Pirates GM Ben Cherington says
trading ace Paul Skenes is 'not at all part of the conversation'
[May 23, 2025]
By WILL GRAVES
PITTSBURGH (AP) — The Pittsburgh Pirates are reeling, and just about
everything is on the table for a last-place team that has already
fired its manager and packed a half-decade's worth of
public-relations missteps into two months.
Well, except for one thing: trading ace Paul Skenes.
Asked on Thursday if flipping the reigning National League Rookie of
the Year is a consideration for a club woefully lacking in impactful
position-player prospects, general manager Ben Cherington gave an
atypically brief response.
“No, it's not part of the conversation at all,” Cherington said
flatly.
Pittsburgh entered a four-game series against NL Central rival
Milwaukee already 11 games out of playoff position, thanks in large
part to an offense that ranks last or next-to-last in nearly every
major category: from runs, slugging percentage and OPS (all 30th) to
home runs and batting average (both 29th).

The Pirates at least showed a small flicker of life at the plate in
an 8-5 loss to the Brewers a few hours after Cherington spoke,
scoring five runs for the first time in 27 games. Their 26-game
streak of four runs or fewer tied a major league record set by four
other teams, most recently the then-California Angels in 1969.
Yet it was telling that Pittsburgh also left 10 runners on base,
typical of a season in which the Pirates have consistently been
unable to take advantage of what few opportunities they create.
Not exactly what the team had in mind during spring training, when
everyone from Cherington to Skenes to manager Derek Shelton — who
was jettisoned two weeks ago and replaced by Don Kelly — talked
about the need for Pittsburgh to take another step forward after
consecutive 76-86 seasons.
Instead, the Pirates have been stuck in reverse from opening day,
even when Skenes starts. Pittsburgh is just 3-5 in his eight starts,
the latest loss a 1-0 setback in Philadelphia last weekend in which
Skenes limited the Phillies to three hits while throwing the first
complete game of his career.
Skenes, who turns 23 next week, has been all-in on the Pirates since
being called up a year ago. He's also under team control for the
rest of the decade and won't become arbitration-eligible until after
2026, making him one of the biggest bargains in the majors.
While Pittsburgh has locked down players like two-time All-Star
outfielder Bryan Reynolds and third baseman Ke'Bryan Hayes to
long-term deals, they are a pittance by MLB standards compared to
what Skenes might command one day should his career continue on its
current trajectory.
[to top of second column] |

The Pirates are perennially one of the most frugal
teams in the majors. Their opening day payroll this season was just
under $88 million. Only the Chicago White Sox, Tampa Bay, the
Athletics and Miami spent less.
Even so, Pittsburgh has received little return on its investment.
While the bullpen has been a bit of a mess, the starting rotation
has been solid. Skenes (2.44), Mitch Keller (3.88), Andrew Heaney
(2.91) and Bailey Falter (3.50) all have ERAs under 4.00, yet they
also have a combined record of 11-21.
The issue has been a punchless lineup that is largely nondescript
outside of Reynolds, franchise icon Andrew McCutchen and center
fielder Oneil Cruz.
Pittsburgh has one of the deeper pools of pitching prospects in the
majors — a list that includes hard-throwing 22-year-old Bubba
Chandler and Mike Burrows, who gave up four runs over five innings
Thursday in his first major league start — but the cupboard of
homegrown position players who are on the cusp of the big leagues
remains pretty bare five-plus years into Cherington's tenure.
Catcher Henry Davis, the top overall pick in the 2021 draft, remains
a work in progress nearly two full years after his major league
debut. Second baseman Nick Gonzales, a first-rounder in 2020, is
recovering from an ankle injury and has yet to establish himself as
an everyday player. Former first-round picks Termarr Johnson (2022)
and Konnor Griffin (2024) are still years away.
So far, the only callups from Triple-A have been mostly
injury-related, not performance-related.
“We want guys from Triple-A to pound the door down,” Cherington
said. "That would be good. I still think that can happen this year.
We want more of it over time. ... Everybody knows we’ve got to score
more runs. That’s not going to happen just by saying it and hoping
for it. You’ve got to do the work to do it.”
Cherington remains optimistic that the major league team will start
to turn the corner over the final 110ish games, and he's certain
Skenes will be a part of it no matter which way it goes.
“We've just got to get better,” Cherington said. "Let’s play better
baseball, and that’s going to lead to winning more games. Then,
let’s wake up and see where that takes us when we get to July.”
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
 |