- 1966 - Pittsburgh swept a doubleheader from the Philadelphia Phillies by 2-1 and 4-2 scores at Connie Mack Stadium. The strong mound work of Steve Blass and Bob Veale pulled the club within 1-1/2 games of first place Los Angeles. In the first game, Donn Clendenon homered and Manny Mota chased Matty Alou home for the Bucco offense. The big blows in the nightcap were a triple by Bill Mazeroski that plated a run and led to a second tally when Maz came home on a bad relay, followed by a two-out Roberto Clemente double that scored Matty Alou, who tallied after a single and error. But it was the last hurrah for Pittsburgh; the San Francisco Giants swept the final three-game set at Forbes Field and the Bucs finished in third place, three games off the pace.
- 1970 - Danny Murtaugh was featured on the cover of Sports Illustrated for the story “The Desperate Race.” It actually wasn’t that desperate; the Bucs’ lead had grown from two games into five by the time the issue was published after winning 6-of-7 down the stretch. That was the final margin over the Cubs before the Bucs dropped the NLCS to Cincinnati’s 102-win Big Red Machine.
- 1978 - KDKA rehired Milo Hamilton and Lanny Frattare, both rumored to be on thin ice, to one-year contracts. Milo, who had a hard time filling the Gunner’s shoes, moved along after the 1979 season, jumping to the Cubs booth. He left there, too, and found a long-term gig in Houston. That job led Hamilton to the Baseball Hall of Fame's Ford C. Frick Award, the National Radio Hall of Fame and the Texas Radio Hall of Fame. Lanny became a lead announcer in 1980 after Hamilton left and broadcast 5,000+ Bucco games before retiring after the 2008 campaign to become a professor at Waynesburg College.
Lanny - Pirates Promo |
- 1986 - The Pirates Bob Patterson and the Mets Bob Ojeda were involved in a dandy duel at TRS in front of 30,606 fans. The Bucs Jim Morrison added some drama with a two-out homer off Ojeda in the ninth to tie it, 1-1, before Darryl Strawberry launched an 11th inning, three-run bomb off Bob Walk to give NY the win. There was even a little more drama after the game. The Four Tops & Chuck Berry were scheduled to perform after the home season finale. Berry was scheduled to start at 5 PM but when the game ran long, he refused to take the stage as showtime was pushed back 45 minutes and walked out, despite having already been paid $10K up front. The Four Tops, a pro act, played a longer set to make up for Berry’s snit. The Pirates went on to sue him for $20,000 and ended up recouping the deposit and some of the damages.
- 1997 - The Freak Show ended its run with the club’s 79th victory, 5-4, over Houston in 11 innings at the Astrodome. Jose Guillen swung the hot bat with a homer, two runs scored and three RBI to give Jason Christiansen the win, saved by Rich Loiselle, who were the fourth and fifth Buc pitchers following starter Jose Silva. The club wouldn’t match that victory total again until 2012.
- 2000 - Pittsburgh scored twice in the ninth for a 3-2 victory over Houston to claim the last Bucco walkoff win in TRS history. The ‘Stros had taken a 2-1, ninth inning lead with a two-out single, but the Pirates had an answer. With two away and two aboard via walks, Jason Kendall knotted the score with a rap that plated Mike Benjamin. The next batter, Warren Morris, put it away with a walkoff knock that brought home John Vander Wal for the rally capper. Jose Silva, although dented for 10 hits, stranded nine Astros runners and went the distance for the victory.
Warren Morris - 2000 Fleer Tradition |
- 2009 - The Pirates won their home and season finale, 11-1, against the Dodgers, with Andy LaRoche hitting two homers and driving in six runs. John Russell drew the ire of the 16,696 fans in attendance at PNC Park when he inexplicably pulled starter Zach Duke, who was at 103 pitches, with two outs in the ninth after a sacrifice fly spoiled his shutout bid.
- 2012 - The Bucs drew 34,796 fans to PNC Park, but the star of the show was Reds pitcher Homer Bailey, who tossed a no-hitter to outduel AJ Burnett and earn a hard-fought, 1-0, complete game win. Bailey walked one and fanned 10 as the Pirates were no-hit for the first time since 1971. It was the year of the no-hitter; Bailey’s was the seventh of the season, tying a modern-day MLB record that was matched in 2015 and broken in 2021 when nine no-nos were posted.
- 2013 - Behind a six-home-run barrage (Neil Walker popped two while Andrew McCutchen, Pedro Alvarez, Marlon Byrd and Andrew Lambo each added one), the Pirates won home field advantage for their wild card game against the Reds by defeating Cincinnati, 8-3, at GABP. It was the first time since August, 2007, versus the Rockies at Coors Field, that Pittsburgh banged out that many long balls in a game. It was his first career multi-homer game for Walker and the first career MLB home run for Lambo. Alvarez became the first Pirate third baseman to drive in 100 runs since Aramis Ramirez chased home 110 tallies in 2001, and El Toro’s 36 homers were a club record for a third baseman. Vin Mazzaro came on in the fifth inning and was credited with the win.
- 2016 - Although eliminated from playoff contention the day before, the Pirates still had some spunk left in them and whipped the 100-win Cubs and Jake Arrieta, 8-4, at PNC Park. John Jaso led the attack by hitting for the first cycle in PNC Park history (it was the first Bucco cycle since Daryle Ward’s in 2004 and the first at home since Jason Kendall’s in 2000 at TRS) while chasing home five runs and scoring twice. Rookie Jameson Taillon spun a one-hitter through six innings and survived some occasionally shaky bullpen work to earn the win. Josh Bell, Sean Rodriguez and Eric Fryer each added a pair of knocks with S-Rod touching home three times for the Buccaneers.
Steve & Mayor Peduto - 9/28/2019 photo/Mayors Office |
- 2019 - The Pirates and Mayor Bill Peduto declared it “Steve Blass Day,” and the Bucs helped celebrate it by announcing during a pregame ceremony that Steve would be part of the initial franchise Hall of Fame class, as selected by the fans and located in PNC Park in 2020. Blass retired the following day, after announcing the Pirates final home broadcast of the season. The Pittsburgh HoF was placed on hold because of Covid, and the first induction ceremony was delayed until 2022.
- 2020 - It was a dismal campaign for the Bucs, and beset by injuries and underperformance, they finished the year at 19-41, the worst record in MLB. But there was one shining Steel City star; 3B Ke’Bryan Hayes, who was promoted to the big team on September 1st, hit .376 w/5 HR, 17 runs scored, 11 RBI and an OPS+ of 202 in 24 games per Baseball Reference to go with some dazzling glove work at the hot corner (+4 DRS). Although he was promoted too late in the year for serious consideration as Rookie of The Year, he was named the National League’s Rookie of the Month for September.
- 2021 - The Pirates were playing out the string to open their last home stand of the year but continued to give nine innings worth of effort in an 8-6 win over the Cubs at PNC Park. They jumped ahead 3-0 on Colin Moran’s first inning homer, but were down 6-3 after Mitch Keller failed to record an out in the fifth frame. No sweat; the Pirates kept comin’ and put up a four-spot in the sixth, keyed by Hoy Park’s two-run, two-out triple and a following rap by Michael Chavis. An error led to a later insurance run while five Buccaneer relievers tossed five frames of scoreless, three-hit ball with Enyel De Los Santos credited with the victory and Chris Stratton with the save. Captain Redbeard ended up with four RBI and Bryan Reynolds banged out three hits and scored three times. It was the 10th time the Bucs had rallied back from a three-run deficit during the year.
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