- 1869 - SS Tommy “The Cork” Corcoran was born in New Haven, Connecticut. The Cork started his 18-year big league career, spent mostly with the NY Bridegrooms and Cincinnati Reds, as a 21-year-old rookie starting for the Players League Pittsburgh Burghers in 1890, batting .233 while playing 123 games. Corcoran featured a sweet glove - he set a still-current MLB record for shortstops with 14 assists in a nine-inning game after starting out fielding barehanded and eventually adapting to a mitt later in his career. As a leadoff man, hit .256 with 387 stolen bases and 1,184 runs scored over his big league lifetime. He was famously involved in discovering one of the odder sign-stealing scenes of early baseball. While playing at the Baker Bowl in Philadelphia as a Red, he noticed the Phils’ third base coach tapping his leg before every pitch. Adding two and two, he went to the coaches’ box and started digging with his spikes. He found a shallowly-buried electronic box that was signaling pitches stolen from an outfield perch to the coach through a gentle shock system and then sent from the coach to the batter.
Tom Corcoran - Moffitt Studio (Springfield) |
- 1886 - St. Louis owner Chris Von Der Ahe sold the contract rights of IF Sam Barkley to the Alleghenys despite the fact that the infielder had already signed a deal with the Orioles. Because the O’s were late in sending Von Der Ahe their check to buy Barkley’s rights, he unilaterally voided the contract and shipped him to Pittsburgh instead, triggering a brouhaha that wouldn’t be settled for weeks. The American Association eventually resolved the controversial case by allowing Barkley to play for the Alleghenys and sending 1B Milt Scott from Pittsburgh to Baltimore as compensation. Additionally, the Browns were allowed to keep the $1,000 they received from Pittsburgh for Barkley's reserve rights. For all the hubbub his musical chairs created, Barkley hit just .248 in his two years with the club, splitting time between first and second base.
- 1962 - RHP Jay Tibbs was born in Birmingham, Alabama. Jay tossed for parts of seven seasons in the show and spent his last five big league games as a Pirate in 1990, going 1-0/2.57. The Buccos sent RHP Dorn Taylor to the Baltimore Orioles for him in late June, and on July 7th Tibbs, who was coming off shoulder surgery, threw his last MLB inning. Fun fact: Tibbs had a small role in the 1994 Tommy Lee Jones flick “Cobb,” playing one of Georgia Peach’s teammates.
- 1977 - LHP Brian O’Connor was born in Cincinnati. Brian’s MLB career consisted of six relief outings for the Pirates in 2000 as a September call-up, picking up no decisions with a 5.11 ERA. Brian was an 11th round pick of the Pirates in the 1995 draft and pitched 12 pro seasons in the Pirates, Rays and Braves systems before retiring after being cut by his hometown Reds in 2007.
John Raynor - 2010 Bowman Gold |
- 1984 - OF John Raynor was born in Memphis, Tennessee. The Pirates plucked the outfielder from the Marlins in the Rule 5 draft for the 2010 campaign. He made it through the spring and got into 11 games as a PH/sub, going 2-for-10. When Jeff Karstens came off the DL in early May, Raynor was returned to the Fish after the two teams failed to reach an agreement for the Bucs to keep him. Florida stashed him away, then released him in 2011 as a late camp cut. The 27-year-old Raynor retired and returned to UNC-Wilmington, his alma mater, as a student/coach.
- 1991 - Buffalo, the minor-league leader in attendance and on the short list of possible expansion cities at the time, signed on with the Pirates for two more years as the AAA affiliate despite misgivings caused by executive churn in Pittsburgh and the erratic movement of players between levels that affected their competitiveness. The Bisons, Pittsburgh’s top farm club since 1988, stayed in the fold until 1995 when it joined with Cleveland and the Pirates moved to Calgary; the Buffs are now part of the Toronto system. The Pirates later swapped out Calgary for Nashville, and the Pirates top talent has been sent to Indianapolis since 2005. Indianapolis was used to being the Bucs’ feeder system’s big dog - Indy had originally been the top Bucco farm from 1947-51.
- 1993 - The Pirates signed OF Lonnie “Skates” (due to his somewhat circuitous routes while playing the outfield) Smith to a one year/$1M deal. He put up a line of .286/6/24, with a .422 OBP and nine stolen bases before he was flipped to the Baltimore Orioles in September for two career minor leaguers, Terry Farrar and Stanton Cameron. The Pirates were Smith’s fifth team; he had reached the World Series with the first four, but his championship streak came to an end as a Bucco as they finished fifth in the division.
Lonnie Smith - 1993 Upper Deck |
- 1996 - Pittsburgh purchased the contract of free agent and eight-time All-Star catcher Lance Parrish from the Detroit Tigers. “Big Wheel” had caught for the Bucs in 1994, hitting .270 in a backup role before moving back into the American League. The catcher was entering his age 40 season in 1996 and didn’t make it out of camp with the Pirates, marking the end of his 19-year career. Since then, he’s been an announcer, minor league manager, and MLB coach. Lance was a local boy who was born in Clairton although raised in California and had a scholarship offer to play football at UCLA but made what proved to be a wise choice by focusing on baseball.
- 1996 - RHP Blake Cederlind was born in Turlock, California, where he was a HS teammate of Kevin Kramer. “Baby Thor” (he’s a big, long-haired blond guy) was originally drafted by Minnesota as a college freshman, but stayed in Merced College and was picked in the 5th round by the Pirates the following year, signing for $285K. The power pitcher (he’s touched 100 MPH) broke out in 2019, moving from Hi A to AAA Ball and then getting his feet wet in the Arizona Fall League. Cederlind had a bout of Covid in mid-2020, but recovered to become a September 15th callup and pitched a clean inning against the Reds on the same day. Blake worked five MLB outings, posting a 4.50 ERA and punching out a batter per inning, but 2021 ended up a washout after he underwent March TJ surgery, and he lost 2022 to clean-out elbow surgery. He was outrighted at the end of this season and went unclaimed, so Blake should start this season at Indy.
- 2007 - Rene Gayo signed Dominican OF Starling Marte for $85,000 in one of the top Latin signings of Dave Littlefield’s watch. Marte was sought by several teams, and his stock took off after he switched from SS to CF. The deciding factor was said to be that Gayo had a good working relationship with Marte’s buscon (agent), tilting the field toward the Buccos.
Starling Marte - 2012 Bowman Platinum Top Prospects |
- 2018 - The Pirates claimed RHP Shane Carle from Colorado, where the Bucs had sent him in the 2014 off season in exchange for RHP Rob Scahill. The Bucs flipped him to Atlanta two weeks later for a PTBNL/cash after the team faced a 40-man roster jam following the Gerrit Cole trade, and Carle went 4-1-1/2.86 for the Bravos in 53 outings. He’ sat out ‘20 and has moved around since then, playing for three organizations in 2021 before being released by the Rox in mid-August.
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