Gonzales' walk-off caps statement win for surging Bucs

3:51 AM UTC

PITTSBURGH – went to bat looking for a strike and something hard. The Pirates’ second baseman knew José Alvarado could ramp it up into triple digits, but there was also that cutter that can tail away from right-handers, which matched where he wanted to do damage.

“I was just trying to get something a little away from me and I just hit it hard,” Gonzales said.

Gonzales got a hold of Alvarado’s first-pitch cutter in the ninth inning Friday and shot a base hit through the left side of the infield to send the majority of the PNC Park crowd home happy. After trailing for most of the night, Gonzales’ single gave the Pirates their first and only lead of the night, walking off the Phillies to win, 8-7.

Friday night had the makings of a team being caught flat-footed out of the All-Star break. Starter Martín Pérez’s slump continued, and he was pulled in the fourth inning after allowing six runs on the night. The Pirates were facing the team with the best record in baseball. They played from behind for most of the night.

And yet, it was Gonzales and his teammates who were celebrating on the right side of the diamond postgame.

“I think it would’ve been really easy to fold after the first inning, especially going against the Phillies,” Gonzales said. “But nobody here in the dugout, nobody in this clubhouse did that. So kudos to them. And kudos to the coaching staff, too.”

That first inning was arguably the worst for Pérez, who faced the entire Phillies lineup and allowed three runs before leaving the bases loaded. The offense quickly struck back against Aaron Nola in response, with Oneil Cruz lining an RBI double that had an exit velocity of 120.5 mph, the second-hardest hit ball for him -- and all of Major League Baseball -- this season. He would later come home on a Rowdy Tellez sacrifice fly, the first of three sac flies Tellez would hit, which set a Pirates single-game record.

Down 7-6 in the ninth inning, Connor Joe lined a single through the left side of the infield and gave way to pinch-runner Michael A. Taylor, which set up the gamble of the night. First-base coach Tarrik Brock spotted an opportunity to run, and with two on and nobody out, Taylor and Andrew McCutchen pulled off a double steal to move the tying run 90 feet away.

"In a situation where we thought we were going to take a chance, we took a good chance,” said manager Derek Shelton.

Cruz followed by bouncing a ball off home plate for a game-tying fielder’s choice, and Gonzales lined the next pitch to left to win it.

“To come out and play as complete a game as we did and do all the little things we needed to do, yeah, really excited about how they responded," Shelton said.

It’s one win, but given the context of the season, it could be bigger. The Pirates are now above .500 again with a record of 49-48. They have won five in a row, dating back to before the All-Star break. They have only nine more games left before the July 30 Trade Deadline, and while the team is looking to add, every win does make the case to be aggressive more justifiable. This is also the gauntlet run of the season, the first of nine straight series against teams with a winning record and competing for a playoff spot.

The playoffs have been the goal for the clubhouse all year. Right now, the Pirates feel they’re building some momentum towards that.

“We talk about it a lot,” Tellez said. “We’ve had a couple guys in here win some World Series. With Milwaukee, we made it to the playoffs every year. Younger players, when they ask questions and want to talk through it, I always say, ‘There’s nothing more driving than getting to the playoffs.’ Once you’re there, that’s all you want the next year, over and over again. A lot of us when we talk about that kind of stuff, it resonates with guys. We’re in a good spot. But just talking it game-by-game.”