Pirates Fans Are Finally Seeing The Young Core They Wanted

Pirates rookies Griffin and Valdez are not only making powerful waves on the field but also forging a friendship that elevates the team's chemistry and prospects.

PHILADELPHIA -- The Pirates’ clubhouse has plenty to talk about these days, and not all of it starts with the box score. On Monday afternoon at Citizens Bank Park, after the usual pre-series hitters’ meeting broke up, Konnor Griffin and Esmerlyn Valdez were off to the side with Griffin’s arm around Valdez, laughing like a pair of guys who’ve spent a lot of time together for a reason.

That connection has become easy to spot around the team. They keep talking, keep pulling for each other and keep trading notes on the strange, fast climb through the minors and into the majors.

“We came up [through the Minor Leagues] together,” Griffin said. “We both love to compete, love to have fun. We enjoy being around each other and making each other better.”

Added Valdez, with Major League coach Stephen Morales translating: “He’s a great dude and always doing the right things. We have a really good relationship.”

The Pirates have seen plenty of reasons to enjoy that pairing lately, especially with Valdez running into a stretch of power that has turned heads in the clubhouse. Prior to Tuesday, he had homered in four straight games, becoming the first Pirate since Corey Dickerson in 2018 to do that and the third Pittsburgh rookie in the Modern Era (1901-present) to pull it off.

That kind of run has not gone unnoticed by Griffin, who knows what special pop looks like.

“He’s got some of craziest pop that we have in our organization,” Griffin said. “To see him doing this at the highest level, I’m super happy for him.

I know how it feels to show you can succeed at this level. To do it so consistently like he does, hitting homers, it’s pretty cool.”

Griffin also had plenty to say about what Valdez brings away from the batter’s box. Valdez admires the way Griffin handles himself - the friendliness, the constant autograph-signing, the charity work and the way he interacts with fans. On the field, Valdez called him an incredible teammate and said he is “always ready and aggressive” at the plate.

The feeling goes both ways. Griffin said Valdez has even helped him with Spanish, moving at a pace that works for a Mississippi kid who, by his own admission, is still climbing the language-learning ladder.

“I don’t know much, but it’s fun,” Griffin said. “He understands a lot of English and can help me figure out what the heck [the Latin guys] are saying.”

What Griffin likes most, though, is watching Valdez show off the power that made him such an intriguing bat in the first place. Valdez posted 26 home runs, 25 doubles and an .898 OPS last season, and his power has already shown up in eye-opening fashion before. He debuted in the Arizona Fall League with a 425-foot, 108-mph homer, then followed that with a 114.4-mph blast the next night.

Griffin, who has drawn a pile of attention of his own around the sport for his potential, emergence and contract extension, said Valdez may have the louder power tool.

"I feel like I have some power myself,” Griffin said. “But to do it as consistently as he does, man, that’s pretty impressive.”

The Pirates have also leaned on the youth movement as a real part of their offense, alongside outside additions like Brandon Lowe, Ryan O’Hearn and Marcell Ozuna. That has mattered during a stretch when Griffin missed time and Oneil Cruz remains sidelined with non-displaced fractures in his left hand.

It hasn’t been just Griffin and Valdez carrying the load, either. Entering Wednesday, Tyler Callihan had an .852 OPS with seven extra-base hits in 24 games, and he has helped with his versatility. He is also hitting .313 with a 1.275 OPS with runners in scoring position.

Jake Mangum, who is 30 but technically a second-year player, has chipped in too. His speed and defense have been useful with Cruz out, and since May 20 at St. Louis he has hit .327 with six doubles, a home run, 11 RBIs, nine stolen bases and 11 runs scored in 33 games.

Manager Don Kelly said production like that matters over the course of a long season.

“We have guys who can plug holes different ways,” Kelly said. “Whether it’s a rookie or a [slightly older player], that energy can be infectious.”

Valdez and Griffin have made their presence felt in their own ways. One has turned into a franchise face, hitting .321 with 15 RBIs, 10 walks, 11 steals and 25 runs scored in 35 games since his 20th birthday. The other has the Pirates’ best nickname, “The Magician,” and plenty of buzz thanks to his recent heater.

Valdez said what makes it even better is knowing more young talent is on the way. He pointed to Jhostynxon Garcia, Edward Florentino, Wyatt Sanford, Murf Gray, Yordany De Los Santos and Termarr Johnson as some of the position-player prospects in the system who could make noise soon.

“It feels good to do this and have [Griffin] right here,” Valdez said. “I think the organization has put us in a really good spot to succeed.

But I’m pretty sure we’re not going to be the only ones who do that. Hopefully there are more young players to come.”

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