November 7, 2024

He's the right person for the job': Pirates extend manager Derek Shelton  beyond 2023 season | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The Pittsburgh Pirates Have Few Reasons To Keep Paul Skenes Down As He Terminate Contract

There are sparks of hope for baseball in Western Pennsylvania. The Pittsburgh Pirates are 13-13, chasing their first season with a winning record since 2018. Calling up top pitching prospect Paul Skenes could fan those sparks into a flame, but he remains in the minor leagues.

The Pirates drafted Skenes with the first overall pick in the 2023 draft out of Louisiana State. Prior to this season, every major prospect list ranked him as the top pitching prospect in baseball. MLB Pipeline lists him as the third-best overall prospect in the game behind Baltimore Orioles shortstop Jackson Holliday and Milwaukee Brewers outfielder Jackson Chourio, both of whom are already in the Major Leagues.

Skenes has two truly elite pitches. His fastball was ranked by MLB Pipeline as an 80 on the 20-80 scouting scale. In other words, it’s one of the very best that scouts have ever seen, sitting in the high 90s and topping out over 100 mph. His slider is considered by some to be the best in the minors. He also throws an above-average changeup and possesses excellent command of his pitches.

It's Time for the Pirates To Call up Paul Skenes | FanGraphs Baseball

Through five starts in Triple-A this season, he put up video-game numbers. He has a 0.53 ERA in 17 innings and has struck out 34 of the 66 batters he’s faced. For context, the average strikeout rate in MLB this year is 22.5%, and he’s fanning 51.5% of hitters. His strikeouts outnumber all of his other outs combined by a two-to-one margin.

It’s hard to argue that Skenes still needs to prove himself in the minor leagues. The only blemish on his resume is that the Pirates won’t let him go deep into starts, as evidenced by his average of 3.4 innings per appearance. His last outing was on Wednesday, in which he threw a season-high 4 1/3 innings and 71 pitches, including 50 strikes.

Even if the organization is ramping up his workload gingerly, there’s no difference in the effort required to throw a pitch in Pittsburgh as opposed to throwing one in Indianapolis. They could easily limit his innings while pitching in the Majors.

Paul Skenes frustrated with workload limits as Pirates top prospect  continues scoreless streak in minors - CBSSports.com

The only reason to leave him in Triple-A is an unspoken one. By delaying the start of his MLB career, the Pirates can manipulate his service time, keeping him under team control through 2030. If he had started the 2024 season on the major-league roster, he could’ve reached free agency after the 2029 season.

If they keep him in the minors until sometime in June, they will likely prevent him from reaching Super Two status, meaning he would get four years of arbitration instead of three. That would be inexplicable for a club with playoff aspirations given his prospect pedigree and how well he’s performing, but the team has not indicated a timeframe for calling him up.

Paul Skenes frustrated with workload limits as Pirates top prospect  continues scoreless streak in minors - CBSSports.com

The Pirates have a recent history of signing their best homegrown young talent to extensions. Keller is signed through 2028 while third baseman Ke’Bryan Hayes and outfielder Bryan Reynolds are under contract through 2030. It seems likely they will try to do the same with Skenes eventually, which renders service manipulation somewhat moot. However, the club will have more financial leverage in those negotiations by delaying him access to arbitration and free agency.

 

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