The Pittsburgh Pirates spent the offseason trying to buy into something bigger than just talent. They wanted veterans who knew what winning looked like, and Ryan O'Hearn and Brandon Lowe have given them exactly that - plus production.
O'Hearn arrived on a two-year, $29 million deal, the first multi-year free-agent contract the Pirates had handed out in almost a decade. Lowe came over in a three-team trade that sent promising right-handed starter Mike Burrows to the Houston Astros. Both moves carried real weight, and both players have backed them up with strong seasons.
What stands out most is how quickly each veteran has connected this Pirates club to the playoff teams he knows from before.
O'Hearn’s recent path has been a study in reinvention. After struggling through five seasons with the Kansas City Royals from 2018-22 and bouncing through multiple DFA situations, he found his footing with the Baltimore Orioles.
That turned him into a regular contributor on winning teams. Baltimore went 101-61 in 2023, won the American League East and reached the ALDS, then finished 91-71 and made the Wild Card in 2024.
The Orioles then dealt O'Hearn to San Diego at the 2025 trade deadline, and the Padres finished 90-72 and grabbed a National League Wild Card spot.
Across those stops, O'Hearn became the kind of bat contenders want: roughly 15-plus homers a year, an .800 OPS, and an All-Star selection in 2025.
He sees differences between the teams he’s played on - Baltimore’s offense, San Diego’s bullpen, and Pittsburgh’s starting rotation - but he says the common thread is a group that keeps showing up with the same edge.
“So I mean, I think, every year, every team is just constructed differently," O'Hearn said to Pittsburgh Pirates On SI. "I think one common denominator that I’ve seen on every team that’s gone to the playoffs is a fearlessness, an elite motivation to win and shows up every day and forgets about the losses and continues to keep plugging and find yourself in a good spot in the end of it.”
He’s done his part in 2026. Through 73 games, O'Hearn is hitting .285/.340/.471 with an .811 OPS, 78 hits, 12 doubles, 13 home runs and 51 RBI.
And he believes this Pirates group can keep pushing into the second half.
“Yeah I think we can get better at things, but I think we definitely are a confident group and I think it’s all right there for us," O'Hearn said. "This second half has the potential to be really fun.”
Lowe has been just as important, and maybe even more electric. The Pirates got the best power-hitting second baseman in baseball this season, and the numbers back that up.
In 81 games, Lowe has hit .243/.319/.498 for an .817 OPS with 77 hits, 19 doubles, 20 home runs and 57 RBI. He leads all MLB second basemen in home runs, RBI and slugging percentage, and he ranks second in OPS behind Luis Arraez of the San Francisco Giants.
His background fits the Pirates’ pitch. Lowe spent eight seasons with the Rays from 2018-25 and lived through a long stretch of October baseball, making five straight postseason appearances from 2019-23 and appearing in three of them from 2019-21, including the 2020 World Series.
What he sees in Pittsburgh is a lineup with the same kind of relentless personality.
“I mean a lot of it," Lowe said to Pittsburgh Pirates On SI. "Good starting pitching staff, good arms.
Honestly one of the biggest things, one-through-nine, and with the bench, the offensive side of the lineup is just incredible. It’s a really good offense to be a part of and just kind of the attitude of if you get punched in the face, we’re gonna punch back, not give up or sell at-bats and keep going after it.”
He also pointed to the Pirates’ rotation - Paul Skenes, Braxton Ashcraft, Mitch Keller, Bubba Chandler and Jared Jones - as a major reason this team can make noise if the bullpen finds its rhythm.
“Our starting staff is phenomenal," Lowe said. "We have some guys in the bullpen that have some incredible stuff and once everything starts to click and we’ll be really dangerous and win a lot of ball games.
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