- 1958 - The Pirates stopped in Boise, Idaho while on a west coast trip and became the first MLB club to play a game in the state. The Bucs paid the visit as a nod to Vern Law, who was born in Meridian and honored during “Vern Law Day.” The Pirates were greeted by a crowd at the airport and driven to their hotel in a motorcade. The Boise Braves were a Class C club out of the Pioneer League and played to that level, losing to the big boys by a 17-6 count.
- 1966 - For the second time in a week, Roberto Clemente homered over the center field wall at Forbes Field, becoming the first right handed batter to pull off that feat more than once. The blast came during a 4-2 loss to the Cards; the first long ball was part of a 9-5 win over the Astros.
- 1968 - In a game that neither the Pirates nor Astros players wanted to play after Robert F Kennedy’s assassination, the league muscled up on the teams - “They told us we have a contract and we must live up to it...” explained Houston player rep Dave Giusti - and the Bucs defeated Houston, 3-1, at the Astrodome. Bob Moose spun an eight-inning four-hitter, closed out by Ronnie Kline. The Bucs’ Maury Wills, along with the ‘Stros Rusty Staub & Bob Aspromonte, refused to play. Wills was handed an undisclosed punishment by the team while both Astros players forfeited a day's pay and were traded after the season. MLB’s sole concession to the tragic event was that none of the day’s games could start until after RFK’s memorial service concluded.
- 1972 - Through his first 10 starts of the season, LA’s Don Sutton had slashed 8-0/1.14, but finally met his match with the Pirates. He suffered his first loss of the season when he gave up 10 hits and five runs (two earned) in seven innings to the Bucs at Dodger Stadium. Pittsburgh put up their five-spot in the opening frame. They didn’t exactly pound the righty; the runs scored on just three singles augmented by a trio of Dodger misplays. Still, the Pirates held their own with Roberto Clemente collecting three hits while Vic Davalillo and Al Oliver added a pair each. It was only a temporary burp for Sutton. Even though he lost his next three games, he was an All-Star with 19 wins and a 2.08 ERA at year’s end and finished fifth in the Cy Young voting.
Roberto Clemente - 1972 Upper Deck |
- 1974 - Richie Zisk hit for the cycle against the San Francisco Giants during a 14-1 romp at Candlestick Park, with five RBI and four runs scored. Willie Stargell outdid him in generating scores with two homers (one a grand slam), a double and six runs driven home. Bob Robertson also went long as Jerry Reuss cruised to victory behind the Bucs’ lumber explosion on the Bay.
- 1978 - Down 8-1 after five innings, the Bucs shook their lethargy and came to life to rally past the Cincinnati Reds by an 11-9 count at TRS. They were led by Willie Stargell, who had pumped up his teammates with a short mid-game speech, and Bill Robinson. The pair combined for seven hits, including four doubles, six RBI and five runs scored. Chuck Tanner made the unorthodox move of bringing in starter John Candelaria from the pen (he hadn’t pitched in relief since 1976) and he recorded four straight outs to save Grant Jackson’s victory.
- 1988 - The Pirates were looking hapless at TRS against Jamie Moyers and the Cubs bullpen. They went into the ninth inning down, 3-1, and were facing Goose Gossage, a decade removed from his Bucco glory days. But Darnell Coles and Sid Bream opened the frame with doubles to cut the lead to a run and cook the Goose. A groundout and walk of Denny Gonzalez by Gossage’s relief helper, Frank DiPino, left Bucs on the corners. RJ Reynolds’ grounder to third cut down Bream, off on contact, at the dish. But the slow-footed Sid flashed some baseline footwork and did a little boogaloo before allowing the tag to be applied, and it proved a key move by allowing the Pittsburgh runners to get to second and third. Barry Bonds cashed them in when he slapped a soft two-out liner into right that plated the pair to give the Pirates a walk-off win for Jim Gott.
- 1989 - Pittsburgh scored in the bottom of the ninth to tie the Mets after they had gone ahead in the top half, and then plated again in the 10th to take a 4-3 win at TRS. Gary Redus’ two-out single-and-error bouncer to short scored Rafael Belliard to knot the game. Another Met miscue led to the winner. Andy Van Slyke’s single to right was misplayed into a three-bagger, and after a pair of intentional walks, Benny Distefano’s one-out grounder ended up the walk off at-bat when the Mets couldn’t turn two, earning Bill Landrum the win.
Brant Brown - 1999 Upper Deck Victory |
- 1999 - The Pirates beat up on the Detroit Tigers, 15-3, as Brant Brown smacked out five hits, including a double and homer, scored four runs and chased home five tallies. Ed Sprague and Jose Guillen each added a bomb and three RBI at Tiger Stadium while Francisco Cordova picked up the win. It was the first time the Pirates ever played a regular season contest in that ballyard (and not a minute too soon; it dated back to 1912 in its current configuration and this was the stadium’s final season). The Pirates last previous visit to Motown was in 1909 during the Hans Wagner v Ty Cobb World Series at Bennett Park, located on the same site that eventually evolved into Tiger Stadium.
- 2009 - C Tony Sanchez was the Pirates first selection (#4 overall - $2.5M signing bonus) in the draft. RHP Vic Black ($717K bonus) was the second round pick and is now a Pirates coach, while IF Brock Holt, who put in a decade in the league with five teams and an All-Star nod before retiring in 2022, was chosen in the ninth round. There was a great gnashing of teeth over the Pirates' cheap ways in selecting Sanchez. It wasn’t a notably deep draft. Stephen Strasburg was taken #1 while prepster Michael Trout was the #25 overall choice. Sanchez never quite made it; he got into 51 games with the Pirates (.259 BA) with one final MLB outing with Atlanta in 2017. 2019 was his last pro season.
- 2015 - The Pirates chose Arizona SS Kevin Newman (#19 overall, $2.175M bonus), Texas prep 3B Ke’Bryan Hayes (#32; $1.855M bonus) and UCLA SS Kevin Kramer (#62; $850K bonus) in the opening two rounds of the draft. Newman made it to the show in 2018 and became the starting SS next season; he’s now with the D-Backs. Young Hayes took over at third in 2019 while Kramer last played in the Brewers system in 2021. LHP Brandon Waddell (currently tossing in Korea) and RHP James Marvel (called up for four starts in 2019 and now an FA) were also members of the class who made Pittsburgh stops.
- 2016 - The Buccos took Wake Forest 3B Will Craig (#22 overall; $2,257,700 bonus), one of the top college sticks on the board, followed by HS pitchers lefty Nick Lodolo from California (#44; he rejected $1.75M and instead honored his commitment to TCU) and Florida’s RHP Travis MacGregor (#68; $900K bonus) on the first day of the draft. Craig appeared briefly for the Bucs in 2020-21 and moved on to Korea. Other draftees: LHP Braedon Ogle (now in the indie leagues), RHP Blake Cederlind (he was called up in 2020 but had TJ surgery the next year and is a FA), RHP Max Kranick (TJ surgery after big team cups of coffee in 2021-22 and now in the Mets system) and RHP Geoff Hartlieb, who made stops in Pgh from 2019-21 before moving on to the Mets, Boston and now Colorado systems. Lodolo was drafted seventh overall by the Reds in 2019, signed for the slot value of $5.4M+ and joined their rotation in 2022. He’s missed much of his first two big league seasons with back and leg injuries.
Will Craig - 2021 Gypsy Queen |
- 2022 - Bradenton pitchers Quinn Priester, Anthony Solometo, Jake Sweeney and Yunior Thibo combined to toss a no-hitter for Bradenton in a 3-0 win over Clearwater at LECOM Park in Low Class A Florida State League action. It was the Baby Bucs’ second no-no of the year (Indy also spun one) and a good omen for the future: RHP Priester, 21, a 2019 first rounder (#18 overall) was making his first rehab start after dealing with an oblique injury and made his MLB debut with the Bucs in 2023. LHP Solometo, 19, was the Pirates second round pick (#37 overall) from 2021 and is working at AA Altoona.
- 2023 - Rich Hill went a season-high seven innings as the Pirates throttled the Mets, 14-7, at PNC Park in front of 29,429 Pride Night/fireworks fans, several of whom got into a brawl in the stands, although the two teams remained peaceful on the field. It was the most runs the Bucs scored against New York since 1992, when they plated 19 times. Hill tossed 119 pitches, the second-most he's ever thrown in a game. His high count is 120, hurled in 2006 as a 26-year-old Chicago Cubbie (he’s 43 now). The last Pirates pitcher to throw 119 or more pitches in a game was James McDonald in 2012. As for the swingers, Ke'Bryan Hayes led the pack with a five-hit night, the second of his career (2020 was his first), with two doubles, four RBI and three runs. This was his fourth 3> hit night of the month. Carlos Santana and Jack Suwinski (who had three raps and scored four times) went back-to-back as Pittsburgh pounded out 17 hits, seven for extra bases. All nine players in the Pirates’ starting batting order had a hit for the first time this season.
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