Bucs tie club mark with 18 stranded runners
LOS ANGELES -- The Pirates had chances to score. Plenty of them.But most of those chances evaporated into the Southern California sky, as Pittsburgh left a franchise record-tying 18 men on base and went 1-for-14 with runners in scoring position in an 8-4 loss at Dodger Stadium on Saturday."They were
LOS ANGELES -- The Pirates had chances to score. Plenty of them.
But most of those chances evaporated into the Southern California sky, as Pittsburgh left a franchise record-tying 18 men on base and went 1-for-14 with runners in scoring position in an 8-4 loss at Dodger Stadium on Saturday.
"They were out there. We couldn't get them in," manager Clint Hurdle said. "I don't think we were trying to do anything but fight, scratch, claw our way back into the game."
Still, the Pirates had plenty of chances to win and solidify their standing in the National League Wild Card race.
They totaled 10 hits and 11 walks. They batted with the bases loaded six times, five of them in the first two innings and three of them against a starter,
"A ball in the gap would have been nice. We didn't get it," Hurdle said. "We got a couple walks, plated a couple runs, kept stretching things out. We just weren't able to score."
The Pirates stranded 18 runners for just the third in a nine-inning game. The others were not exactly recent history: June 5, 1951, against the Boston Braves; and Sept. 8, 1905, against the Reds.
Kang recorded their lone hit with men in scoring position, a second-inning RBI single off reliever
"He wasn't chasing. He stayed stubborn with his approach," Hurdle said of Kang, who reached base a season-high four times. "That can be the start of something good, something real good."
The Pirates became the fourth team this season to rack up double-digit hits and walks and lose. Still, they had a chance in the ninth.
"I spent eight years [coaching and managing] at Coors Field, so this really doesn't wrinkle me too much. We saw a lot of games at Coors Field. There's a lot of baserunners," Hurdle said. "But this is somewhat of an outlier here, there's no doubt. It's a park that's seen a lot of good pitching, a lot of low-scoring games. There was a lot of traffic out there."
Adam Berry has covered the Pirates for MLB.com since 2015. Follow him on Twitter at @adamdberry.