Late substitute Tellez comes up big vs. lefty as Bucs win seriesLate substitute Tellez comes up big vs. lefty as Bucs win series

Late substitute Tellez comes up big vs. lefty as Bucs win series July 24th, 2024 Alex Stumpf @AlexJStumpf Share share-square-344208 PITTSBURGH — Derek Shelton hates to be on the other side of that situation pregame, one of the few spots where he’ll publicly admit causes him some anxiety. It’s when a team sends out a
Late substitute Tellez comes up big vs. lefty as Bucs win seriesLate substitute Tellez comes up big vs. lefty as Bucs win series

Late substitute Tellez comes up big vs. lefty as Bucs win series

July 24th, 2024

PITTSBURGH — Derek Shelton hates to be on the other side of that situation pregame, one of the few spots where he’ll publicly admit causes him some anxiety. It’s when a team sends out a lineup, has to scratch a player late and then substitutes someone else in.

This time, though, he was on the other end. Bryan Reynolds was a late scratch with back spasms, according to the club, and had to miss his first game of the year. That forced Shelton’s hand to put Connor Joe in the outfield and put lefty Rowdy Tellez in the lineup against Cardinals left-hander Matthew Liberatore.

“It’s either really bad or really good,” Tellez said about being a late substitution. “There’s no in between.”

“I know when people switch lineups, I’m always like, ‘Ah man, the guy that comes in, you think something good’s gonna happen,’” Shelton said. “Rowdy had a good game today.”

It went really well for Tellez, who shot the opening and closing RBI salvos in a 5-0 Pirates’ win over the Cardinals on Wednesday to take the rubber match at PNC Park.

Tellez entered the day with a .148 batting average and just one RBI against left-handed pitchers. Granted, some of that is due to a small sample size against southpaws, but his career .684 OPS against lefties entering Wednesday enforces why he’s mostly been used as a platoon. That didn’t mean he was slacking in his prep work for left-handed starters, though.

“It’s my job to show up every day,” Tellez said. “It’s not like it’s foreign to face lefties in my career, so it was just going in and understanding who was pitching and doing the homework I needed to do and being ready for it.”

That homework paid off, first in the second inning with a base hit up the middle on a two-strike slider to score Ke’Bryan Hayes and open the scoring. The Pirates’ offense, which had scored just three total runs the first two games of the series, would end up piling on four runs that frame, with Andrew McCutchen picking up a bases-loaded walk and Joe getting his first RBIs since June 11 with a two-run double.

Tellez chased Liberatore in the fourth inning, crushing a fastball and depositing it into the Allegheny River. As Tellez rounded the bases, Reynolds was seen in the dugout, pointing to the name on the back of his jersey.

“Reynolds will take credit for anything the one day he does not play,” Shelton joked.

That was more than enough offense for Martín Pérez, who vowed after his last start Friday to come back stronger. He did, tossing six scoreless frames by working around five walks and four hits. The ground ball was his best friend, including in the fifth inning when Lars Nootbaar halted a potential Cardinals’ rally with a tailor made 4-6-3 double play.

“I thought the last start he didn’t mix and match as well as he should have,” Shelton said. “He looked like he was right around the zone. I know he had five walks, but it looked like he was right around the edges, and he’s got to pitch to the edges. Sometimes it gets expanded. Sometimes it doesn’t. Today it didn’t, and he was still able to come back and execute, put the ball on the ground.”

“I’ve got confidence,” Pérez said. “It doesn’t matter. I’m always going to trust my stuff. I was able to compete with a lot of pitches in the strike zone, moved the ball. It was a great game. I was in the corners, trying to maintain so they didn’t feel too comfortable at home plate.”

The whole team is playing with an air of confidence right now, opening the second half of the season with a pair of series wins against the Cardinals and Phillies, the latter of whom has the best record in baseball. The schedule doesn’t get much easier: They have two series with the D-backs coming up, with a road set with the Astros sandwich in between. It’s some of the most important ball they’ve played in Shelton’s time as a manager, but they have showed this month that they belong to be in the thick of the playoff chase.

“We don’t give up,” Pérez said. “This is a good team, too. Continue doing good things and winning games to make the playoffs because that’s what we want.”

Total
0
Shares
Leave a Reply
Related Posts
Is this the biggest Covid summer wave ever?
Read More

Is this the biggest Covid summer wave ever?

The U.S. is in what may end up being its biggest summer wave of Covid, with no end yet in sight.  “If you just talk about infections, this is probably going to end up becoming the largest summer wave we’ve had,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, dean of the Brown University School of Public Health and
EXCLUSIVEHuw Edwards invited young BBC producer into his Royal Albert Hall dressing room on the same night he hosted Festival of Remembrance to an audience of Prince Charles, Camilla and Prince William
Read More

EXCLUSIVEHuw Edwards invited young BBC producer into his Royal Albert Hall dressing room on the same night he hosted Festival of Remembrance to an audience of Prince Charles, Camilla and Prince William

Huw Edwards invited a young man to his dressing room at the Royal Albert Hall where he was hosting the Festival of Remembrance attended by Prince Charles, Camilla and William. The BBC veteran messaged him: 'Come and see me,' and 'Backstage. Dressing Room 4' as the former voice-to-the-nation waited to present the Royal British Legion's
Tory fury as Treasury ‘draws up plans to hike capital gains tax and cut pension tax relief for middle classes’ as Chancellor Rachel Reeves warns of £20billion ‘black hole’
Read More

Tory fury as Treasury ‘draws up plans to hike capital gains tax and cut pension tax relief for middle classes’ as Chancellor Rachel Reeves warns of £20billion ‘black hole’

The Tories today angrily accused Labour of 'breaking their promises' from before the general election as a Cabinet minister refused to rule out tax hikes. Steve Reed, the Environment Secretary, said the Government was 'not going to shy away from difficult decisions' as he was quizzed over possible tax changes. He did not dismiss claims