Pirates Fans Are Suddenly Facing A Nightmare Deadline Possibility

Despite trade deadline pressures, the Pirates are holding firmly onto Oneil Cruz as they prioritize bullpen solutions without sacrificing key talent.

The Pirates have a deadline problem, but Oneil Cruz is not the answer to it.

Pittsburgh still needs bullpen help, and that means general manager Ben Cherington is going to have to pay up. Relief pitching always gets expensive in July, especially when contenders are trying to patch holes before October.

That part of the equation is real. The idea that Cruz should be the one moved to make it happen is not.

The conversation popped up on 93.7 The Fan, where the possibility of dealing Cruz - or even rookie right fielder Esmerlyn Valdez - was floated in the context of landing a reliever or closer. The logic was simple enough: teams have to give up something to get something. But Cruz is far too much to put on the table for a bullpen arm, especially one headed for free agency.

The Pirates do have trade chips. Outside of top pitching prospect Seth Hernandez and top hitting prospect Edward Florentino, they’ll likely listen on the rest of their system. That gives them room to chase impact arms like San Diego Padres right-hander Mason Miller or Boston Red Sox left-handed closer Aroldis Chapman without touching their center fielder.

And Cruz is not just another name on the roster. He hasn’t played in more than a month while recovering from a fractured left hand, with his last game coming on June 7. Before the injury, he was hitting .264/.350/.472 with an .822 OPS in 64 games, piling up 66 hits, 10 doubles, 14 home runs, 44 RBI and 21 stolen bases in 25 tries.

He was the first MLB player to reach the 10-10 club this season, and he was tracking toward 34 home runs and 52 steals. That kind of production would have him in the 30-50 conversation, a club that has only included names like Shohei Ohtani, Ronald Acuña Jr. and Barry Bonds, who won the 1990 National League MVP with 33 homers and 52 steals.

Cruz also took a big step forward against lefties. In 2026, he hit .312/.361/.506 with an .867 OPS against them, a sharp jump from the .102/.224/.176 line and .400 OPS he posted in 2025.

The power is obvious. Cruz owns the hardest-hit ball in baseball this season, a 119.0 mph double on April 16 against the Washington Nationals. He also carries the highest average exit velocity at 96.0 mph and the second-highest average hard-hit percentage at 59.2%.

That blend of force and speed has made him a major part of Pittsburgh’s lineup and a big reason the Pirates have been one of the better offenses in MLB. Getting him back should only strengthen that group.

While Cruz has been out, Jake Mangum has handled center field and done a solid job in the role. In 31 games, Mangum has hit .328/.376/.431 with an .807 OPS, plus 38 hits, seven doubles, a triple, a home run and eight stolen bases. He has also formed a good fit alongside Bryan Reynolds in left and Valdez in right, even if there have been a few mistakes along the way.

Still, when Cruz returns, the Pirates will almost certainly slide him back into center. Mangum would then return to a fourth outfielder role, ready to fill in wherever needed.

That’s the difference between the two players. Cruz brings the power Pittsburgh needs every day.

Mangum brings contact and versatility, but not much pop or extra-base damage. Both matter, just in different ways.

The Pirates have managed to stay strong through injuries to Cruz, Spencer Horwitz, Konnor Griffin and Endy Rodríguez, with Mangum and others helping keep the offense afloat. That depth matters. It does not make Cruz expendable.

Pittsburgh enters the second half at 50-47, two games out of the final NL Wild Card spot after sweeping the Milwaukee Brewers at home at PNC Park. With the postseason within reach for the first time since 2015, moving one of the team’s best bats would cut against everything the Pirates are trying to build.

Cruz in the lineup changes games with one swing. That’s the kind of player you keep, not shop.

In Other News...

Pirates Get A Bullpen Arm Back At A Critical Time

The Pirates got a bullpen arm back at a useful moment Friday, activating right-hander Wilber Dotel off the 15-day injured list and putting him on the 26-man roster ahead of their doubleheader against the Guardians. Dotel had been working his way back through a rehab assignment, and the club is counting on him to give the relief corps another option as it navigates a long day against Cleveland.

Dotel is expected to be available for the second game, which gives Pittsburgh a chance to ease him back in rather than asking for immediate heavy lifting. The timing matters because he had opened the season in strong form before the injury, and the Pirates could use even a partial return to that version of him as they try to stabilize the middle innings. [Read more 🡒]

Pirates Turn To An Unexpected Arm As Bigger Doubleheader Questions Loom

With a doubleheader against the Guardians on July 18 forcing some short-term roster juggling, the Pirates turned to right-hander Khristian Curtis as their 27th man for the day. Curtis was added to handle the first game, giving Pittsburgh an extra arm for a spot start in the schedule before the club sends him back to Triple-A Indianapolis.

The move fits the kind of one-day roster math that often comes with a twin bill, especially for a pitching staff that needs to keep one eye on the next game as much as the current one. Wilber Dotel is set to come off the injured list afterward, and the Pirates also moved center fielder Oneil Cruz to the 60-day injured list to clear the way for Curtis to join the 40-man roster. [Read more 🡒]

Brewers Pitcher Just Changed How Rivals Have To View The Pirates

The Pirates have spent enough time being treated like the NL Centrals long-shot project, but that perception has started to change around the division. After Pittsburgh swept the Brewers right before the All-Star break, Milwaukee pitcher Jacob Misiorowski was among the voices acknowledging that the Pirates belong in the same conversation with the Cubs and Cardinals as the race tightens.

Pittsburgh still has ground to make up in the standings, but the bigger shift is how opponents are talking about them now. They are no longer being framed only as a rebuilding club, and with a Wild Card chase still within reach, rivals have to account for them as a legitimate threat rather than a team just trying to hang around. [Read more 🡒]