- 1961 - Tony LaCava was born in Pittsburgh. He never made the show as a player, but won a state championship at Central Catholic HS and went on to play at Pitt. The local boy made good not in a uniform but a suit. He signed with the Bucs out of college, and after a couple of years struggling in the low minors, Tony began scouting for the Angels, Braves, Expos and Indians. The Blue Jays hired him as an assistant to the GM in 2002, and he served as GM for a season with Toronto; he’s now their VP of Player Personnel. LaCava, an Oakmont resident, was interviewed and considered to be one of the top candidates for the Bucs GM spot in 2007 that eventually went to Neil Huntington.
- 1962 - The Bucs beat the Cubs, 8-4, at Forbes Field behind the top two guys in the order, Bill Virdon and Dick Groat. The duo went 8-for-9 with a walk, two doubles, scored twice and drove in six runs. Tom Sturdivant earned the win with 6-1/3 shutout frames in relief of starter Earl Francis.
- 1965 - The Bucs broke an eight-game losing streak with a 6-1 win over the Philadelphia Phillies at Forbes Field. Vern Law and Al McBean combined for a five-hitter, backed by Bill Mazeroski’s two hits and three RBI, Donn Clendenon’s three knocks and a big two-run pinch hit by Jerry Lynch. The Pittsburgh Press sports banner read “Brace Yourself - Pirates Win One.” The paper’s beat man Les Biederman noted the team’s relief, writing “In the clubhouse, the players were shaking hands with one another and cutting up for the first time in ten days.”
Vern Law - 1965 Topps |
- 1968 - OF Steve Pegues was born in Pontotoc, Mississippi. Steve joined the Bucs in 1994 after starting the year with the Cincinnati Reds and stayed through 1995, getting into 89 games and hitting .264. Steve was a toolsy guy but it never translated in the bigs. He was drafted by the Detroit Tigers in the first round of the 1987 draft (21st overall) and spent 11 years in the minors with another campaign in an indie league, but his 94-95 campaigns were his only MLB years.
- 1976 - The Pirates tried to come back from a 5-0 hole but fell, 5-4, to the Chicago Cubs at Three Rivers Stadium. The bigger issue was the makeshift supporting cast. The regular crew in blue passed on the game, supporting the striking TRS vendors, so the Bucs lined up some sandlot guys. By all reports, they did an acceptable job. Also out in support were the ground crew and other union workers - “everyone but the players,” per one newspaper - but the club got through it as things returned to normal after a two-day work stoppage.
- 1997 - The Bucs ended a four-game tailspin by edging the Cards, 3-2, at Busch Stadium, scoring on a balk, a bases-loaded walk and blooper, with a couple of sidebars to the story. In the second inning, with Bucs on the corners, Jason Kendall checked off ball four as Joe Randa headed to second. The Cards threw to second and beat The Joker to the bag, but since it was ball four...or was it? The Redbirds asked for a confirmation by the first base ump, who overruled the plate ump and called Kendall’s wiggle a swing, so instead of the bases loaded with no outs, the Bucs had a runner on third with two away. He did score on a balk, but not before coach Pete Vukovich was ejected and manager Gene Lamont protested the game. In the eighth, Mark Johnson was thrown out at home by two steps, slapping C Mike Difelice in the noggin on the play. The two then tussled, Kevin Young knocked Tony La Russa's glasses off during the ensuing melee, and he joined Johnson and Difelice in the shower. The winning vibes were provided by the Pirates pitchers - Francisco Cordova, Matt Ruebel and Rick Loiselle - who made the three runs stand up.
Rick Loiselle - photo Rick Stewart/Getty |
- 1999 - IF Rodolfo Castro was born in Los Llanos, Dominican Republic. Despite never playing above High A, Castro was called off the alternate camp team to the big squad in late April, 2021, to replace Anthony Alford after flashing some power during spring training. The Pirates wasted little time getting him in action - he joined the team during a twin bill and started the second game during his brief stay. He was sent to Altoona after a week’s visit. Rudy came back after the Adam Frazier trade and made some record-setting noise when his first five hits in the show all left the yard. He started 2022 with the Curve, but earned a May call-up. Rodolfo played 2B-SS-3B while getting into 71 games and batting .233 with 11 long balls. Castro broke camp with the big team in 2023 and was in the 2B mix, shifting to short when Oneill Cruz went down.
- 2002 - Brian Giles hit a three-run, opposite-field, inside-the-park homer to highlight a 12-1 Bucco win at Wrigley Field in the lidlifter of a twin bill. It was his first inside-the-park blast and the first by a Pirate in three years. Kevin Young had a homer and two doubles while Chad Hermansen went long and added a two-bagger in support of Jimmy Anderson and Sean Lowe’s three-hitter. The Cubs rallied to take the nightcap 4-3. Pittsburgh jumped off to a 3-0 first-inning lead but Sammy Sosa’s three-run shot in the sixth off Josh Fogg earned a split for the Chicago nine.
- 2005 - Before a sellout crowd of 37,504 at PNC Park, Ollie Perez surrendered a pair of hits and two runs while striking out eight batters in five innings on the bump as the Pirates beat the Rockies, 8-3. C Humberto Cota had a day at the dish with a pair of hits, including a double, and four RBI. The victory was Lloyd McClendon’s 300th as the Pirates’ skipper.
- 2013 - The Cubs scored first and last, but the Bucs scored enough in the middle, keyed by a sixth-inning Travis Snider grand slam, to eke out a 5-4 win. Snider’s grannie was his first ever and the first Buc pinch hit salami at PNC Park since Craig Wilson’s in 2003, rallying the Pirates from a 3-0 hole to a 5-3 victory. Wandy Rodriguez got the win with a Jason Grilli save.
Travis Snider - 2013 Topps |
- 2014 - Neither Pirates starter Wandy Rodriguez nor the Orioles Chris Tillman made it through the first two innings of the game. It was the first time in either club’s history that both starters were removed so early in a game; the quick hooks were also a first in interleague play. (Rodriguez was DFA’ed the following day after giving up six runs in 1-2/3 innings.) The score was 8-6 Pittsburgh after two frames; the O’s tied the game late, then the Pirates rallied to take a 9-8 decision at PNC Park. The middle of the Buccos order - Andrew McCutchen, Pedro Alvarez, Starling Marte and Ike Davis - went 11-for-17 with six runs scored and chased home six more. Tony Sanchez delivered the game-winning hit and Bryan Morris, the third of five relievers, claimed the victory.
- 2021 - The Pirates were turned every which way but loose in a 20-1 drubbing at the hands of the Braves at Truist Park, a game fitting closed by utility man Wilmer Difo’s eight-run outing on the hill in the ninth. Atlanta hit two grand slams among seven dingers, setting a slew of lowlights for Pittsburgh: The Pirates let in 20 runs in a game for the first time since being blanked, 20-0, by the Brewers on April 22nd, 2010, at PNC Park while the seven home runs surrendered were the most since allowing seven on July 8th, 1956, in the opener of a double dip at the New York Giants (the club record is eight from August 30th, 1953, in the lidlifter of a twin bill vs. the Milwaukee Braves). It was also the second time since 1900 that the Pirates allowed two grand slams in the same game. The other time it happened was on July 29th, 1955, at Cincinnati, per the Elias Sports Bureau.
- 2021 - A mural of Homestead Grays/Pittsburgh Crawfords great Josh Gibson was unveiled on the back wall of Voodoo Brewery on Ninth Avenue in Homestead. The Hall of Fame catcher’s portrait covered 27,000-square feet and was created by artist Jeremy Raymer, who also painted the likeness of Roberto Clemente by the Parkway North approach to PNC Park.
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