[閒聊] the decade
http://www.pittsburghlive.com/x/pittsburghtrib/sports/pirates/s_658484.html
Sports writer Joe Starkey and the Tribune-Review staff break down
the best and worst moments of the decade for the Pirates.
SIGNATURE MOMENTS
1. April 9, 2001: Pirates christen new home, PNC Park, only hours after
franchise icon Willie Stargell dies of complications from stroke. An
emotional sellout crowd turns moment of silence and video tribute into
loud and lengthy salute before 8-2 loss to the Cincinnati Reds.
2. July 22, 2003: Pirates provoke fan outrage by trading 25-year-old,
homegrown slugger Aramis Ramirez and center fielder Kenny Lofton to Cubs
for package of nobodies.
3. Sept. 7, 2009: On a drizzly day at PNC Park, Pirates lose to Cubs, 4-2,
to clinch 17th consecutive losing season, a record for professional sports
teams in North America.
4. June 7, 2007: Pirates confound baseball world by bypassing consensus
best player on board, catcher Matt Wieters, to take relief pitcher Daniel
Moskos fourth overall. Team press release says "(Moskos) was ranked by
Baseball America as the fifth-best pitcher available in the draft."
5. Jan. 12, 2007: Kevin McClatchy, long-time face of the franchise, steps
aside as principal owner, cedes control to Bob Nutting.
ALL-DECADE TEAM
Catcher — Jason Kendall ('00-04): Franchise leader in games caught.
First base — Adam LaRoche ('07-09): Got a better idea?
Second base — Freddy Sanchez ('04-09): Surged from backup to batting champ
in '06.
Shortstop — Jack Wilson ('01-09): Sparkling glovework, boundless optimism.
Third base — Aramis Ramirez('00-03): Kind of player Pirates needed to keep.
Outfield — Jason Bay ('04-08): Quiet guy whose stats shouted for attention.
Outfield — Nate McLouth ('05-09): Breakout year included Gold Glove,
All-Star berth.
Outfield — Brian Giles ('00-03): Mashed 38 homers in '02.
LH Pitcher — Oliver Perez ('03-06): Had one great full season, which is
one more than anyone else had.
RH Pitcher — Josh Fogg ('02-05): Winningest righty at PNC Park, which is
saying something.
Closer — Mike Williams ('00-03): 140 saves in two nail-biting stints in
Pittsburgh.
Manager — Lloyd McClendon ('01-05): Gets major points for stealing first.
BEST PLAYER
Jason Bay, LF. After coming to Pirates in '03 trade with Padres, won
NL Rookie of the Year and twice represented Pittsburgh in the All-Star
Game. Left Pirates in top 10 in slugging pct. (.515, 4th), OPS (.890, 8th)
and home runs (139, 8th).
BEST GAME
Giles grand slam shocks Astros, July 28, 2001. With two out and nobody on
in the bottom of the ninth, the Pirates rally from an 8-2 deficit to beat
the Houston Astros on Brian Giles' grand slam off Billy Wagner. Houston's
Vinny Castilla hits three home runs and is robbed of a fourth by Giles,
who isn't sure what kind of a pitch Wagner threw him. "When a guy throws
that hard, it's hard to tell," he said. (July 28, 2001).
BEST PLAY
Delwyn Young makes miracle catch, July 28, 2009, at San Francisco. OK, so
the umps missed it. We don't have to. Right fielder Garrett Jones bobbled,
then kicked Randy Winn's fly ball into the air. Second baseman Young dived
into the picture and snagged the ball with his right hand. Umps' ruling?
A hit. Our ruling? Best play of the decade.
FEEL-GOOD GAMES
June 20-21, 2003: Pirates beat pennant-chasing Indians in two raucous,
15-inning games at sold-out PNC Park.
May 28, 2004: Hours after wife Jennifer gives birth to first son, Rob
Mackowiak hits walkoff grand slam to beat Cubs in first game of
doubleheader and game-tying homer in ninth inning of nightcap.
"It's just hard to imagine ever having a better day than this," he says.
Trailing 9-3 in seventh, 10-4 in eighth and 11-10 in 10th, Pirates rally
for 12-11 victory over visiting Cardinals on Jason Michaels' two-out,
two-run homer (July 12, 2008).
Trailing Rockies, 11-6, with one out and nobody on in bottom of ninth,
Pirates rally to win when Jason Kendall singles home Tike Redman
(Aug. 1, 2003).
July 11, 2006: American League rallies past National League, 3-2, in the
77th MLB All-Star Game, at PNC Park.
Carrick High School grad John Wehner homers in final game at Three Rivers
Stadium, a 10-9 loss to Cubs (Oct. 1, 2000).
WHAT WERE THEY THINKING?
Pitching coach Jim Colborn berates shortstop Jack Wilson in dugout during
game.
Pitching coach Jim Colborn tinkers with Zach Duke's mechanics in spring
following Duke's magical rookie season.
Manager John Russell removes Duke from 2009 home finale with two out,
nobody on in ninth.
Pirates put Tike Redman in three-hole because computer tells them to after
simulating thousands of games (presumably all Pirates losses).
Kevin McClatchy predicts Pirates will win 90 games in 2000 (they lose 93).
PRETEND IT NEVER HAPPENED
Red vests
Doug the Camel
"We Will"
Pedro Alvarez signing saga
Chris Stynes
STRANGE BUT TRUE
Pitcher Oliver Perez heads to DL after injuring foot by kicking laundry
cart in clubhouse (June 28, 2005).
First baseman Randall Simon is arrested for clubbing a racing sausage at
Miller Park and is fined $432.10 for disorderly conduct (July 10, 2003).
Pitcher Ian Snell requests and is granted demotion to minors, saying,
"I think the team is better off without me." (2009).
Outfielder Raul Mondesi, saying he fears for family's safety in Dominican
Republic, leaves team on May 7, 2004. He signs with Angels on May 29.
MOVES THAT MADE PEOPLE VERY ANGRY
McClatchy raises ticket prices after 100-loss season (2001).
Littlefield/McClatchy trade Aramis Ramirez (2003)
Huntington/Coonelly trade Jason Bay (2008)
Littlefield/Nutting bypass Matt Wieters (2007)
Adam LaRoche walks to on-deck circle in April or May (2007-09)
ROOKIE STARS
Jason Bay becomes first Pirates player to win Rookie of the Year (2004).
Andrew McCutchen, 11th overall pick from 2005, finishes fourth in
Rookie-of-the-Year voting, despite playing only 108 games (2009).
Zach Duke becomes second Pirate to win first five decisions, posts
1.81 ERA in 14 starts (2005).
DATES
Nov. 18, 2000: Catcher Jason Kendall signs richest contract in team's
114-year history, a six-year, $60 million extension.
May 29, 2004: Latest date all decade Pirates were over .500, at 23-22.
Aug. 14, 2009: Pirates drop 17-2 squeaker at Wrigley Field, marking
fourth-worst beating in team history.
DIGITS
18 — Strikeouts in brutal 25-at-bat stretch for shortstop Brian Bixler
in 2009
.462 — Winning pct. of interim manager Pete Mackanin in 2005 (12-14),
best of any Pirates manager this decade.
.173 — Derek Bell's average in 2001, year of "Operation Shutdown."
3 — Players left from Littlefield era: Doumit, Duke, Maholm.
33 — Years calling games for broadcaster Lanny Frattare, who stepped down
after the 2008 season.
WE WROTE IT
"Chuckles emanated from the gallery when the fourth and fifth Pirates
players were drafted away. A few picks later, the volume increased when
the Pirates decided to pass on their chance to make a selection.
'I heard the laughs coming from back there,' Pirates farm director Brian
Graham said. 'Realistically, it's a compliment. You don't want to lose
players, and it's not a positive for us, but it is a compliment.' "
— Joe Rutter, reporting on reaction by MLB executives as the Pirates'
farm system is picked apart during the 2003 Rule 5 draft.
THEY SAID IT
"We feel comfortable projecting him as a No. 3 starter." — Dave
Littlefield, on the day he drafts Bryan Bullington first overall,
ahead of B.J. Upton.
"This story is bigger than Israel-Palestine. It's amazing. We're talking
about bottled water." — Pirates owner Kevin McClatchy, at a news
conference to reverse policy that bans fans from bringing bottled water
into PNC Park.
"I fear they will take advantage of the good will of the people who
continue to show up. For my money, that's disrespectful. At some point,
you have to write the check." — Pittsburgh-born actor Michael Keaton, at
team-arranged news conference on day Pirates invited him to throw out
first pitch at 2006 home opener.
"Did you think he was going to be safe?" — Manager Jim Tracy, responding
to question about why Jeromy Burnitz dogged it to first on a grounder.
"Dave, I can't thank you enough." — Jeromy Burnitz, to then-GM Dave
Littlefield, on the final day of the 2006 season, a season in which
Burnitz was paid $6.7 million and hit .230.
"I think it surprised a lot of people, but I was like, 'If they want to pay
me that much ($2.4 million signing bonus), I'll do anything.' " — John Van
Benschoten, looking back to when Pirates converted him into a pitcher upon
drafting him, even though he led the nation in home runs at Kent State.
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