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Offseason In Review: Pittsburgh Pirates

By Anthony Franco | April 13, 2022 at 8:15am CDT

It was a quiet winter in Pittsburgh, to be expected for a team still firmly in the midst of a rebuild. The Bucs made a couple low-cost additions on the margins, but it’s another evaluative season for the front office. The biggest move for the franchise: a Spring Training extension with a player they expect to be an integral part of their next core, one that marked the largest investment in the organization’s history.

Major League Signings

  • C Roberto Pérez: one year, $5MM
  • 1B Yoshi Tsutsugo: one year, $4MM
  • RHP Heath Hembree: one year, $2.125MM
  • LHP José Quintana: one year, $2MM
  • CF Jake Marisnick: one year, $1.3MM
  • 1B Daniel Vogelbach: one year, $1MM (deal also includes 2023 club option)
  • C Andrew Knapp: one year, $800K

2022 spending: $16.025MM
Total spending: $16.225M

Trades and claims

  • Claimed RHP Eric Hanhold off waivers from Orioles (later outrighted off 40-man roster)
  • Claimed CF Greg Allen off waivers from Yankees
  • Traded C Jacob Stallings to Marlins for RHP Zach Thompson, minor league RHP Kyle Nicolas and minor league CF Connor Scott
  • Claimed LHP Aaron Fletcher off waivers from Mariners
  • Claimed RHP Adonis Medina off waivers from Phillies (later traded to Mets for cash considerations)
  • Acquired 2B Josh VanMeter from Diamondbacks for minor league RHP Listher Sosa

Extensions

  • Signed 3B Ke’Bryan Hayes to an eight-year, $70MM extension (deal also includes 2030 club option and potentially buys out four free agent seasons)

Notable Minor League Signees

  • Austin Brice, Taylor Davis, Chase De Jong, Jerad Eickhoff

Notable Losses

  • Steven Brault, Trevor Cahill, Wilmer Difo, Phillip Evans, Erik González, Kyle Keller, Chad Kuhl, Colin Moran, Cody Ponce, Chasen Shreve, Jose Soriano, Stallings

The Pirates are still firmly in rebuild mode, one of a handful of teams that enters the 2022 season with no real hope of contending. As with Ben Cherington’s first two years as general manager, the Bucs entered the winter looking as if they’d be one of the league’s least active teams. They again shied away from any long-term commitments to players outside the organization, but Pittsburgh was comparatively more aggressive this time around than they’d been in recent seasons. After spending just $7.25MM in free agency over the prior two winters combined, the Bucs exceeded $16MM in open market expenditures this year to bring in a handful of veteran role players.

The first of those acquisitions was southpaw José Quintana, a former All-Star who has fallen on hard times. Quintana hasn’t posted a full season out of the rotation since 2019, as he missed the bulk of the 2020 campaign with injury and was kicked to the bullpen last June after a dreadful beginning to the year. The 33-year-old had by far the worst ERA of his career (6.43) in 63 innings with the Angels and Giants last season, surprisingly struggling to throw strikes. Yet he also missed bats at a personal-best rate, and he’s a perfectly sensible flier for a modest $2MM.

Quintana steps into an otherwise very young rotation as a veteran stabilizer. The Bucs hope his acquisition will turn out as last winter’s Tyler Anderson signing did. Anderson was a competent starter for the season’s first half, took the ball every fifth day, then netted the Pirates a couple prospects at the trade deadline. Quintana will need to be better this season than he was in 2021 to attract interest from contenders, but there’s little harm in trying.

Not long after bringing Quintana aboard, the Pirates worked out a one-year deal to keep Yoshi Tsutsugo around. Pittsburgh signed the former NPB star after he was released by the Dodgers in August and watched him turn in the best month and a half of his MLB career down the stretch. That late-season showing earned Tsutsugo a few million dollars and an everyday first base job, as Pittsburgh then jettisoned their previous lefty-hitting first baseman Colin Moran. The Pirates couldn’t trade Tsutsugo last fall (and his impressive showing was probably in too small a sample to merit much interest anyhow), but he’d intrigue contenders if he continues to perform at that level in this season’s first half.

Small pickups aside, the Pirates obviously remained amenable to moving veteran players off the roster. The most straightforward trade candidate of the bunch was catcher Jacob Stallings. The 32-year-old has blossomed into a Gold Glove defender and is still plenty affordable, but his age made him an unlikely long-term fit in Pittsburgh. The Bucs moved him to the Marlins for righty Zach Thompson and prospects Kyle Nicolas (a 2020 second-rounder) and Connor Scott (the No. 13 overall pick in 2018) shortly before the lockout.

Structurally, that deal made sense for both teams. The Marlins were aggressive in rebuilding their lineup in an effort to contend immediately. Pittsburgh grabbed a pair of minor leaguers and a depth arm in Thompson who had been squeezed out of Miami’s loaded starting pitching mix. The Pirates have more opportunity to take a look at Thompson, a 28-year-old who was available in minor league free agency a season ago but pitched to a 3.24 ERA with a solid 11.7% swinging strike rate as a rookie. He didn’t accrue a full year of service in 2021, meaning he can be controlled another six seasons.

With Stallings gone and backup catcher Michael Pérez previously outrighted off the 40-man roster, the Pirates had to bring in two catchers. The starter is former Cleveland backstop Roberto Pérez, inked to a $5MM deal shortly after the Stallings trade. Pérez doesn’t offer much at the plate, but he’s a gifted defender who was lauded for his work with Cleveland’s young pitchers. As with Quintana and Tsutsugo, he could be a deadline trade candidate, but Pittsburgh may value his intangible presence enough to hold onto him all year rather than recoup a minimal prospect return. Just before Opening Day, the Bucs brought in former Phillie Andrew Knapp to back Pérez up.

Pittsburgh took a couple more low-cost shots to round out the infield. First baseman/DH Daniel Vogelbach signed for $1MM after being non-tendered by the Brewers. He adds an on-base oriented lefty bat to the mix and is controllable for multiple seasons; Vogelbach has a cheap club option in 2023 and would be arbitration-eligible in 2024. Also controllable for multiple seasons is lefty-swinging utilityman Josh VanMeter, who was acquired from the D-Backs in Spring Training. Pittsburgh gave up a minor league pitcher to land the out-of-options VanMeter, suggesting they believe he’s capable of sticking on the active roster all year (and maybe beyond).

VanMeter joins young players like Diego Castillo, Hoy Park and Michael Chavis in the mix at second base. He could also see some time in the outfield, where holdovers Ben Gamel and Cole Tucker have jobs. The Pirates claimed Greg Allen (who’ll miss the first couple months of the season with a hamstring injury) and signed Jake Marisnick to fill out the depth on the grass.

The left side of the infield figures to eventually be manned by two of the Pirates’ most promising young players. Ke’Bryan Hayes will be around at third base for the long haul (more on that in a minute), while shortstop prospect Oneil Cruz is one of the sport’s most electrifying young talents. Cruz is opening the season in the minors after being optioned to Triple-A Indianapolis, a move that looked to be motivated by service time considerations. He doesn’t have much experience at the minors’ top level, to which the Pirates can point as justification. Yet it’s difficult to argue he’s not a better player than the light-hitting Kevin Newman already, and a non-competitive 2022 season should give the team plenty of time to live with any growing pains the 6’7″ Cruz experiences on either side of the ball.

Newman will hold down shortstop for now, as he has for a few seasons. The Pirates would probably be amenable to dealing him as well, although there may not be enough interest in a glove-only player to generate a ton of demand. It’s possible Newman just kicks over to second base or the bench whenever Cruz returns to the majors.

There’s no question, on the other hand, that rival teams would love to get their hands on star outfielder Bryan Reynolds. The switch-hitting Reynolds has been an excellent hitter in both full seasons of his MLB career. He’s drawn attention from teams like the Marlins, Mariners, Yankees, Brewers and Padres (and doubtless many more) since last summer’s deadline alone. Pittsburgh has maintained they’re more inclined to build around Reynolds than trade him, made all the more evident by the reported asking price they’ve floated in talks.

Barry Jackson and Craig Mish of the Miami Herald reported last month that the Pirates wanted both Kahlil Watson and Max Meyer, each of whom are generally ranked among the game’s top 75 or so prospects, in any Reynolds deal. Pittsburgh’s demand from the Padres hasn’t been reported, but Dennis Lin of the Athletic wrote that San Diego considered it “prohibitive.” Cherington more or less confirmed the Bucs would only move Reynolds for a king’s ransom last week (link via Jason Mackey of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette). “Bryan is a really good player,” Cherington said. “He’s also young, and we’re not winning yet. You combine all those things, teams are gonna call. … Those calls are incoming calls. They’re not outgoing calls.”

Those calls will keep coming, at least unless the Pirates and Reynolds work out a long-term deal. The team controls him through 2025 via arbitration. Reynolds reportedly turned down an extension offer from the Bucs prior to the 2021 season, and he told Mackey that talks about a long-term deal never seriously arose this spring. The sides figure to revisit discussions at some point down the road, but for now, they’ll presumably proceed through arbitration with their star outfielder.

That’s a path they won’t have to take with Hayes, as they agreed to terms with their franchise third baseman on an eight-year extension on Opening Day. The deal guarantees him $70MM, setting a new high-water mark for a franchise commitment to a single player. Nevertheless, it’s a more than reasonable price to pay for essentially the entirety of Hayes’ prime. The deal buys out as much as four free agent years and could keep him around through his age-33 season. For a player who ranked No. 15 on Baseball America’s top prospects list heading into 2021, it’s a sensible investment.

Interestingly, Pittsburgh front-loaded the Hayes deal. That’s an unconventional tack for an early-career extension, which typically align with the standard year-by-year process of progressively paying players more later in the deal for what would’ve been their arbitration and free agent seasons. Instead, the Bucs will pay Hayes $10MM apiece in each of the next two years before paying him $7-8MM per season through the rest of the decade. That gets the young third baseman some noteworthy money up front while allowing the Pirates to keep a fair bit of cash in reserve for future seasons when they anticipate being more competitive.

Who’ll join Hayes as part of the core remains to be seen. Reynolds seemingly will, barring a Godfather-style offer from another team. The Pirates no doubt hope Cruz breaks through, while recent first-round draftees Henry Davis and Nick Gonzales are among the other hitters coming up the pipeline. Much of the attention will again be focused on the minor leagues, but the Pirates have a few arms in the majors trying to pitch their way into the long-term picture.

Mitch Keller and Bryse Wilson are former top prospects who have struggled thus far in their MLB careers. It very well could be a make-of-break year for both righties, but they should get another extended look in 2022. Thompson and JT Brubaker are older and don’t have the prospect pedigree of Keller or Wilson, but they’ve each flashed enough against major league hitters to intrigue. Roansy Contreras and Miguel Yajure each came over from the Yankees in the January 2021 Jameson Taillon deal and could be long-term starting options. Contreras, in particular, is a consensus top 100 prospect whom many evaluators suggest has mid-rotation upside. Not everyone in that group will develop, but the Bucs have plenty of innings to go around in hopes that a couple cement their places on the 2023 pitching staff.

That’s true of the bullpen as well, where Contreras and Yajure are currently stationed. David Bednar broke out as a late-game weapon last season and is controllable through 2026. Reliever performance is volatile enough the Bucs would probably still be open to trade calls on the hard-throwing righty, but he seems likelier to stick around for a few years. Veterans Chris Stratton and Heath Hembree — the latter of whom signed a one-year deal this winter after striking out 34.2% of opponents in 2021 — are more obvious midseason trade candidates.

In aggregate, 2022 will be another rough season for the Pirates and their fans. The club is still firmly in “evaluation” mode of the rebuild, although the hoped-for light at the end of the tunnel is coming closer into view. The time hasn’t yet come for the Pirates to make particularly meaningful pickups on the open market or via trade, but they’ve locked up Hayes as a key piece of the future and declined to move Reynolds for anything more than a massive return. Some of this offseason’s stopgap adds could be dealt away in the coming months, but the Bucs have begun to lay the foundation for what they hope to be their next competitive teams.

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2021-22 Offseason In Review MLBTR Originals Pittsburgh Pirates

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View Comments (34)
Post a Comment

34 Comments

  1. Gothamcityriddler

    3 years ago

    Let me summarize, they were dreadful & terrible last year & they’ll be dreadful & terrible this year, carry on. Ahahahaha!

    3
    Reply
    • ronnsnow

      3 years ago

      It’s amazing to me how so many people either don’t know how rebuilds work or just choose to ignore it. Yes, the Pirates have been historically bad except for 2013-15. But to hold that against Ben Cherington is ignorant. He’s clearly building an impressive group of young players that are set to debut starting this year and 2023. There’s no point in trying to be competitive this year when the core prospects are on the cusp of debuting.

      8
      Reply
      • bucsfan0004

        3 years ago

        Cherington is doing good things with the young players he’s acquired. However, its still no excuse for ownership to field the current major league roster with uncompetitive, waiver wire trash.

        5
        Reply
        • tiredolddude

          3 years ago

          Agreed. I think most fans can salute what Cherington has done. Most appreciate the idea that the farm is well stocked. But the contrasts to the early years of Huntington’s leadership are striking and upon review, have to give any Pirates fan great pause. I just don’t see how any fan trusts ownership here in that regard. How? Rather than put money into at the very least a “competitive” team over his tenure, he has consistently shown that pulling the rug out from the front office where established vets and coveted prospects are concerned—all to slash payroll and again “rebuild”—are better fits his business model
          Yeah, they signed Hayes. But as someone with reservations about Nutting, sending Cruz down and squabbling with Reynolds in arbitration are more the Nutting we all know. The guy will never change

          Reply
      • Cosmo2

        3 years ago

        Yes, they are in rebuild right now but contrary to what many think that doesn’t have to mean losing as much as possible. It’s a shame that Pittsburgh did virtually nothing to try and win a bit more this year.

        Reply
  2. garth16iorg

    3 years ago

    This team will be in Charlotte by 2030 unless the Guardians or Reds beat them there. Pittsburgh is no longer a major-league city in the current financial setup of MLB. True, the ownership is unwilling to spend more on payroll. But add to that a local sports media that stomps on the Pirates and baseball in general day after day while pushing their Steelers and Penguins propaganda 24/7. From Honus Wagner to Roberto Clemente, you had a great run, Buccos. Where you go now is a sad mystery.

    2
    Reply
    • THE downvoter

      3 years ago

      Nothing like an absolute uninformed take, partial facts and the ability to weave a tale of futuristic BS. Good work. I bet your mom is proud.

      Oh, by the way, this is a public downvote.

      11
      Reply
    • SpendNuttinWinNuttin

      3 years ago

      You’re an idiot pittsburgh is one of the biggest best sports cities in the world this team has been here since the 1890s lol kick rocks if you actually think the pirates leave pittsburgh by 2030.

      1
      Reply
    • CubsWin108

      3 years ago

      idk… PNC Park was pretty filled up yesterday, seems fans like the pirates

      3
      Reply
    • mlb1225

      3 years ago

      L take

      3
      Reply
    • PiratesFan1981

      3 years ago

      Why would Pirates move to Charlotte? They won’t have a bigger market than what they have in Pittsburgh. It’s would be going to one short comings after spending 130 years in another short comings. Charlotte can’t even hold their basketball team and barely their NFL team.

      If Pittsburgh goes anywhere, Nashville or even Indianapolis would be the starting point. Unless Las Vegas gets an expansion team, that would be a lock for Rays, A’s or even the Pirates.

      Reply
    • User 1471943197

      3 years ago

      Garth the moron….pirates are staying in Pittsburgh…. PNC Park is among the best…so continue to go to bed at 8 pm….eat your Capt crunch….and play on the computer in mommies basement

      Reply
  3. Scamlikley

    3 years ago

    There hitting probably got worse and there pitching has little upside, they need some of their prospect to come and make some waves.

    1
    Reply
  4. SpendNuttinWinNuttin

    3 years ago

    7 free agents is exciting for this team not quiet lol

    Reply
  5. Monkey’s Uncle

    3 years ago

    Cherington is doing a lot more with a lot less than most would do in his situation.

    2
    Reply
  6. mlb1225

    3 years ago

    Its gonna be a rough season, but I think this is going to be the last really bad season they’ll have for a while. Next year, they’ll get full or nearly full seasons from guys like Nick Gonzo, Peguero, Priester and Mlodzinski. They already have Roansy Contreras in the Majors. Once they call up Oneil Cruz, the line up will finally have the big power bat they need. Diego Castillo looks like a major leaguer, albeit in a small sample size. Plenty of other prospects I’m leaving out like Matt Fraizer, Swaggerty, and about a dozen more I could fire off on.

    6
    Reply
    • Gterm

      3 years ago

      Next season is the year we start turning it around mlb1225. The kids aren’t far away. We’ll be bad this year, but the future is finally bright.

      1
      Reply
  7. mlb1225

    3 years ago

    I’d like to add that the biggest addition to the organization wasn’t a player, it was part of the player development team. They poached Dewey Robinson from the Tampa Bay Rays. He’s known around the league as one of the best when it comes to developing pitchers.

    8
    Reply
  8. CubsWin108

    3 years ago

    All what the pirates need to do this season is simple.

    1. Start Quintana and hopefully filp him for prospects like you did for Anderson, (he had a pretty good 1st start on Tuesday, giving up 1 ER over 6.

    2. Extend Bryan Renyolds, give him a similar extention to Hayes, but say… 6 million more a year? and make it front-loaded of course.

    3. Let your guys play, this is a perfect oppotunity to suck, but inprove long-term, get Cruz some playing time, get your other guys some playing time.

    4. Give a bunch of SP’s chances to start with Perez, similar to 3, this could be a good year for a few Pirates pitchers, delevop them.

    I project a slightly better record then last year: 67-95

    8
    Reply
    • JoeBrady

      3 years ago

      IRT Cruz, imho, what he really needs is mostly a full season of learning to play RF in AAA. For all the love that MLB-R gives him, his K/W in AA last year was a poor 64/20..He did better in AAA, but that was only 21 ABs. There is absolutely no reason to rush him until he improves his K/W, and they either decide he is a SS, which looks unlikely, or until he learns a new position.

      My guess is a minimum of three months in AAA.

      Reply
      • SpendNuttinWinNuttin

        3 years ago

        No real prospect needs a full year at AAA for anything. Most of the best guys go straight from AA to the majors with very little AAA time.

        1
        Reply
  9. madmc44

    3 years ago

    The Red Sox didn’t have a place in the line-up for Michael Chavis–though 1 B and 2 B
    were probably his best opportunity.-Cherrington will find the right fit for him.

    Reply
    • CubsWin108

      3 years ago

      Chavis batted 3rd at DN yesterday off to a alright start

      Reply
  10. mazbilleroski

    3 years ago

    The statisticians have already figured out Pittsburgh’s magic number: it’s 911

    5
    Reply
    • 66TheNumberOfTheBest

      3 years ago

      Nutting says it’s $7.25/hr.

      3
      Reply
      • bucsfan

        3 years ago

        Definitely lol’d at that one.

        Reply
  11. GinaNCRaysFan

    3 years ago

    The rebuild is beginning to show progress. It looks to me like the Pirates will be able to field a decent team by 2024 if they keep to the development plan and add a couple solid players by free agency, not stars necessarily. They should have a good idea how the prospects are panning out by then and a clearer idea of what the team needs are.

    Reply
  12. bigdaddyk

    3 years ago

    Cruz Swaggerty Martin Mitchell will all make it to the majors this season add Castro as well. They pitching is a year away but they will be fun to watch this summer.
    Hopefully Quinntana Jake Ben Yoshi Newman are flipped for scratch off tickets or comp picks. I think they win 70 games this year and if they get any pitching next year they will win 85 games

    2
    Reply
  13. bucsfan

    3 years ago

    What I’m watching for is the willingness to spend come 2024-2025. At that point, most of the young position prospects will be established, but not all the pitching will be quite ready. Will Nutting be willing to open up the checkbook for a top line starter, or extend one that has broken out?

    Reply
    • tiredolddude

      3 years ago

      Exactly. This is the million dollar question that no one can answer

      Reply
    • joew

      3 years ago

      Team has great promise going into 23 and “Shouldn’t” need to spend much. With the prospects that have a better than fair chance of coming out of spring next year.

      Cruz, Gonzales, Bae, Swaggerty, Martin, …. Basically have most of their position players with cost control… assuming non bomb and their offense gets closer to average and allows their defense to play.. like Bae and Swaggerty.

      Reply
    • jimmyz

      3 years ago

      Getting a top of the rotation starter in free agency is too rich for Nutting to sign off on. However if they can raise the floor of their starting rotation to a collection of mid rotation starters as opposed to the current collection of back end starters and one or hopefully two from the group emerges as a front line starter then they could be legitimate World Series contenders in a few years. Haven’t looked at next offseason’s FA starters but using this past offseason as an example they are probably better of going for two guys in the Jon Gray range instead of one Scherzer.

      Reply
      • joew

        3 years ago

        yeah if things go well in ’22 as a whole they should grab a ‘more sure thing’ or two for the rotation, even in trade this season if things are going really well.. not sure what all would be available though.

        Don’t think Nutting would ‘need’ to sign off on unless it is a long term commitment and as long as they stay in a certain range as a whole.I would guess if Ben thought they had a real shot at the play offs i’m sure the pocket books would open.. probably still well under league average salary as a whole though.. And that is fine with a team full of rookie contracts.

        Reply
  14. joew

    3 years ago

    Keys are Hayes health, reynolds continuing to be reynolds young pitching staff improvements and Call ups like Martin, Swaggerty, Cruiz, Gonzales, Bae, etc…

    By the end of the season they can have a team full of some of their higher prospects that are good+ ceilings..

    Could push the team closer to 500 than not if/when that happens. They need to build fast to take advantage of the time remaining with Reynolds.

    Reply

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