Abandon Ship? What do the Pittsburgh Pirates do next?

09 September 2014: The Pirates logo eyes the field during a Major League Baseball game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Pittsburgh Pirates at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, PA (Photo by Gavin Baker/Icon Sportswire/Corbis via Getty Images)
09 September 2014: The Pirates logo eyes the field during a Major League Baseball game between the Philadelphia Phillies and the Pittsburgh Pirates at Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia, PA (Photo by Gavin Baker/Icon Sportswire/Corbis via Getty Images) /
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(Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images)
(Photo by Michael Reaves/Getty Images) /

What do the Pittsburgh Pirates do next?

Put Chris Archer in the Bullpen

More from Call to the Pen

So here’s the thing with Chris Archer:  He’s not good enough to trade.  He’s also not good enough to keep in your rotation.  He IS good enough not to give up on just yet.

When Archer was dealt from the Tampa Bay Rays for two top-end prospects, the key selling point was the team-friendly nature of his contract.  He is owed a shade over $8MM per year for 2020, and 2021 seasons, which is pretty reasonable when you think about it.

His problem?

He gives up Home Runs like they’re going out of style, giving up 2.23 HR/9 for the season.  There is hope here though, as many two-pitch pitchers with high strikeout rate and high ERA profiles like Archer have faired well moving to the bullpen (see Sean Newcomb of the Braves).

It’s worth trying since the Pittsburgh Pirates can’t really do a whole lot else with him at this point.

Promote Ke’Bryan Hayes

Yeah, it’s time.  Ke’Bryan Hayes (son of a long time third baseman Charlie Hayes) has proven he deserves a shot at the big time.  Flashing a solid glove, plus plate discipline and a top-end hit tool, he has shown that he can hack it at the big league level.

It could be a sensible move for a team who needs some excitement down the stretch and could also give their top position player prospect some major league at-bats in order to get ready for the following season since the Pirates really don’t have much of anything going for them at that position going forward.  Sometimes the deadline isn’t exactly the moves you’d hope to make, but the moves you NEED to make.

The truth is tough for Pirates fans, but another season seems to be slipping away from the frugal spending club, and while management hasn’t thrown around words like “rebuild” or “tanking” too freely, or really at all.  It’s no secret that they will have to face their demons at some point, but for now, in classic Pirates fashion, they’ll have to at least make it work for this season…

Next. Why Stroman Won't Work With the New York Mets. dark

and of course, maybe the next one too?