You know Spring is almost here when the Pirates report for training
camp. The Pitchers and Catchers have reported today in Pirate City, and
the rest of the team will filter in throughout the week. The first
workout with the whole team is set for Friday. Keep reading to learn
more about Pirates Training Camp.
Forget the groundhog.
There is a more reliable sign of spring.
It can be summed up in four wonderful words: Pitchers and catchers report.
Monday
is the day in Bradenton, as 38 Pittsburgh Pirates pitchers and catchers
check in at Pirate City, prepared for spring training and the 2013
season.
The first official workout will be at noon Tuesday, then
the Pirates will settle into a practice routine that will see them on
the field from 9:30 a.m. to noon each day. The first full-squad workout
is Friday.
It all leads up to the first Grapefruit League game
Feb. 23, followed a day later by the first home game at a renovated
McKechnie Field.
The Pirates, fresh off another late-season fade
that saw them fall of out of contention in the National League Central
and suffer their 20th straight losing season, are raring to go.
Pittsburgh
signed established free agents in catcher Russell Martin and pitcher
Francisco Liriano to go along with promising young talent in outfielders
Andrew McCutchen and Starling Marte and third baseman Pedro Alvarez.
"(General
Manager) Neal Huntington and the baseball ops staff have been working
hard trying to improve the roster," said Jim Trdinich, the Pirates'
media relations director. "The end of last
year left a bitter
taste in our mouth. It was still a productive season, winning 79 games.
But the last month of the season was kind of a kick in the butt after
playing so well for the first four or five months."
It was mostly
quiet Sunday morning at Pirate City, but the Pirates' newest
acquisition, Liriano, got in some work on a back field.
Liriano
is recovering from a fractured humerus bone in his non-throwing arm. He
suffered the injury in December just days after he and the Pirates
agreed to a two-year, $14 million contract.
The Pirates and
Liriano finalized a reworked deal Friday that will pay the 29-year-old
lefty a guaranteed $1 million in 2013 with incentives that could net him
$5.25 million this year and $8.5 million in 2014 if he pitches 200
innings a season.
With his right arm in a brace Sunday, Liriano
threw about 75 short tosses with the team's medical staff looking on. He
is not expected to work out with the rest of the pitchers on Tuesday
and is a long shot to be ready for Opening Day.
Workouts are free
and open to the public. Players are generally more accessible to fans
than they would be during the regular season or even during Grapefruit
League games.
Trdinich said the best time to get autographs is at the end of the daily workouts.
"The
best place for autographs is at Pirate City, out at the area where the
fields meet. Another place is right by the half field that's at the end
of the batting cages," Trdinich said.
Read more information at Bradenton
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