This Pirates Win Suddenly Feels Bigger Than One Night

In the midst of a challenging schedule, the Pittsburgh Pirates' high-powered offense and resilient play ignite hopes of breaking their playoff drought.

PHILADELPHIA - If the Pirates are going to end a 10-year playoff drought, they’re going to have to do it the hard way.

Monday night opened a brutal 22-game run against teams at .500 or better, and Pittsburgh got punched early before answering with one of its most impressive swings of the season. Down five runs on the road, the Pirates stormed back for an 11-7 win over the Phillies, a result that offered a sharp reminder of why this lineup has been talked about in such lofty terms.

“We’re starting a stretch here and taking it game by game,” Pirates manager Don Kelly said after the game. “I thought we did a great job of that tonight.

Inning by inning. A lot of times, you get down five on the road like that, you can get down, and there's a lot of fight in this team.”

The challenge ahead is obvious. Pittsburgh’s next three weeks include matchups with the Nationals, Braves, Brewers and Cubs, all teams sitting ahead of the Pirates in the standings. The Phillies, meanwhile, entered the night atop the NL Wild Card race and have gone 38-19 under interim manager Don Mattingly.

Kelly knew what was coming before first pitch. “We're .500 too,” he said, “and I think that as we've gone through this season, we've talked about taking it day by day.

I know it's cliche … that's what we've tried to approach every single day. I think that we've done a really good job of continuing to compete.

Yes, we've had some really good games, we've had some tough games, and we continue to show up every single day.”

For a while, it looked like Philadelphia might cruise. The Phillies jumped all over Braxton Ashcraft, who surrendered a career-high three home runs. Trea Turner started the damage with a leadoff solo shot, Brandon Marsh added another homer a few batters later, and Bryce Harper crushed a two-run blast in the third to push Pittsburgh into a 5-0 hole.

Then the Pirates’ bats came alive.

Esmerlyn Valdez cut into the deficit with a two-run homer in the fourth, and the fifth inning turned into a full-blown avalanche. Pittsburgh batted around, piled up four hits and six runs, and sent Aaron Nola to the dugout. Jared Triolo launched a home run to dead center, Konnor Griffin dropped down a bunt single, and Ryan O’Hearn delivered the game-tying hit.

Brandon Lowe added a sacrifice fly in the middle of the chaos, his 57th RBI of the season and the team lead. Lowe, who has been on a World Series team before, said the record book doesn’t tell the whole story.

His view is simpler than that: anybody can win in the majors. And with the way Pittsburgh’s lineup is rolling, he believes it stacks up with the best.

“It's an elite lineup, that's for sure,” Lowe said. “The numbers don't lie; they kind of speak for themselves. ...This has probably got to be the best offense, I think in totality that I've ever been part of.”

Ashcraft regrouped after the early barrage, retiring 11 of his final 12 hitters and striking out six. Phillies hitters also tried to disrupt him by stepping out frequently, but he eventually settled back in. Pittsburgh’s bullpen then did enough to close the door, and Endy Rodríguez added a big cushion with a three-run homer in the eighth.

The Pirates are now 23-22 against clubs with a winning record after the victory, and they still sit a few games outside the Wild Card race in a crowded field. But this stretch is the real measuring stick. Monday was the first test, and Pittsburgh passed it.

“We knew coming in, it's gonna be a tough series, and we just got to do all the little things right and take advantage of big moments like that,” Griffin said. “If we continue to do that over the next few series, I think we're gonna be in a pretty good spot.”

In Other News...

Pirates May Have Found The Bullpen Fix Fans Wanted All Along

The Pirates have spent much of the season searching for a steadier bullpen, and the market for help has already started to sort itself into the obvious names and the quieter ones. One of the more interesting options is a multi-inning middle reliever from Miami, the kind of arm that does not always grab headlines but can fit a roster need without forcing a bigger move.

What makes him stand out is the blend of performance and control. His 2026 numbers point to a pitcher who has limited damage, missed bats and kept traffic down, while his pre-arbitration status gives Pittsburgh a financial angle to consider as it weighs trade candidates against more familiar, and often pricier, relief targets. For a club trying to patch together innings without overpaying, that combination is hard to ignore. [Read more 🡒]

Former Dodgers Reliever Is Back In The News For A Tough Reason

The Phillies made a bullpen move this week, optioning Chase Shugart to Triple-A Lehigh Valley and bringing Lou Trivino back onto the active roster. For a club trying to keep its relief group steady over the stretch run, the move adds a familiar veteran arm who has already logged time in Philadelphia this season and has spent parts of his career with the Yankees, Giants, Dodgers and Orioles.

Trivino is expected to fill a modest role, giving the Phillies innings in lower-pressure spots and helping soak up work when games get out of hand. For Pittsburgh observers, it is the kind of transaction that barely registers on a box score at first glance, but it is also the sort of roster turn that can say plenty about where a pitcher is in his career and how a team plans to use him now. [Read more 🡒]

Pirates Face Painful Trade Deadline Call To Fix Their Bullpen

The Pirates are heading into the trade deadline with their bullpen squarely in the spotlight, and the need is hard to ignore after a rough stretch of relief pitching. Pittsburgh has been linked to the idea of adding a proven late-inning arm, with the front office weighing how much it should be willing to give up in order to steady the back end of the staff for the stretch run.

That conversation brings prospect capital into focus, and right-hander Levi Sterling is among the names that could surface if the Pirates decide to press ahead on a deal. Any move of that kind would force Pittsburgh to balance the urgency of its bullpen problems against the long-term cost of parting with young talent, which is exactly the kind of deadline decision that can shape more than just one season. [Read more 🡒]