Pirates Morning Report: Taking Ineptness To The Next Level

Final Score: Pirates 3 A’s 4

Why The Pirates Lost: The Pirates out-hit the A’s 10 to 4. The Pirates drew 4 walks. They only had one inning when they were retired in order. The AAA boys were 3 for 13 with 4 strikeouts. As usual, the Pirates did not hit when it counted. They were 2 for 13 with runners in scoring position. They stranded 11 runners. The A’s hit two home runs, which accounted for all of their runs. They were 1-1 with runners in scoring position. They left 2 men on base. Mitch Keller took the loss to drop his record to 6 and 15. He went 5 innings, giving up the 4 runs on 4 hits. He walked 1 while striking out 4. The bullpen pitched the final 4 innings without giving up a hit. This was mostly the B squad. The outfield flashed some nice leather last night. Suwinski, Cruz, and Reynolds all made some nice running catches. Despite a lot of positives in this game, the Pirates’ offense could only push across the 3 runs in the first inning. It was not enough as the late summer swoon continues.

Key Moments Of The Game: Mitch Keller was perfect through the first 3 innings. He got the 1st two outs in the top of the 4th. Nick Kurtz took an up-and-in strike zone pitch and lofted a high fly ball that just kept carrying. It went 363 feet over the Clemente wall for a home run. The next two batters had higher exit velocities than the home run. In the top of the 5th, Keller committed the cardinal sin of walking a .174 hitter. He walked him on 4 pitches, no less. This put runners on 1st and 2nd with two outs. Henry Davis went out to the mound and had a long conversation with Keller. It must have been about what they like on cheeseburgers. He got behind the next batter, Lawrence Butler, 2-1. He threw a 90 MPH changeup right down the middle of the plate. Butler did not miss it. He hit it 110 MPH and 424 feet for a 3-run homer. The A’s had the lead 4-3. The Pirates had their chances to tie the game but failed miserably. In the bottom of the 7th, with 1st and 2nd and one out, Pham flew out and Gonzales grounded out. You can call the bottom of the 9th Pham’s revenge for not being traded or waived. The inning opened with a double by Rafael Flores. Miraculously, Bryan Reynolds moved him over to third on a ground out. McCutchen walked, putting runners on first and third with one out. Up stepped Tommy Pham with a big smile on his face. He swung at a pitch well outside the strike zone. The next pitch was on the outside corner, a little above the knees. Instead of trying to go with the pitch, he pulled it right to the 3rd baseman. The A’s took their time turning the double play and still had Pham out by 5 feet. Revenge is sweet.

Next Game: Tonight, A’s in Pittsburgh. The Pirates have now lost 12 of their last 13 games. It will be interesting to see the Pirate broadcast booth come up with positive things to say about this team. They should open the broadcast by saying the Pirates have lost 12 of 13 games and they really stink. If they opened like that, do you think it would really keep the gathering down? The Pirates’ offense took ineptness to a new level last night. At least they raised their batting averages some. Good luck tonight, Bubba Chandler. You are going to need it.

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