Pirates still above .500.
Paul Maholm and Hector Carrasco at 7.
Correia and Tomlin at seven.
Pirates are 35-33; the Indians, who once had the best record in all baseball, are 36-31.
How great would it be if these two teams were division rivals. The Indians could be the Browns of baseball.
The winning Pirates take on the hapless Astros again.
Game starts in about half an hour. McDonald and Lyles are the starters.
Time to start brainstorming about who the Pirates will add, at the trade deadline, for the defense of their national championship.
Those Mets had a pretty good-looking catcher who might be available, given the pathetic down-on-their-luck condition of that scandal-plagued franchise.
One of the Charlie Mortons takes on Happless tonight at eight.
The Bucs are 33-33 and four games out of first place. Playoff odds are 75.5%.
We raise our glasses to the proposed league realignment, and the day the mighty Bucs won't have to regularly play the hapless last-place Astros.
Maholm and Pelfrey at seven.
In other news, all hail new Trib columnist Dejan Kovacevic, who now has a free blog, reports Bucs have signed a new catcher, thinks Huntington should be extended, and like me, cried* outside after Bream's slide (* very briefly in our case).
Was mighty entertained by last night's game. McCutchen took that HBP like a chambpion.
Today it is Chris Capuano and Huntington's Correia at one-thirty.