The Pirates are lining up their top three starters for a three-game set against the Braves at PNC Park from July 7-9, and the matchup gives Pittsburgh a clear look at where its rotation stands right now.
Paul Skenes gets the ball in the opener on July 7, Jared Jones follows on July 8 and Mitch Keller closes the series on July 9. Atlanta is countering with three right-handers of its own: Hurston Waldrep against Skenes, Grant Holmes against Jones and Bryce Elder against Keller.
With both clubs trying to strengthen their postseason push, the series could hinge on which rotation settles in first.
Skenes enters the matchup trying to steady himself after the toughest outing of his MLB career by the numbers. In a 10-6 loss to the Philadelphia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park on July 1, he was tagged for eight runs, seven earned, over four innings.
He allowed six hits, walked two, gave up two homers and hit a batter. Those were both career highs for runs and earned runs in a start.
The recent stretch has been rough overall, too. Skenes has a 5.36 ERA over his last nine outings, a sharp departure from the efficiency he’s usually known for.
Still, he’s already faced Atlanta once in his career, and that came as a rookie on June 29, 2024 at Truist Park. In that game, he allowed a solo homer and struck out nine over six innings in a 2-1 extra-inning loss.
This will be his first start against the Braves at PNC Park, where he’s been far better than on the road. At home, he owns a 3.02 ERA over 10 starts.
The Pirates, though, haven’t won any of Skenes’ last nine starts. Defense and offense have both let him down during that stretch, and those areas need to improve along with his own performance. He was just named to his third All-Star team in three seasons, and a strong outing against Atlanta would go a long way toward reinforcing why he belongs in that company.
Jones is still working back into form after a long rehab from internal brace surgery, and he’s been back in the rotation for a little more than a month. His last start against the Phillies was a step in the right direction: one run allowed over four innings, two hits, two walks and six strikeouts, matching his season high. He also struck out the side in the first inning.
He remains on an innings and pitch count limit, but that outing mattered. It helped set up Pittsburgh’s 6-1 win in the series finale and a split of the four-game set.
The results overall haven’t been where Jones wants them yet. He carries a 5.28 ERA across 29.0 innings, with 31 strikeouts, 11 walks, a .254 batting average allowed and a 1.38 WHIP. The raw stuff is still there - the fastball velocity is strong and the offspeed movement is working - but he’s left too many pitches in the zone and hasn’t always finished hitters when he gets ahead.
Jones has never faced the Braves before, and this could be a chance for him to start building some consistency in 2026.
Keller’s most recent outing was a step backward. Against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park on July 3, he gave up three homers and five earned runs in his first three innings before eventually working six innings. Washington won the opener 9-5, using that early damage to take control.
That start tied Keller’s career high for home runs allowed and snapped a run of stronger performances. He had put together back-to-back quality starts at PNC Park, allowing three runs in six innings in a 3-2 loss to the Seattle Mariners on June 23 and again in a 9-4 win over the Cincinnati Reds on June 28. Before that, he gave up one earned run over 5.1 innings in a 6-5 win over the Athletics at Sutter Health Park on June 16.
Before the Nationals game, Keller had posted an 8.70 ERA across his previous six starts, and that rough outing looked a lot more like that earlier stretch. He also faced Atlanta once already this season, on June 5 at Truist Park, and was charged with six runs over 4.2 innings in a 6-1 loss.
For Pittsburgh, Keller’s role is straightforward: give the club efficient innings, keep the bullpen out of trouble and put the team in position to win. If he does that against the Braves, it would be a major lift for the Pirates’ postseason hopes.
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