Pirates Just Got Another Painful Reminder Something Has To Change

Despite standout performances from Skenes, Jones, and O'Hearn, a faltering bullpen and mounting injuries are undermining the Pirates' potential this season.

The Pittsburgh Pirates got exactly the kind of lift they needed from Paul Skenes and Jared Jones against the Atlanta Braves. They also got the kind of bullpen work that keeps wrecking good nights.

That combination left Pittsburgh with a split feeling after a three-game set at PNC Park. The Pirates won the opener 12-4 on July 7, then dropped the next two games, 3-0 on July 8 and 10-5 on July 9. The club is back at .500 at 47-47, and the message from this series was hard to miss: if the bullpen doesn’t sharpen up, the Pirates are going to keep burning chances.

The relief corps was a problem again. Pittsburgh’s bullpen gave up 12 runs across 12 innings against Atlanta, a 9.00 ERA that tells the story just fine.

In the second game, Dennis Santana served up a two-run homer in the eighth to push the Braves ahead 2-0. In the finale, he was hit for a grand slam in the ninth that made it 10-5.

Santana’s season line now sits at a 5.95 ERA with a 2-4 record, seven home runs allowed, 36 strikeouts, 21 walks, a .248 batting average against and a 1.50 WHIP.

Cam Sanders also had a rough finish to the series, giving up three runs in just two-thirds of an inning in the finale. That included a two-run homer to Braves shortstop Jim Jarvis, his first MLB home run, which made it 5-2 in the fourth after Pittsburgh had trimmed the gap to one.

Not every reliever stumbled. Carmen Mlodzinski threw two scoreless innings in the opener.

Yohan Ramírez worked two scoreless innings in the finale. Hunter Stratton bounced back from allowing two runs in the series opener and turned in a scoreless inning.

Mason Montgomery and Gregory Soto each added a scoreless inning as well.

But the larger issue remains the same: there still isn’t anyone in that group Pittsburgh can count on every night. That’s a dangerous place to be when leads are on the line - or when the offense is trying to claw back into a game.

The Pirates have 25 days until the Aug. 3 trade deadline, and outings like these only add pressure on the front office.

Mitch Keller’s start in the finale was another reminder of how much the Pirates need more from their rotation, too. The right-hander lasted a season-low three innings, allowing a solo homer in the first and two more runs in the third before leaving after 72 pitches. Over his last 11 starts before the All-Star break, Keller gave up 44 earned runs in 56.1 innings for a 7.03 ERA, with 11 home runs, 21 walks and 42 strikeouts.

That’s a sharp contrast from the start he got off to in 2026. Through his first eight outings, Keller posted a 2.87 ERA, went 4-1, struck out 35 and walked 14, allowed just two home runs and delivered six quality starts. Since then, he has only three quality starts in his recent stretch.

Pittsburgh needs Keller to be the reliable veteran who works deep enough to steady the game and give the lineup a real chance. Right now, he isn’t doing that, and the burden keeps landing on a bullpen that has already shown it can’t carry it.

The offense, at least, kept showing up.

Ryan O’Hearn was the headliner in the opener, launching three home runs - a grand slam and two three-run shots - and driving in a franchise-record 10 runs. That total put him in rare company, as one of just 11 players in MLB history since RBI became an official stat in 1920 to reach that mark.

Jake Mangum delivered in the finale with a four-hit game, including a two-run homer he absolutely crushed and an RBI single that pulled the Pirates within 6-5 in the sixth. Bryan Reynolds and Esmerlyn Valdez went back-to-back in the second inning, and Brandon Lowe, Nick Gonzales and Tyler Callihan also came through with key hits during the series.

Even with injuries thinning out the lineup, the Pirates still managed plenty of damage. Oneil Cruz and Spencer Horwitz are both in Bradenton, Fla., working back from a left hand fracture and a hamstring injury, while Konnor Griffin and Endy Rodríguez landed on the injured list this week with a left ring finger sagittal band injury and a left glute strain.

The bats have been good enough to keep Pittsburgh in games. The problem is that the pitching behind them hasn’t been.

Skenes and Jones gave the Pirates the kind of starts they needed. Skenes worked six innings in the opener, allowing eight hits and two runs while striking out four in a win that snapped a streak of nine consecutive starts of his that the Pirates had lost. Jones followed with six perfect innings in the second game, striking out eight over 77 pitches in the best outing of his MLB career.

Skenes has not been at his Cy Young level lately, but this was a needed reset after he was tagged for career highs of eight runs and seven earned runs in the July 1 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park. Jones, meanwhile, would have likely gone deeper under normal circumstances, but Pittsburgh is being careful with him after his return from internal brace surgery on his right elbow.

For a team trying to reach the postseason for the first time since 2015, that’s the formula right there: strong starts from Skenes and Jones, enough offense to keep pressure on, and a bullpen that finally stops turning close games into losses.

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