- 1866 - RHP Pete Conway was born in Burmont, Pennsylvania, just outside of Philly. For Pete, it was a matter of too much, too soon. He broke into the majors at age 18 in 1885, and by his 1888 campaign made 46 starts, with 43 complete games and 391 IP on the way to a 30-14/2.26 year for the Detroit Wolverines. After Motown disbanded, Conway signed with the Alleghenys for two years at $3500 per year and then worked all of three games even though his arm was shot (the Boston Daily Globe reported that he had “snapped a cord in his arm”; later researchers believed he had a rotator cuff injury) and Pittsburgh suspended him - without pay, of course - for not being in baseball condition. He became a cause celebre with the Players Brotherhood as they tried to get his contract enforced (Pete even reported to the team daily) but to no avail; the injury was deemed to have a “natural cause.” He tried to pitch for a couple of more years, then went to Michigan to get a law degree. He coached the Maize & Blue nine for two years, but wasn’t allotted much time for either career, passing away at age 36 of a heart ailment. His older brother Jim was also a big league pitcher; his career ended because of a bum arm, too.
- 1884 - Financially troubled despite finishing second to New York in the American Association, the Columbus Colts sold its players to the Pittsburgh Alleghenys for $8‚000 and disbanded. The Alleghenys needed all the help they could get; they finished the 1884 season 30-78 and 45-1/2 games behind the AA champion NY Metropolitans. The deal bolstered the Pittsburgh fortunes: 10 of Columbus’ players stuck on the Alleghenys 1885 roster, and five became core players for years - C Fred Carroll, OF Tom Brown, 2B Pop Smith, 3B Bill Kuehne and P Ed Morris.
- 1914 - LHP Aldon “Lefty” Wilkie was born in Zealandia, Saskatchewan. Lefty worked three years in the majors, all for Pittsburgh (1941-42, 1946), posting a line of 8-11-3/4.59. He lost 1943-45 to the war as he was sent to Europe by the Army, and he never regained his pitching touch after his return. Lefty worked in the minors through 1951, then retired to Oregon.
Bobby Bragan - photo via Sports Memorabilia |
- 1917 - Manager Bobby Bragan was born in Birmingham, Alabama. The former big league infielder managed the Bucs in 1956-57, just before they turned the corner, slating a record of 102-155 (.397) and earning a showman’s rep before Danny Murtaugh took the reins. Bobby moved on to Cleveland and after a break managed the Braves from 1963-66. He went on to become president of the Texas League and chairman of the Bobby Bragan Youth Foundation.
- 1918 - SS Tony “Mosquito” Ordenana was born in Guanabacoa, Cuba. Ordenana spent from 1942 to 1954 in pro ball, playing in 11 leagues with 14 teams. After appearing in one big league game with the Pirates in 1943, going 2-for-4 w/three RBI while handling seven chances at short, he spent the rest of his pro career in the minor leagues. Mosquito (so called because of his quickness) hurt his MLB cause by batting just .250 without ever swatting a homer on the farm.
- 1957 - IF Houston Jimenez was born in Mexico City. Jimenez got parts of four seasons in the show, with most of his playing time as a Twin. He went 0-for-6 as a Bucco, getting into five games in 1987 before moving on to the Indians for a final cup of coffee the following campaign. Houston finished out his career playing winter ball and in the Mexican League, taking his last at bat in 2001 as a 43-year-old. He’s managed below the border since and was recognized in 2013 when he was selected into the Caribbean Baseball Hall of Fame.
- 1959 - Danny Murtaugh was inked to a one-year contract, per the Pirates policy, for an undisclosed amount, another FO standard. Bill Burwell, Frank Oceak, Sam Narron, Lenny Levy and George Detore all stayed on as members of his coaching staff. Murtaugh, 42, had led the Buccos to 162 wins during back-to-back campaigns after the dark ages of the early-to-mid 50’s, with the best to come.
Lee Tunnell - 1985 Flee Super Star |
- 1960 - RHP Byron Lee Tunnell was born in Tyler, Texas. The Baylor righty was the Bucs’ second pick in the 1981 draft. He arrived in Pittsburgh the following September and then went 11-6/3.85 in 1983, but his four year run (1982-85) produced just a 17-24-1/4.06 line overall. Lee went on to toss for St. Louis and Minnesota. He later pitched in the Japanese League for three seasons, then coached in the minor leagues for the Rangers and Reds. Tunnell joined the Milwaukee Brewers in 2009 as a minor league pitching coordinator and became the Brew Crew bullpen coach in 2012.
- 1971 - Dave Giusti was named The Sporting News Fireman of the Year by posting a line of 5-6-30/2.93 during the season after being the runner up in ‘70 to the Reds’ Wayne Granger. Though postseason stats weren’t considered for the point-based award, he was brilliant in the NLCS v the Giants and the World Series against the Orioles, giving up just four hits and no runs in 10-2/3 innings (seven outings) while earning three saves. Guisti was the last Pirate to win the award before it was renamed after the 2010 campaign; Roy Face (1962) and Al McBean (1964) were previous awardees. Also, TSN issued on this date featured Roberto Clemente as the cover boy on its World Series Wrap Up issue, fittingly subtitled the Corsair Cannon for the ‘71 WS MVP.
- 1975 - Westinghouse Broadcasting stunned Pirate fans by announcing that Bob “The Gunner” Prince and sidekick Nellie King were getting the ax. At the time, no major league broadcaster had ever spent more years (29) with one team than Prince had with the Pirates. The reasons given were that the pair didn’t do enough to promote the team and went off-topic too often (guilty of the latter, but not the former). Despite public outrage and a parade in his support that drew 10,000 fans, the duo were replaced by Milo Hamilton, formerly of the Atlanta Braves booth, and Lanny Frattare, the voice of the Pirates AAA Charleston club.
- 1981 - RHP Ian Snell was born in Dover, Delaware. He spent parts of six seasons (2004-09) as a Pirate starter, showing promise but never quite getting over the hump with a line of 33-46/4.75. Ian was demoted to Indy in 2009, at his own request, and traded to Seattle a month later. He bombed there and was DFA’ed in June of 2010, ending his MLB career, despite a couple of comeback efforts.
Ian Snell - 2009 Topps Heritage |
- 1991 - Mark Sauer was named club president/CEO after Carl Barger left for the Florida Marlins to deal with upcoming big-name free agency and negotiations to cut Pirates expenses at TRS without much financial ammunition. Sauer oversaw the cost-cutting that gutted the Pirates' 1990-92 powerhouse teams as per the orders of the Pirates' public-private ownership to reduce payroll, losing players like Bobby Bonilla, Barry Bonds, Doug Drabek and Andy Van Slyke. Mark was eased out of action by the Kevin McClatchy group and resigned in the summer of 1996; McClatchy slid into Sauers' CEO/President title.
- 1992 - Outfielders Barry Bonds and Andy Van Slyke were named to the Associated Press All-Star team. Bonds’ line was .311 BA/34 HR/103 RBI and he would later be named the NL-MVP. AVS hit .324 and scored 103 times. But the eminent early-1990s club was coming apart. BB was an FA and signed with the Giants in December. AVS went on to have an All-Star year in ‘93, only to be curtailed by a broken collarbone just before the break, and then had a subpar ‘94 during the strike-shortened season. After that campaign, he moved on to Baltimore.
- 2002 - The Pirates signed the first overall pick of the draft, RHP Bryan Bullington, to a $4M deal, the most they had ever paid a draftee. The 22-year-old from Ball State was expected to be a power arm but never panned out; labrum surgery cost him the 2006 season and he was never the same pitcher afterwards. The Pirates cut him in 2007 after just three starts and six games in the show, and he failed to stick in later stints with Cleveland, Toronto and Kansas City.
- 2003 - The Pirates announced price cuts for their 2004 tickets, slicing $3/ducat off full season ticket plans, a dollar off for partial fans and a sliding discount scale for single-game tickets. “We still haven’t delivered anything that we’re supposed to deliver,” Kevin McClatchy told Robert Dvorchak of the Post Gazette. “We have to do better on the field.” The move was estimated to require an extra 100,000 fans to break even, but McClatchy figured the cuts would boost the gate.
Cutch & the Clemente Award - 10/30/2015 Sports Illustrated |
- 2015 - Andrew McCutchen became just the second Pirate to win the MLB’s Roberto Clemente community service award, following Willie Stargell, who took the honor in 1974. Cutch was presented the trophy during pre-game ceremonies before the third game of the World Series between the Mets and Royals at Citi Field. Andrew won the Pirate’s RC Award a record four straight times (2012-15), and holds the club mark of five in all, also taking the prize in 2009. Among his causes were the Make-A-Wish Foundation, the Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh Foundation, the Homeless Children's Education Fund, the Light of Life Rescue Mission and Habitat for Humanity. He also started the local “Cutch’s Crew” for at-risk inner-city kids. Even after he was traded, McCutchen returned to Pittsburgh to sponsor a week of community projects.
- 2019 - LHP Sam Howard was claimed by the Bucs from the Rockies. He was prone to the occasional meltdown outing; while he averaged better than a K per inning, he was bitten by walks and homers that blew up his ERA. Still, the lefty mostly provided the Pirates with some solid mid-game work in 2020-21. He was waived in 2022 and is now tossing in the Tiger system.
- 2020 - In a short season that still saw 11 players end up on the 60-day IL, the Pirates had to make more moves than Salome to straighten out their postseason 40-man roster. They added C Michael Perez from Tampa Bay, then outrighted holdover backstops Luke Maile and John Ryan Murphy to make Perez the early backup to Jake Stallings. They also lost LHP Brandon Waddel to the Twins and RHP Nick Tropeano was claimed by the Mets off waivers. IF Kevin Kramer, RHP Yacksel RĂos and OF Jason Martin were returned from the injured list and outrighted off the 40-man roster. Before the cuts were made, pitchers Keone Kela and Derek Holland had declared free agency to start the culling of the herd.
- 2021 - Former Pirates player, coach and manager Lloyd McClendon received the 2021 Josh Gibson Legacy Award at a celebration held at the Wyndham Grand hotel. The Gary, Indiana native’s career began as “Legendary Lloyd” as a little leaguer and included playing eight years for three MLB teams, coaching for two more, and managing three others. Mac was also the first full time African American manager/head coach of any of Pittsburgh’s three major sports teams.
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