Pittsburgh
Pirates (1891-present)
Pittsburgh Innocents (1890)
(Also referred to as
"Infants" in 1890)
Pittsburgh Alleghenys (1887-1889)
Allegheny (no city in official name,
but
based in Pittsburgh) (1882-1886)
Before it was named the Pirates, this baseball club was called Allegheny,
when the north side of the three rivers was a separate city (as with
Brooklyn and New York). Sometimes erroneously referred to in modern
references as "the Alleghenys" or "the Alleghenies" as
if it were the team nickname. The plural form "Alleghenys" was
used in newspapers in the same way that the club from Chicago was
"the Chicagos" or the club from New York was "the New Yorks".
The ballclub was renamed Pittsburg (and eventually Pittsburgh)
after the City of Pittsburgh annexed the Allegheny government. The
ballclub was sometimes dubbed the Innocents during the 1880s.
After the 1890
season, when the one-year-wonder called the Players'
League had broken up, a number of the "rebel" players were
assigned to National League and American
Association (AA) clubs, typically to their previous clubs, provided
they had been reserved by their former teams' owners. Highly-regarded
second baseman Lou
Bierbauer, who had previously played with the Philadelphia
Athletics of the Association, was instead awarded to the Pittsburgh
club (which was by now in the National League) on the grounds that the A's
had not reserved him. This led to loud complaints by the Athletics that
the Pittsburgh club were "Pirates". This incident (which is
discussed at some length in The
Beer and Whisky League, by David Nemec, 1994) quickly accelerated
into a schism between the leagues that pretty well finished off the old
AA. In any case, the colorful epithet stuck with the Pittsburghers, and
eventually became the club's official nickname. It was first acknowledged
on the team jerseys in 1912,
but even by the 1903
World Series, "Pirates" was in common usage.
In its early days, the club benefited three times from mergers with
defunct clubs. While it was still in the AA, the club picked up a number
of players from a defunct Columbus,
Ohio team in 1885.
In 1890, they
merged with the Pittsburgh team from the Players
League after that league folded. In 1900,
the Pirates picked up star players from the defunct Louisville,
Kentucky club, including greats like Honus
Wagner and Fred
Clarke (who also served as the team's manager from 1900
to 1915),
triggering a long string of pennants.
1901-1969
The 1901-1903
Pirates completely dominated the National League, in part because they
lost few star players to the rival American
League. However, owing to injuries to their starting pitchers, they
lost the
first World Series ever played, in 1903
to Boston.
Deacon
Phillippe pitched five complete games, winning three of them; but it
was not enough. With largely the same star players, the Pirates would
continue to be a strong team over the next few years and got their first
World Series title in 1909,
defeating the Detroit
Tigers in seven games.
The decline of Honus Wagner, considered by many to be the greatest
shortstop ever, and by a number of his contemporaries to be a greater
player than Ty
Cobb, led to a number of losing seasons, culminating in a disastrous
51-103 record in 1917,
Wagner's last season. However, veteran outfielder Max
Carey and young players Pie
Traynor and Kiki
Cuyler, along with a remarkably deep pitching staff, brought the
Pirates back into the spotlight. The Pirates recovered from a 3-1 deficit
to win the 1925
World Series over the Washington
Senators, and reached the 1927
World Series before losing in a sweep to the New
York Yankees, who at that time had built the most dominant team in
baseball. The 1927
season was the first for the sharp-hitting combination of brothers Lloyd
Waner and Paul
Waner, who along with shortstop Arky
Vaughan ensured that the Pirates had plenty of Hall of Fame-caliber
position players through 1941.
However, the crushing defeats of 1927, and also of 1938 when they lost the
pennant to the Chicago
Cubs in the final days of the season, took awhile to recover from.
The post-World
War II years were not kind to the Pirates, despite the presence of a
genuine superstar in Ralph
Kiner. The Pirates would have only one winning season until 1958,
when Danny
Murtaugh took over as manager. Murtaugh is widely credited for
inventing the concept of the closer
by frequently playing pitcher ElRoy
Face late in close games. The 1960
team featured eight All-Stars, but was widely predicted to lose the World
Series to a powerful New
York Yankees team. In one of the most memorable World Series in
history, the Pirates were defeated by more than ten runs in three games,
won three close games, then recovered from a 7-4 deficit late in Game 7 to
eventually win on a walk-off home run by Bill
Mazeroski, a second baseman otherwise better known for defensive
wizardry. In an amusing sidelight, the 1960 Pirates were the only team
between 1945 and 2001 to have not succumbed to the so-called "Ex-Cubs
Factor" in the post-season.
The 1960s would continue with extremely solid defensive play by
Mazeroski and the first Puerto
Rican superstar, Roberto
Clemente. Clemente was regarded as both one of the game's best
all-time hitters and right fielders. Although not the first black-Hispanic
baseball player (an honor belonging to Minnie
Minoso) Clemente's charisma and leadership in humanitarian causes made
him an icon across the continent. However, the Pirates struggled for the
remainder of the decade, and Murtaugh was replaced by Harry Walker in 1965.
Pirates
1952 Pittsburgh
Pirates program.
Super70s and "The Family"
Slugger Willie
Stargell became a fixture in the Pittsburgh lineup in the late 1960s,
and the Pirates would return to prominence in 1970
when Murtaugh returned as manager and the Pirates' home field, Forbes
Field, was demolished in favor of the multi-purpose Three
Rivers Stadium. In 1971,
The Pirates won their first of five division titles over the next six
years, and won their fourth World
Series the next year behind a .414 Series batting
average by Clemente. They also thought they had a genuine superstar
pitcher (historically rare for the Pirates) in Steve
Blass, who pitched two excellent games in the World Series and put
together excellent seasons in 1968
and 1972.
Clemente died tragically in a plane crash in 1972
while accompanying a shipment of relief supplies to the victims of an
earthquake in Nicaragua.
The Baseball
Hall of Fame waived its usual waiting requirement and inducted
Clemente immediately; Pittsburgh would eventually erect a statue and name
a bridge and park near the stadium after him. In 1973,
Blass suffered a mysterious breakdown in his pitching abilities and posted
an outrageous 9.85 ERA. Some speculated that the emotional shock of his
friend Clemente's death contributed to his breakdown. He retired soon
afterwards; he has now been one of the Pirates' radio and TV announcers
for almost two decades.
Stargell, speedy Omar
Moreno and power-hitting but ostentatious and unpopular Dave
Parker became the cornerstones of the Pirates as Murtaugh left and Chuck
Tanner took over as manager in 1977.
Adopting the then-popular disco
anthem "We Are Family" as their theme song, the Pirates won a
fifth World
Series, again in seven games, in 1979.
Awesome80s & Virtual90s: The Leyland Era and Decline
Following was a period of decline until the Pirates were regarded as
the worst team in baseball during the mid-1980s.
Jim
Leyland took over as manager, and the Pirates gradually climbed out of
the cellar behind young and exciting players such as "outfield of
dreams" Bobby
Bonilla, Barry
Bonds, and Andy
Van Slyke; infielders Jay
Bell and Jose
Lind; and pitchers Doug
Drabek and Stan
Belinda.
The Pirates would win the first three division titles of the 1990s,
but failed to advance to the World
Series each time, the second two losing closely contested seven-game
series to the Atlanta
Braves on questionable calls at the end of the final games.
Pirates
1979 Pittsburgh
Pirates media guide.
Before the 1993
season, Bonds left for a more lucrative contract with his hometown San
Francisco Giants. Both Bonds and Bonilla complained about the
preferential treatment given to fan favorite Van Slyke, although Bonilla
flatly rejected Bonds's suggestion that racism
was a motivating factor.
Since then, the Pirates have not had a winning season. The closest to a
winning team was the 1997
"Freak Show" team, which finished second in the NL Central, only
being eliminated in the season's final week, despite having a losing
record and a payroll of only $9 million. Their overall lack of success in
the last decade have been blamed partly on former General Manager Cam
Bonifay, who gave large contracts to players such as Derek
Bell while failing to identify, develop, and retain numerous young
potential star players. Despite poor play in 2001,
Bell announced that he would begin "Operation Shutdown", a passive-aggressive
ploy in which he would fail to play effectively in response to losing his
role as a starter.
The failure of the Pirates to compete in recent years has been blamed
on "small market syndrome"; teams located in small cities such
as Pittsburgh
and Kansas
City cannot compete with New
York City and Boston
without a salary
cap or similar agreement, as the better players tend to gravitate
towards cities where teams generate more revenue, meaning larger salaries.
2000-present: The PNC Park Years
The Pirates opened a new stadium, PNC
Park, in 2001.
Due to its simple, unpretentious concept and strategic usage of the
remarkably beautiful Pittsburgh
skyline, it is frequently regarded (as in a recent ESPN
article) as currently the best park in baseball. Despite this, the
Pirates' mediocre performance has translated to subpar attendance figures.
Current General Manager Dave
Littlefield was installed midway through the 2001
season and began overhauling the team to comply with owner Kevin
McClatchy's dictum to drastically reduce the payroll. Enigmatic but
talented third baseman Aramis
Ramirez was traded to the Chicago
Cubs in 2003
for a fairly minimal return under pressure to dump his $6 million salary
for 2004,
and he proceeded to become a star for the Cubs. Brian
Giles was one of the National
League's best hitters for several years, but he and his $9 million
salary were also traded in 2003 to the San
Diego Padres for youngsters Oliver
P้rez, Jason
Bay, and Cory
Stewart. Pirate fans found this trade much more palatable in the short
run, as Perez led the majors in strikeouts
per inning
and Bay won the Rookie
of the Year Award award in 2004, while Giles put up a subpar season by
his standards. After the 2004 season, Kendall went to the Oakland
Athletics in a cross-exchange of high-salary players. Though this rash
of trades has not been popular in Pittsburgh,
it is generally accepted that it can mostly be attributed to the
aforementioned "small market syndrome." It is felt that
Littlefield is attempting, with perhaps mixed success, to follow the
blueprint created by overachieving small market teams such as the Oakland
Athletics and Minnesota
Twins, often referred to as the moneyball
approach, so-named after the book Moneyball: The Art of Winning an
Unfair Game, by Michael
M. Lewis. Illustrating the Pirates rebuilding efforts is the fact that
at the close of the 2005
season, the team fielded the youngest roster in baseball, with an average
age of 26.6. The next youngest team was the Kansas
City Royals, with an average age of 27.1. The team also called-up 14
players from its Triple-A affiliate, the Indianapolis
Indians, 12 of whom made their first major league appearance.
All-Star Games
The Pirates have hosted the MLB
All-Star Game a total of four times. The first game occurred on July
11, 1944. The National
League won the competition 7-1, with 12 hits to the American
League's 6 hits. The second time the All-Star game visited Pittsburgh
was on July 7, 1959. The National League again took the game 5-4, getting
9 hits to the American League's 8 hits. The third All-Star game in
Pittsburgh was on July 23, 1974. The National League again took the
contest 7-2, with 10 hits against an American League effort of just 4. It
was July 12, 1994 when the All-Star game visited Pittsburgh for the fourth
time. It was a tight contest, with the A.L. leading by two runs going into
the bottom of the 9th. The N.L. posted two runs that inning to tie the
score and force extra innings. The N.L. won the game 8-7 in the bottom of
the 10th inning.
The MLB has once again chosen Pittsburgh as a host city for the
All-Star game. In 2006, baseball's best will visit the Pirates' home
stadium, PNC
Park, which has gained much recognition as one of the prettiest
baseball parks in America. Since the Pirates hosted the 1944 and 1959
games in Forbes
Field, and the 1974 and 1994 games in Three
Rivers Stadium, this will be third ballpark with which the Pirates
will showcase MLB's All-Stars, a
feat achieved by no other franchise.
Trivia
100 Wins in a Season. There has been only one Pirate manager who
has recorded more than 100 wins during a single season with the team. Fred
Clarke did it first in 1902 with a 103-36 record, and a second time in
1909 with a 110-42 record. The Pirates won the Pennant in 1902, but went
further in 1909 with a World Series victory over Detroit.
100 Losses in a Season. There have been six different Pirate
managers who have suffered more than 100 losses in one season. Guy Hecker
in 1890 (23-113), Jim Callahan and Honus Wagner in 1917 (51-103), Billy
Meyer in 1952 (42-112), Fred Haney in 1953 and 1954 (50-104, 53-101),
Chuck Tanner in 1985 (57-104) and Lloyd McClendon in 2001 (62-100).
Quick Facts
Founded: 1882, as a charter member of the American
Association. Transferred to the National League in 1887.
Uniform colors: Black and gold
Logo design: Pirate caricature superimposed on crossed
baseball bats
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