially retired; that $2.75M the Pirates gave him last year was a nice parting gift. He mostly stayed home last season with a bum leg, although he did manage to fit in seven games with Indy first.
2 comments:
Too bad about Chisenhall. He was a better than average player if never the star many thought he would become, but injuries chopped him down. As you say, he sure got a nice parting gift. I really wish the Pirates would stop throwing money at iffy guys. Either spend on established players or do a cattle call, but stop flushing millions down the toilet on the slim chance that the Chisenhalls of the world will actually be able to get on the field.
Oh, tossing $2.75M at a fourth OF'er isn't terrible, Will, but I've been on fence regarding Pirate medical evaluations for years. Everytime I think they run on gauze and mercurochrome, a Giancarlo Stanton/Luis Severino pops up.
I think for bubble guys, it may be worth a shot to see what they've got left. But I have to admit, Chisenhall just being sent home to finish out the deal left a bad taste in my mouth; he should have at least helped coach up kids for a couple of months.
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