Sweet 60: The 1960 Pittsburgh Pirates
April 20, 2013 by Bob Hurte · Leave a Comment
For those who have known me for longer than fifteen minutes, learn that I am a ‘Die hard’ Pittsburgh Pirates fan. The 1971 team is my favorite Pirates’ team of all-time. But I have a strange relationship with the 1960 version. One might describe it as destiny, like the Pirates beating the New York Yankees [...]
How I became friends with Wally Westlake
January 8, 2013 by Bob Hurte · 2 Comments
On April 18, 1947, the Pittsburgh Pirates had their home opener with the Cincinnati Reds at Forbes Field. That morning, Elmer Hurte and his oldest son Bobby packed sack of chip-chopped ham sandwiches and a jug of iced tea. With lunch in hand they rushed out the door to catch the streetcar from the North [...]
36 Up, 36 Down, But Still Lost
January 6, 2013 by Matt Nadel · 2 Comments
Hey baseball fans! In honor of the perfect games last season, I wanted to blog about a very strange ALMOST-perfect game: Harvey Haddix, of the Pittsburgh Pirates, was nothing special, but on one day, he happened to just be a pitcher who pitched a perfect game through 12 innings, but gave it up in the 13th. It [...]
The Broken Thumb of Fate, the Collapse of the ’64 Phillies
June 24, 2012 by Bob Hurte · Leave a Comment
Frank Thomas and I have been faithful friends for nearly twenty years. I am referring to the “Original” Frank Thomas who was a rookie for the Pirates in 1951 and an original New York Met in 1962; not to confuse him with the White Sox slugger of the nineties. I met Frank at a Pirates’ [...]
A Unique Walk-Off
June 18, 2012 by Bob Hurte · Leave a Comment
I attended a SABR meeting of the Connie Mack Chapter in June of this year. It was held at Waterfront Park in Trenton, New Jersey. This is home to the Trenton Thunder, the ‘AA’ affiliate for the New York Yankees. That day one of the presentations was about players that had hit over twenty triples [...]
The Glory Days: First NL Expansion Draft
June 10, 2012 by Thad Mumau · Leave a Comment
The New York Mets and the Houston Colt .45s stocked their rosters with players selected in the expansion draft held by the National League on October 10 of 1961 at the Netherland-Hilton Hotel in Cincinnati. The Mets’ brain trust was headed up by general manager George Weiss and manager Casey Stengel, both of whom had [...]
Jim Neidlinger: No Regrets
May 20, 2012 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
The Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers have had a string of legendary pitchers during their existence, earning accolades, World Series victories, and Hall of Fame enshrinements. Many young hurlers have imagined themselves being part of that group upon signing with the Dodgers’ organization, but few have accomplished such lofty goals. During the summer of 1990, Jim Neidlinger [...]
The Glory Days: Dramatic Homers Usher in the 1960s
May 13, 2012 by Thad Mumau · 1 Comment
A pair of monumental home runs ushered in the 1960s, and both blasts have been talked and written about ever since. Bill Mazeroski’s seventh-game homer was the first to end a World Series, giving the Pittsburgh Pirates victory over the New York Yankees. Various polls of fans and writers have ranked it the most dramatic [...]
Rollie Hemsley: How a Hard Drinking Catcher Made Alcoholics Anonymous an International Phenomenon
April 27, 2012 by Andrew Martin · 4 Comments
Particularly in the earlier days of the game, baseball had a well-earned reputation for hard drinking and living players. Because the players often socially mingled with the press, and because the writers depended on access to teams to sell their papers, the vast majority of the more salacious happenings failed to make it to the [...]
West Virginia Power Looking for Excitement in 2012
April 4, 2012 by Ronnie Foreman · Leave a Comment
Yesterday was a beautiful day for media day here in Charleston, WV for the West Virginia Power, Class A affiliate of the Pittsburgh Pirates. Sun, freshly cut grass, the smell of baseball in the air leading up to a season of great expectations on the ballfield. The Power returns eight players from last year’s [...]
This Ain’t Your Uncle’s Slide Show
April 1, 2012 by Austin Gisriel · 1 Comment
When I was a boy, the latest in home entertainment technology was not a 60″, HD, surround-sound television, but the Kodak Carousel slide projector. This bit of click-clacking wizardry was hardly entertaining, however, because invariably, Uncle Bob and Aunt Sally would invite you and your family over to view the slides from their latest vacation [...]
Off the Beaten Basepaths: Spring Training 2012
March 19, 2012 by Austin Gisriel · 1 Comment
It wasn’t easy going to Florida for a Spring Training sojourn because it was up to us to have as much fun as possible on behalf of all our friends who couldn’t go. Our motto was We’re having fun because you can’t. It took us 15 days and we drove almost 2,900 miles down, around, [...]
Forensic Career Bypassed as Indy Grad Jason Cooper Takes on New Opportunity With Pirates
December 2, 2011 by Bob Wirz · Leave a Comment
Stanford University professors may not want to hear it, but one of their anthropological science graduates has given up an admitted “passion” for forensics to start on Phase 2 of a professional baseball career, this time as a front office rookie with the Pittsburgh Pirates. Jason Cooper could see the handwriting on the wall within [...]
Kevin Collins: Many Cups of Coffee
November 8, 2011 by Andrew Martin · Leave a Comment
Kevin Collins grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts loving baseball. Like many children his dream was to one day play professional baseball for a living, and he was one of the lucky few to achieve that goal. Although he never became a regular player in the major leagues, he played parts of six seasons with three [...]
Catching Up With Tom Shopay
October 23, 2011 by Andrew Martin · 5 Comments
Former outfielder Tom Shopay had the pleasure and the misfortune to play for either veteran or very good major league teams during his career. It allowed him to have some great teammates and experience a winning environment, but it also invariably meant that he never got much of an opportunity to establish himself as an [...]
Mariners Win one for Rick “The Peanut Man”
July 27, 2011 by Jeff Engels · 3 Comments
The Seattle Mariners snapped a painful 17-game losing streak by trouncing the New York Yankees 9-2 as all of us in Mariners Nation let out a sigh of relief. Mariners Ace Felix Hernandez went 7 frames allowing only a run and for once he got the backing of his teammates who scored 9 runs thanks [...]
Feature Film on Roberto Clemente in the Works
July 27, 2011 by Andrew Tuttle · 10 Comments
A little bit of baseball died on Dec. 31, 1972 when Roberto Clemente was killed trying to deliver food and supplies to the earthquake ravaged people of Nicaragua. Back in Clemente’s baseball hometown of Pittsburgh, a nine year-old boy cried for days over the death of his hero and vowed one day his hero’s story [...]
Fireworks in the Steel City
July 22, 2011 by Chip Greene · Leave a Comment
With the Pittsburgh Pirates resurgence this summer, I’m reminded of one of the most abysmal pitching performances I’ve ever come across in all my years as a baseball fan. Unfortunately, it happened to my grandfather, Nelson Greene, in the only game he ever pitched in the Steel City. It’s difficult to imagine any modern day [...]
2011 Pre-Season Preview: NL Central –Pittsburgh Pirates
March 12, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · Leave a Comment
Pittsburgh Pirates CF Andrew McCutchen Pittsburgh Pirates (2010 record: 57-105) Notable additions: SP Kevin Correia, LF Matt Diaz, SP Scott Olsen, 1B Lyle Overbay Notable subtractions: SP Zach Duke The Pittsburgh Pirates’ current streak of 18 consecutive losing seasons is the longest such streak in history for any North American professional sports franchise. The drought [...]
When Twelve Weren’t Enough
February 10, 2011 by Sam Miller · 4 Comments
Where were you on the afternoon of April 17, 2010? That afternoon the Cardinals and Mets embarked on a 20-inning game that lasted close to seven hours. On the way to their 2-1 win, I wonder if anyone on the Mets had epiphanies of Harvey Haddix. Haddix pitched a perfect game for 12 innings in [...]
2011 MLB Power Rankings, The Ides of January Edition (Part I, #21-#30)
January 8, 2011 by Jeffrey Brown · 1 Comment
 With most of the top free agents now signed and teams starting to take shape as we approach spring training, I thought I would share my pre-pre-season pespective on the relative strengths (and weaknesses) of all 30 major league teams. I have broken the article down into three installments, and will publish one of [...]
How About Those Pirates…
October 6, 2010 by Steve Lenox · Leave a Comment
The Pittsburgh Pirates endured another losing season in 2010 (18th straight and counting), fired yet another field manager in John Russell, tied the 1963 New York Mets for the worst road record for a single season, and drew 1,613,399 fans to P&C Park, the second lowest total in the National League, and still fashion themselves [...]
Rattled in the Clinches: Manager Pie Traynor and the Epic Collapse of the 1938 Pirates
September 7, 2010 by James Forr · 1 Comment
On the evening of September 29, 1938, inside the funereal visitors’ clubhouse at Wrigley Field, a despondent Pie Traynor leaned back, fired up a cigarette, and prepared to lie through his teeth. His Pittsburgh Pirates had just lost three crushing games to the Chicago Cubs thanks to Gabby Hartnett’s famous “Homer in the Gloamin’†and [...]
Little Billy Makes His Play
August 22, 2010 by John Cappello · 2 Comments
Little Billy squeezed the handle of his new bat so hard his knuckles were glowing white. His new high performance stick with the composite barrel and optimum swing flex was supposed to eliminate all of his hitting flaws—at least that’s what his dad was banking on when he tossed his credit card onto the counter [...]
Baseball Industry Network to Meet for First Time in Boston
August 13, 2010 by Mike Lynch · Leave a Comment
The Baseball Industry Network, founded by my friend and colleague Tyrone Brooks, who serves as Director of Baseball Operations for the Pittsburgh Pirates, will be meeting for the first time on August 26 in Boston. From Tyrone: The Baseball Industry Network invites you to join us in Boston for the Baseball Industry Network Boston Meetup. To celebrate [...]
Wake Up and Smell The (Bitter Cup of) Coffee!
August 11, 2010 by Doug Gladstone · Leave a Comment
Former Pittsburgh Pirates player and broadcaster Nellie King passed away yesterday at Family Hospice Center in Mt. Lebanon, Pennsylvania. Nellie was 82 years old. Signed as an amateur free agent in 1946, King didn’t make his major league debut until 1954. Three years later, at the age of 29, he was out of baseball because [...]
They Belong to the Ages: The 2010 Pittsburgh Pirates
July 14, 2010 by James Forr · 1 Comment
Sometimes we notice incompetence only when it assumes its most spectacular forms. The chemist who blows up her lab.  The surgeon who amputates the wrong leg. The mechanic who fills your radiator with wiper fluid. But often we overlook the grinding, day-to-day manifestations of ineptitude, the kind you live with and suffer through until one [...]
Touring the Bases With…Milt Wilcox
July 12, 2010 by Bob Lazzari · Leave a Comment
Milt Wilcox, a righthanded hurler from Hawaii, was drafted by the Cincinnati Reds in the second round of the 1968 amateur draft, a draft that included Tim Foli, Thurman Munson, Bobby Valentine, Greg Luzinski, Gary Matthews, and Bill Buckner. Coming straight out of high school, Wilcox began his career in the Rookie League before moving [...]
A Humorous Look at Recent Baseball News
June 13, 2010 by Chris Jensen · Leave a Comment
The Indians were expecting close to 35,000 fans to attend Sunday’s game against the Nationals, the team’s highest attendance since Opening Day. I think it’s great that so many Indians fans are excited about seeing highly touted prospect Carlos Santana play. Hear he plays a mean guitar.  Or maybe they are excited about the rejuvenated [...]
Stan the Man from Donora
June 9, 2010 by Sam Miller · Leave a Comment
Some months ago, I examined a pair of Stan Musial biographies at a friend’s request. Not long afterward, “Stan the Man“ hit the shelves. What makes Wayne Stewart’s book different? Stewart shares Musial’s hometown and writes much of the book from that perspective. How appropriate. Though Musial found stardom in a big way, he never [...]
When Cheney Ruled Washington
May 22, 2010 by Gabriel Schechter · 1 Comment
It was a cool September evening in 1962 when 4,098 citizens exercised their right to assemble, in anticipation of an appearance by the representatives of the nation’s capital. Not surprisingly, John Kennedy was the first to take his turn, though he turned out to be a minor figure in the night’s long drama. Later, a [...]
The Sixth Tool: Measuring the Mind
May 6, 2010 by James Forr · Leave a Comment
Of all the prospects Pittsburgh received in its 2009 fire sale, possibly the most alluring was 25-year-old right-hander Charlie Morton.   Morton came armed with a knee-buckling curve, a swooping slider, and a darting fastball that blazed past hitters at 95 miles-per-hour.  He dominated Triple-A in 2008 and 2009.  Word was he was the ideal pitcher [...]
Pete Castiglione Passes
May 1, 2010 by Gary Bedingfield · Leave a Comment
Peter P. Castiglione was born on February 13, 1921 in Greenwich, Connecticut. A high school baseball star he signed with the Pittsburgh Pirates’ organization in 1940 and played for the Carthage Pirates of the Class D Arkansas-Missouri League. In 55 games he batted .298 and advanced to the Hutchinson Pirates of the Class C Western [...]
Strasburg In Harrisburg: Altoona, April 11, 2010
April 18, 2010 by Gerry Von Hendy · Leave a Comment
Who is he? He’s a right-handed pitcher, picked first in the nation by the Washington Nationals in the 2009 draft. We know as much. He grew up in Santee, California, under his parents Jim and Kathleen Swett, and went to West Hills High School there. He then attended San Diego State University as a public [...]
Dan’s daring predictions for diamond action
March 23, 2010 by Dan Schlossberg · Leave a Comment
Predicting the future — in any venue — is difficult even for Alison DuBois or others blessed with psychic powers. That is especially true when it comes to baseball, where teams play nearly 200 games and face each one without knowing who will get hot, who will get hurt, or who will perform above or [...]













