Pitcher Matt Capps.
Four-fifths of the rotation and some of the bullpen showed encouraging signs, but the Pirates must straighten out Hart and Matt Capps to have a complete staff.
Hart has four pitches, including an effortless 95-mph fastball, but was erratic with his delivery in going 1-8 with a 6.92 ERA since coming from Chicago. Management likes his stuff, and pitching coach Joe Kerrigan has an offseason plan to harness it. If that does not happen, Daniel McCutchen will step in.
"If I do what I'm capable, we'll have a really good, really deep rotation," Hart said. "I'm going to work really hard to be ready."
If Capps is not traded -- and that will get entertained this offseason -- he will be the default closer. But expect his hook to be short, with surging Joel Hanrahan in the wings.
Manager John Russell.
4. Manage emotions.
With Russell's even-keel demeanor, it is easy to think of those running the Pirates as unemotional. But emotion got them into some trouble in the past year.
The failed attempt to sign Dominican prospect Miguel Angel Sano became as much about personality as about getting the player. There also was the waffling decision to offer, then pull back contract extensions for Wilson and Sanchez. And there was frequent exasperation shown at things spoken or written in public over their many transactions.
All of this is inconsistent with the bold path management has taken through its actions.
A winning approach: Make the move, and move on.
Huntington, on that topic: "We've talked from day one about having to make logical, rational decisions. It gets a lot tougher the more we lose, no question about that. The willingness to stay the course becomes more challenging, but it also becomes more important. There are a lot of teams that have gone this path and ended up short-circuiting themselves."
Peter Diana/Post-Gazette
Third baseman Pedro Alvarez.
3. Promote Alvarez, Lincoln.
When the Pirates' top two prospects are ready, they should play in Pittsburgh.
Already, signals have been sent that neither will make the team out of spring training, which hardly seems conducive to offering each at least a glimmer of optimism that a good offseason regimen will make any difference.
This decision should not be dictated -- as it was, in part, with Andrew McCutchen -- by finances. A player must play six full years in the majors to qualify for free agency, and must have three full years to guarantee arbitration. Thus, holding him back even a month or two can save money and a year of control well down the road. But the Pirates have saved plenty enough money, and setting the stage for great things in 2015 does not make a compelling argument, either.
Matt Freed/Post-Gazette
Pitcher Zach Duke.
2. Improve individually.
Management gets the bulk of the attention when analyzing any building effort, but the reality is that the success or failure of the 2010 Pirates will hinge mostly on how the individual players improve.
Someone has to emerge from nowhere as Jones did. Or make a rookie splash as McCutchen did. And several someones will have to upgrade their game as Ohlendorf, Zach Duke, Jesse Chavez and Evan Meek did on the mound, and LaRoche did defensively.
Take Meek: While missing the past month to a strained oblique, he bulked up 10 pounds of muscle.
"I'll be throwing 100 miles an hour next time you see me," he said.
Doug Benc/Getty Images
Cardinals outfielder Rick Ankiel.
1. Spend.
Sign Rick Ankiel or any free agent -- Nick Johnson? Mark DeRosa? Xavier Nady for a second tour? -- who might bring some pop to the lineup.
Make a trade for a quality player, regardless of cost.
The Pirates' current $23 million roster -- which projects to $28 million with raises -- has to represent the low point. There is no rule that says a team building from within must be a catastrophe at the major league level until the prospects arrive. Provided that acquisitions do not block key players -- signing, say, a center fielder would be absurd -- the only reason not to fill other holes would be to create more leftover money.
When Cincinnati recently traded for Scott Rolen and his $11 million salary after being miles out of contention, many in baseball scoffed. But the Reds went 25-11 with Rolen, and their many youngsters might have their development aided by his presence.
Do not expect anything at that level from the Pirates, but ...
"We will be out there, and we will be aggressive," team president Frank Coonelly said.
Only 180 days until the opener, April 5, 2010, against the Los Angeles Dodgers at PNC Park.
Catch more on the Pirates at
the PG's PBC Blog. Dejan Kovacevic can be reached at
dkovacevic@post-gazette.com.

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First published on October 6, 2009 at 12:00 am