Pittsburgh Pirates Complete Team History — From Honus to Clemente to Skenes — Team Episode 14/30

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3 комментария

  1. ⚾ Pirates fans — I want to hear from YOU:

    What is the FIRST moment, player, or memory you think of when you think about Pittsburgh Pirates baseball?

    Was it Roberto Clemente?
    The “We Are Family” Pirates?
    Barry Bonds in the early 90s?
    The McCutchen playoff years?
    Or is Paul Skenes about to begin a brand new golden era?

    Drop your answer below 👇

    And if you enjoyed the video, sharing it with another baseball fan REALLY helps these history videos reach more people and keeps the series going. 🏴‍☠⚾

  2. Imagine what the Pirates history could have been if they were able to access all of the Negro League talent playing in Pittsburgh at the time…

    The Pirates hold the distinction of winning the biggest blowout pennant race of all time, in 1902 they won by 27 1/2 games over second place Brooklyn. That deserves an asterisk, though, that year, the upstart American League was raiding National League teams for talent, but they intentionally left the Pirates alone in order to sabotage the NL pennant race and make AL games more appealing than NL ones in cities with both.

    The Pirates also have the biggest hit in MLB history by a metric called Championship Probability Added, a measure of the difference between the probability of winning a World Series before and after the hit, and, amazingly, that hit is largely forgotten today. In Game 7 of the 1960 World Series, the Pirates trailed the Yankees 7-6 in the eighth inning with two outs and runners on first and third. At that point, the Pirates had a 30% chance of winning the game and the championship. Hal Smith, a catcher who didn't start the game, came up and hit a three run homer giving the Pirates a 9-7 lead, improving the Pirates chances to 93% a WPA (and ChPA) of 63%. That hit is largely forgotten because the Yankees tied the game in the ninth, and, of course, the Mazeroski homer is what we remember.

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