- 1986 - 1B Jason Thompson was traded to Montreal for a pair of PTBNL minor leaguers, Ron Giddens and Ben Abner. It ended up a very minor deal as Thompson fared poorly for the Expos in his last MLB campaign and neither prospect the Pirates got made it to the show.
- 1993 - C John Bormann was born in Danville, Virginia. A 24th round pick in the 2015 draft from the University of Texas at San Antonio, the Class A Bradenton Marauder catcher got a call to the show in 2017 for a game while regular catcher Fran Cervelli was laid up briefly with a sore foot. He got one at bat and whiffed. Still, he was excited to get a chance to live the dream. As Clint Hurdle said "Imagine, when he woke up today, he was going to go on a bus to Port Charlotte..(and instead) ends up playing in a major league game.”
- 1996 - RHP Mitch Keller was born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. Keller was drafted in the second round of the 2014 draft out of Xavier HS and signed for a $1M bonus, foregoing his commitment to North Carolina. He rose to the top of the Pirates pitching prospects list and after the 2018 campaign was added to the 40-man roster. He made his MLB debut in 2019 against the Reds, getting banged around in the first inning and then retiring 10-of-11 before calling it a night. He finished the year 1-5, though he did show his stuff worked (sometimes) with 12K per nine innings.
- 2000 - The Bucs drew a record announced crowd of 54,399 as Jason Schmidt lost 5-2 to the Astros for TRS’s final home opener. Sadly, the butts in the seats didn’t match the attendance figure by a longshot even with Christina Aguilera on hand to sing the Anthem. There were an estimated 15,000 live fans on hand; the drizzly, 40-degree weather in Pittsburgh curbed most folks enthusiasm.
- 2007 - The Pirates swept the Astros in Houston for the first time since 1991, winning 5-4 at Minute Maid Park behind Tom Gorzelanny. Jose Bautista banged out three hits including a double and drove in three RBI to prime the attack.
- 2008 - Closer Matt Capps agreed to a $3.05M, two-year contract that ran through 2009 and covered his first year of arbitration. Capps wasn’t tendered when the deal ran out - he had 27 saves in 2009, but with a 5.80 ERA - and moved on to Washington. He hasn’t tossed over 50 IP in any season since 2010, and last pitched in the majors in 2012 for the Twins as he was plagued by a series of shoulder injuries. The Mad Capper was selected this season to be part of a three-man rotating color crew (Kevin Young and Michael "The Fort" McKenry join him) for Bucco broadcasts, if there is a 2020 season for him to analyze.
- 2016 - Cumberland “Cum” Posey, the first black athlete at Penn State & Duquesne and a former player, manager, and owner of the Homestead Grays baseball team, was elected into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. He had been inducted into the National Baseball Hall of Fame in 2006, and thus became the only member of both the professional basketball and baseball halls of fame. Posey, who was born in Homestead in 1890, played two hoop seasons at Penn State, then with the Loendi Big Five, an all-black basketball team that won multiple Colored Basketball World Championships, and later at Duquesne under the name "Charles Cumbert," leading the Dukes in scoring for three seasons from 1916-18. After Duquesne, he focused on baseball and helped build the Grays into a powerhouse club.
- 2019 - The Pirates blanked the Reds 2-0 at PNC Park. It was Jordan Lyles first start as a Bucco, and he put up five zeros on the board. Pittsburgh stranded 10 runners and didn’t score until the seventh, when back-to-back singles and a bleeder pushed across the first run and three eighth-inning raps produced a second to give Nick Kingham the win. It was rinse, lather and repeat the next day. Joe Musgrove tossed seven scoreless, three-hit innings and Sonny Gray gave up a run in the seventh on Jung Ho Kang’s two-out double; the Bucs added an insurance run in the eighth on a bunt single, sacrifice, and Adam Frazier’s double to clinch Big Joe’s win. Bucco pitching put up a 30-inning line of zeroes against the Reds, shutting them out in three straight games, a streak that started in Cincy.
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