On January 18th, four years ago, Ben Cherington continued to rebuild the Pirates roster around through youth by sending Pittsburgh's 2020 Opening Day starter, J
While the Pittsburgh Pirates have not yet experienced the return to success at the big league level that many fans have been waiting for, pitching talent acquired by general manager Ben Cherington via the draft has more national focus on the Steel City than what they’ve had in recent years.
It’s been a pretty quite offseason for the Pittsburgh Pirates so far, but that looks like it could change at some point between now and spring training.
Ben Cherington is now in his sixth offseason as general manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Pirates hired Cherington to replace ousted GM Neal Huntington following the 2019 season.
They didn’t hold a dance-off at the David L. Lawrence Convention Center on Saturday. If they did, the unlikely winners would have been the Pittsburgh Pirates trio of team president Travis Williams, general manager Ben Cherington and manager Derek Shelton.
The Pittsburgh Pirates play a game of chance by offering fans the opportunity to Ask Pirates Management questions at PiratesFest, so team president Travis Williams knew that he would be facing a first-pitch fastball Saturday morning at David L.
With still many needs to address, one would believe the Pittsburgh Pirates should be far from done with adding to the roster ahead of next season. At PiratesFe
Andrew McCutchen can sense some frustration in the fan base. Fans won’t dare get in the franchise icon’s face to voice that irritation, but he’s been around long enough to have his finger on Pittsburgh’s pulse and know what’s up.
The Pirates showed their commitment to David Bednar last week. The two sides agreed to a $5.9-million contract for 2025 that avoided a potential salary arbitration hearing.
The hits keep on coming for the Pittsburgh Pirates. Pirates players at the team's event, PiratesFest, were signing autographs, and there was one clear mistake
Pittsburgh Pirates ace Paul Skenes is focused on helping his team make the playoffs in 2025, not his long-term future.
Back in August of 2024, the Pittsburgh Pirates officially decided ... both,” general manager Ben Cherington said. “That’s our mindset. We believe that will be his mindset going into it.”