Wednesday, September 16, 2020

9/16 From 1970: Rennie Rolls Seven; Boot Hill; Craig POTW; Youth Served; Game Stories; HBD Brandon & Michael

  • 1975 - Rennie Stennett matched a major league record by going 7-for-7 in a nine-inning game in Chicago at Wrigley Field (he tied Wilbert Robinson’s 1892 record). Rennie started off with two more hits the next game for nine knocks in a row. Dave Parker had five RBI while Richie Heber & Frank Taveras added three more; to add insult to injury, John Candelaria, Ken Brett and Ramon Harris spun a three-hitter. The 22-0 romp over the Cubs was the Pirates franchise’s biggest margin of victory and the most one-sided shutout in post-1900 MLB history. 
  • 1978 - The Pirates had the lumber swinging in a 12-5 win over the Expos at TRS, banging out a season-high 19 hits. Frank Taveras set the table at lead off with four hits and three runs; Dave Parker had three doubles and four RBI while Willie Stargell & Dale Berra also collected three raps. Don Robinson got the win, although he faded late and needed Ed Whitson to come on to get the final two outs. 
Frank had a hot stick - 1978 Topps
  • 1982 - Utilityman Michael Martinez was born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic. The good glove, bad bat bench guy stopped in Pittsburgh in 2014 and hit just .128 in 26 games. Through the 2018 season, he’s played seven years for five teams, usually serving as a minor league insurance policy for the big club. 
  • 1983 - 1B/OF Brandon Moss was born in Monroe, Georgia. Moss joined the Pirates from Boston as part of the Jason Bay package and from 2008-10 hit .228 in 195 games. He went on to have three solid years with the Oakland A’s, including an All-Star campaign in 2014 and has settled into a low batting average, 20+ HR bat since his Pittsburgh days during his 11-year, seven-team journey through the show. He was DFA’ed by the A’s in 2018 and retired at the end of the year, when his contract ran out.
  • 1985 - The Pirates were charged with seven errors during an 8-4 loss to the Cards in front of just 3,601 at TRS. It was a bad day all around; the Bucs also lost the second game of the doubleheader 3-1 to be swept by St. Louis. The defeats dropped Pittsburgh to a 47-94 mark on their way to a last place finish and 104 losses. 
  • 2003 - Jack of all trades (1B-C-corner OF) Craig Wilson was named the NL Player of the Week after hitting .370 and banging five long balls while scoring seven times and driving in 10 runs. He beat out two mateys who were also nominated: OF Reggie Sanders hit .407 with eight runs chased home and RHP Josh Fogg slashed 2-0/2.25. 
  • 2005 - It was a revolving door for young guys during the September call-ups. Pitchers Bryan Bullington, Tom Gorzelanny and Matt Capps, along with 3B Jose Bautista and C Ronny Paulino, got a ticket to the big club. The team needed some 40-man roster space, so OF Chris Duffy was put on the 60-day DL, P Corey Stewart was outrighted and OF Ray Sadler DFA’ed. Duffy, at age 25, was the oldest of the eight players on the move. 
The Mad Capper got the call - 2004 Topps Rookie
  • 2013 - San Diego’s Andrew Cashner faced the minimum 27 Bucco batters as he one-hit the Pirates 2-0 at PNC Park. Jose Tabata broke up the perfect game with a seventh inning leadoff single; he was erased an out later on a 6-4-3 DP off the bat of Andrew McCutchen. The game was a scoreless duel into the seventh when three ground ball singles off AJ Burnett led to the Padres pair of runs. 
  • 2016 - Jordy Mercer delivered the game-winning single as part of a three-run 10th inning (David Freese’s two-out, two-run single iced the cake) that lifted the Bucs to a 9-7 win against the Reds at Great American Ball Park. The Bucs took an early 3-0 lead in the first inning, highlighted by Gregory Polanco’s two-run blast to right field. Jung Ho Kang also connected for his 19th homer with a two-run blast in the seventh that helped send the game into extra innings (he also got plunked twice and walked twice). Pittsburgh used seven pitchers (the Reds burned eight arms; welcome to September baseball), with Antonio Bastardo getting the win and Tony Watson earning a save. For the Bucs, it was part of a 6-for-7 September run that got them above .500, but they staggered to the finish afterward to end up with just 78 wins.

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