- 1885 - Pop Smith, slick fielding but weak hitting Alleghenys 2B, hit into a 4-3-2 triple play against Baltimore in the 11th at Oriole Park. It marked the beginning of an accursed stretch of baseball: Pittsburgh would go on to lose the game 11-10, beginning a tumble that saw them drop from second to finishing 17-½ games back after an 8-23 stretch.
- 1904 - C John O’Connell was born in Verona. The Duquesne Duke’s MLB career lasted three games played in 1928-29; he doubled once in nine PAs with a walk. O’Connell was the first Red & Blue ballplayer to reach the big leagues since Johnny Miljus in 1915; the next Bluff product in the show was pitcher Dick Ricketts in 1959 with the Cards. He also multi-tasked by playing pro hoops until he retired after the 1958 season.
Preston Ward - 1954 Bowman |
- 1954 - It was a forgettable day for the Bucs, dropping a twin bill to the Cards at Busch Stadium by 5-0 and 5-3 scores. But it was a rags-to-riches tale for 1B Preston Ward. He wore the golden sombrero in the opener, K’ing four times while facing Harvey Haddix. He sat in the nightcap, but pinch hit in the eighth, and smacked a solo homer off Stu Miller. It would take 61 years for another Pirate to whiff in all four at-bats in the first game of a double header and then drill a homer in the second before Starling Marte turned the trick in 2014.
- 1968 - Pittsburgh won a wild one, 8-7, over the Giants at Candlestick Park. San Francisco scored two runs in the bottom of the ninth and loaded the bases with two down, but had used up their bench and had to send Ray Sadecki, a good hitting hurler, to the dish to bat for reliever Bill Henry. Roy Face took over and whiffed Sadecki to close out the victory. The play of the game was made in the sixth when Roberto Clemente took a home run away from Willie Mays, making a grab over the RF railing as he was crashing into the fence with two on and two out.
- 1972 - LHP Darrell May was born in San Bernardino, California. He spent seven seasons, getting a brief look in Pittsburgh in 1996, getting five outings (two starts) and going 0-1/9.35 as a 24-year-old. The Pirates had acquired him off waivers from the Braves; Pittsburgh released him in September and California claimed him. He pitched in the show and in Japan through 2005. He did some high school and college coaching and now runs DMay Baseball School and is in charge of player development for TWC Sports Management.
Willie Stargell - 1980 Topps Superstar |
- 1980 - It was Willie Stargell’s day as Pops went 4-for-4 with two homers, both off Joe Niekro, a double and all five RBI (he drove in Tim Foli three times) in a 5-3 Bucco victory against the Astros at TRS. Eddie Solomon got the win with Kent Tekulve coming on to get the final two outs.
- 1985 - The New Jersey Sports & Exposition Authority announced that it had a pair of groups ask about the availability of the Meadowlands should the Pirates relocate there, per the Pittsburgh Post Gazette. The Bucco FO denied the rumors, saying that they hadn’t talked to any potential Jersey buyers and had made remaining in Pittsburgh, at least during the TRS lease that ran through 2011, one of their conditions for a sale. But the storm clouds over the franchise were gathering…
- 1988 - The Pirates shut out the Cubs, 8-0, at Wrigley Field in Chicago. Bobby Bonilla homered and went 3-for-5 with three RBI while Barry Bonds went 2-for-4 with a dinger and scored three times. Bob Walk pitched a complete game for the win while dodging raindrops - he threw 121 pitches and gave up eight hits with four walks but stranded 12 Cubbies.
- 1994 - The Bucs avoided becoming no-hit victims when Carlos Garcia singled off Expo pitcher Jeff Fassaro’s glove with two outs in the ninth. Fassaro, with his bubble burst, then served up a gopher ball to Jay Bell, which didn’t do much to move the needle as Montreal won the contest, 10-2, at Stade Olympique.
Joe Randa - 1997 Fleer Circa Rave |
- 1997 - Ex-Pirate Jeff King hit a two-run homer for Kansas City but was answered by ex-Royal Joe Randa with a tying homer, a triple and three RBI as Pittsburgh and KC squared off. Tony Womack smacked the winning homer in the sixth off Royals reliever Mike Williams, who joined the Buccos the next season, in a 5-3 Pittsburgh win at TRS. It was the Pirates’ first interleague game and the concept was an early hit in Pittsburgh as 108,536 turned out for the three-game set. The mix of old mates came about after a December trade sent Jay Bell and King to the Royals for Jeff Granger, The Joker, and Jeff Wallace.
- 2000 - Pittsburgh scored three times in the ninth and once again in the 10th to rally for a 7-6 win over the Atlanta Braves at TRS, redeeming themselves a day after blowing a five-run lead against the Bravos. Bruce Aven drove in Kevin Young to cut the lead to 7-5 in the final frame, then with two down, pinch hitter Mike Benjamin doubled and Warren Morris singled them both home on an 0-2 pitch to knot the score. Wil Cordero did it the easy way in the 10th by launching a leadoff bomb off Don Wengert for the walk-off win, credited to Jose Silva.
- 2001 - The Pirates traded infielder Enrique Wilson to the Yankees for journeyman relief pitcher Damaso Marte. The Bucs would later trade Marte away, get him again and then flip the lefty back to the NYY with Xavier Nady for Jose Tabata, Jeff Karstens, Ross Ohlendorf and Daniel McCutchen, all in a three-year span. In all, Marte spent four workmanlike seasons with Pittsburgh, posting a line of 7-8-5/3.52 in 210 outings.
- 2005 - The Pirates signed their #1 draft pick, CF Andrew McCutchen (#11 overall) from Fort Meade HS, to a $1.9 M deal and began his pro journey at Bradenton in the Rookie League. Cutch gave up a commitment to Florida to turn pro and debuted in 2009. He played nine years in Pittsburgh, batting .291 with 203 homers while winning an MVP (2013) and five All-Star berths before hop-scotching his way around MLB.
Jeanmar Gomez - 2014 photo Lisa Blumenfeld/Getty |
- 2014 - The Pirates blew a ninth-inning, 6-2 lead to Miami by allowing the Fish to tie the score on one hit; three relievers walked six batters in a Friday the 13th nightmare. But Jeanmar Gomez pitched four frames of shutout bonus ball - he and starter Jeff Locke tossed 12 innings, giving up just two runs without yielding a single walk - and Gregory Polanco’s first MLB homer won it in the 13th, 8-6, at Marlins Park. Polanco had quite a coming-out party; he became just the second post-1914 era rookie to have a five-hit contest during his first four games in the league, going 5-for-7. The top of the Pirate order (El Coffee, Starling Marte, who also homered, and Andrew McCutchen) went 11-for-21 with six runs scored and five RBI. The Pirates snapped a 13-game Friday the 13th losing streak in the 13th inning in their Twilight Zone victory. The Pirates almost played out the same scenario the next day, giving up four ninth-inning runs but hanging on for another 8-6 victory.
- 2019 - After bursting onto the scene by tossing 6-2/3 innings of perfect ball in his April of 2018 MLB debut while on his way to a 5-0, nine-K, win over the Cards, 26-year-old Nick Kingham was DFA’ed and sold to Toronto. Projected as a mid-rotation arm, the fourth round, 2010 pick from Sierra Vista HS in Vegas couldn’t replicate the magic, and finished the year at 5-7/5.21 in 18 outings (15 starts). Flipping between the pen and starting in 2019, his line was 1-1/9.87, and out of options, he was released in early June after spending a decade in the Pirates system. Nick was tossing in Korea but was injury-bitten and recently released after suffering an arm injury. He was replaced by former Bucco Yefry Ramirez.
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