Hurdle sees '19 Bucs to have untapped potential

December 13th, 2018

LAS VEGAS -- General manager Neal Huntington summarized the Pirates' offseason acquisitions so far with one word: "ceiling."
could swing a 30-homer bat, if he returns to form. played at a high level when he was healthy the last two years, but the trick was staying on the field. They believe could be a quality everyday shortstop, if given the opportunity. All of the pitching prospects they've added are projectable, high-upside teenagers.
Manager Clint Hurdle believes there's untapped potential everywhere on the Pirates' roster, which is why he thinks Pittsburgh can contend in the loaded National League Central next season.
"For me, as important as anything is we have position players that are going to take the field that all have room for improvement," Hurdle said Wednesday at the Winter Meetings. "Everyone has an opportunity for improvement."
Nobody is going to pick the Pirates to finish first in the NL Central after an 82-79 fourth-place finish in 2018. The defending division-champion Brewers are bringing back their core. The Cubs remain one of the most talented teams in the Majors. The Cardinals added to their lineup. The Reds are starting to turn a corner in their rebuild, which they proved by acquiring starter on Wednesday.
What's the case for the Pirates? Hurdle pointed to their talented rotation, although they currently don't have a certain fifth starter after trading on Tuesday, and the four dominant relievers at the back end of their bullpen. He also believes the Pirates will take a step forward if their lineup puts together a more consistent season under new hitting coaches Rick Eckstein and Jacob Cruz.
"I think the combination of the two is going to give us an opportunity to do a job, hopefully a more productive, more consistent job than we've been able to do in the past," Hurdle said.
Hurdle addressed a number of other topics during his annual session with reporters at the Winter Meetings.
On using an opener
Huntington brought up the possibility Tuesday, and Hurdle said Wednesday that they discussed it at times last season. The Pirates might eventually settle on a traditional fifth starter, but Hurdle said they at least discussed relievers who could play the part.

"The common sense part of it is real. I mean, it's just rearranging the mentality of the people that are involved and working them through it," he said. "We'll see how our internal competition works itself out, see if it makes sense. But we've planned to have that conversation. We've had the conversation to see where it takes us."
On Goldschmidt joining the fray
The Cardinals brought one of the game's most feared hitters into the division, so the Pirates will see a lot more of the former D-backs star, who's hit .270/.387/.479 in 199 career plate appearances against Pittsburgh.
"The one thing I like about our guys, come game time, they're ready to go out and get outs. And the name on the back, I don't think we have any stargazing going on," Hurdle said. "I think they'll look at it as a very professional challenge to get another really good hitter, to get him out or trying to figure out what he can do. Good players are always fun to compete against."
On a potential Cervelli trade
The Pirates will at least listen to offers for catcher , one of their most valuable players last season. There is no indication that Pittsburgh is actively looking to move Cervelli, but Hurdle believes that the Bucs could compete even if they move Cervelli and make their starting catcher.

"He's a Pirate right now," Hurdle said. "If we get to there. I think there's a path of contention. … It wouldn't be the same team, obviously. It would be a different skill set [with Diaz]. But I think it's still one that would contend."