Pirates Suddenly Face A Bigger Brewers Challenge After Rainout

The Brewers and Pirates prepare for a pivotal doubleheader showdown after weather delays, with standout performances expected from pitchers Brandon Sproat and Shane Drohan.

Friday night’s opener between the Milwaukee Brewers and Pittsburgh Pirates won’t happen as planned.

The teams were set to begin a three-game series, but inclement weather forced a postponement. Milwaukee announced the change on X, and the clubs will make it up with a doubleheader on Saturday.

Game 1 is scheduled for 11:05 a.m. CT, followed by Game 2 at 3:05 p.m.

CT.

The pitching plan shifted a bit after the postponement, though not in the way it first appeared. Brandon Sproat had been lined up to start Friday, while Shane Drohan was originally set for Saturday. Curt Hogg of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported at first that the two would be flipped for the doubleheader, but he later corrected that update.

“Nevermind. The Brewers have amended the probables.

It's Sproat Game 1 and then Drohan Game 2. As you were,” Hogg wrote.

So the Brewers are sticking with the original order: Sproat in the first game, Drohan in the second.

That decision makes sense. Sproat was already scheduled to go Friday, so keeping him in the first game keeps things simple. Drohan, who was already penciled in for Saturday, stays on his normal track without being pushed around.

Sproat has been throwing well lately. Over his last three starts, he’s posted a 1.76 ERA with a 21-to-5 strikeout-to-walk ratio across 15 1/3 innings, allowing just three earned runs.

Stretch that out to his last six starts, and he’s sitting on a 3.30 ERA in 30 innings. He’s finding a rhythm, and Milwaukee could use more of that, especially with Brandon Woodruff on the Injured List.

Drohan has been one of the more encouraging arms for the Brewers this season. He arrived in the deal that also brought Kyle Harrison and David Hamilton, part of the Caleb Durbin trade, and has put up a 2.97 ERA in 18 appearances as a rookie, including eight starts. He’s bounced between the rotation and the bullpen, but has now made seven straight starts and owns a 3.22 ERA over that span in 36 1/3 innings.

Saturday now looms as a meaningful day for Milwaukee. Pittsburgh enters at 47-47, and a series win would give the Brewers a chance to do real damage in the standings.

In Other News...

Pirates Near Bullpen Trade As Cherington Faces One Reckoning

The Pirates have been working the phones on the No. 34 overall pick for about a month, and the idea is straightforward enough: turn a valuable draft asset into immediate bullpen help. With injuries and a thin relief corps dragging the group down, Pittsburgh is trying to land a proven Major League arm before the draft, one that can help stabilize the late innings and fit into the clubs long-term picture.

Ben Cheringtons front office is feeling the pressure because this is no ordinary deadline-style patch job. The Pirates are not just looking for any reliever, but one with multiple years of control, the kind of move that could aid a postseason push while also addressing a roster weakness that has been building for some time. Even if the deal gets done, though, it will only be one part of a much bigger bullpen reckoning. [Read more 🡒]

Pirates Just Made A First Round Pick Fans Will Debate Fast

The Pirates went in a direction that should spark plenty of debate after using the fifth overall pick on LSU outfielder Derek Curiel. A left-handed contact hitter with a reputation for getting on base, Curiel brings a different kind of profile than the power-first names that often dominate the top of the draft, and his ability to handle center or left field only adds to the appeal.

Curiel also arrives with a familiar LSU thread for Pittsburgh, joining a recent run of college talent tied to the Tigers in the clubs draft history. He was a key piece of LSUs 2025 College World Series title team and has collected multiple All-American honors, but the real discussion now is how the Pirates view his ceiling relative to the safer, more polished bat they just chose to bet on. [Read more 🡒]

Pirates Make Another Tough Roster Call As Young Infielder Suffers Setback

The Pirates made another pair of roster moves Wednesday, designating right-hander Cam Sanders for assignment and shifting shortstop Konnor Griffin from the 10-day injured list to the 60-day injured list. The transactions create room for Jacob Gonzalez and Brandon Eisert, both recent additions from the White Sox, as Pittsburgh continues to shuffle its depth chart around injuries and new arrivals.

For Griffin, the move is a reminder that the club is planning for a longer absence after the young infielder suffered a torn finger tendon. Sanders, meanwhile, had become the odd man out as the Pirates work through the back end of the roster, and now his immediate future will hinge on whether he gets through waivers and stays in the organization. [Read more 🡒]