Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Clutch hit saves gem by Wilson

Bullpen fiasco nearly spoils valiant outing of eight scoreless innings

- By Mike Persak

There has been a theme in Bryse Wilson’s starts this season. Far too often, he’s put together solid innings only to have them blow up on mistake pitches.

Wilson’s season-long line reflects those mistakes. He entered Wednesday’s start against the Cincinnati Reds with a 5.95 ERA, having allowed a team-high 20 home runs over 104 ⅓ innings this season.

With that, it’s been fair to wonder what Wilson might look like without the mistakes. As far-fetched as that desire may sound, Wilson basically did it against the Reds.

He tossed eight shutout innings, the first time a Pirate has done that since Tyler Anderson did it May 9, 2021. Wilson was dominant throughout, allowing just five baserunner­s the entire afternoon on three hits, a walk and a hit batter. Somehow, it wasn’t good enough for Wilson to earn the win, as the Pirates needed an extrainnin­g walk-off to win 4-3.

It turned sour for Pittsburgh in the ninth, when Pirates manager Derek Shelton pulled his starter, putting in right-hander Chase De Jong. It went horribly.

De Jong allowed a leadoff single to Spencer Steer, a two-run blast to left from Kyle Farmer and a game-tying, no-doubt homer to right from Jake Fraley. All of Wilson’s efforts were put in the rearview in one fell swoop. So why pull Wilson? “I think there’s a couple reasons,”Shelton said. “Number 1, [Wilson] hadn’t been up that many times. Number 2, we felt he was at the end of his rope. I went out and talked to him in the eighth and he kind of emptied it there. So 3-0 lead, he had done his job and Chase has been really good for us all year.”

The Pirates can just be happy it worked out in the end, thanks to Kevin Newman.

In the 10th, with the automatic runner starting on second and an intentiona­l walk issued to outfielder Ben Gamel, the stage was set for Newmanwith two on and two outs. He blooped a single into center for his seventh-career walk-off plate appearance, salvaging a win for his team despite nearly giving it away.

The late-inning chaos shouldn’t take away from the effort Wilson gave the Pirates.

The only times the righthande­r ever faced some trouble came in the third and eighth innings. In the former frame, Reds shortstop Jose Barrero got on with a one-out double, but Wilson bounced back to induce an easy groundout to short and a fly out to center to end the threat. In the eighth, Barrero again got on, singling to right and reaching second on a fielding error with two outs. Wilson hit the next batter, then got the final out on a weak popup to shortstop Oneil Cruz.

If it sounds like an uneventful great outing, that’s because it was. Then again, the best ones are. Wilson struck out six, didn’t really put anyone on base and just worked quickly and efficientl­y throughout the game.

In a sense, it looked almost frustratin­gly easy. When Wilson, 24, joined the Pirates at the trade deadline last season, he arrived with the pedigree of a former top prospect who had already pitched in a playoff game in his young career with the Atlanta Braves. Again, though, the mistakes have killed him far too often in Pittsburgh.

There is a bright spot in Wilson’s newly-developed splitter. He threw the pitch 24 times, and only one of them — a sixth-inning single from Barrero — went for a hit.

Wilson credited his pitch

mix for his success, and the splitter has a lot to do with that mix.

“It’s going to be a really good pitch for me going forward,” Wilson said with a smile.

After struggling for so long this season, finding a late equation for success could be frustratin­g.

As the saying goes, though, better late than never. In one of Wilson’s final starts of the season, he put his best foot forward, stringing together the type of confidence-building appearance that can carry one through the offseason.

“I threw 90 pitches. I didn’t perfectly execute 90 pitches, but I think a lot that goes into it is the mix,” Wilson said. “The pitch usage was really, really good today and I think sometimes the usage and keeping the hitters off-balance is when you can get away with those mistakes.”

 ?? Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press photos ?? Kevin Newman, right, celebrates with teammates Wednesday after he singled in the winning run in the bottom of the 10th inning to beat the Reds, 4-3, at PNC Park.
Gene J. Puskar/Associated Press photos Kevin Newman, right, celebrates with teammates Wednesday after he singled in the winning run in the bottom of the 10th inning to beat the Reds, 4-3, at PNC Park.
 ?? ?? Bryse Wilson pitched eight shutout innings Wednesday.
Bryse Wilson pitched eight shutout innings Wednesday.

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