PITTSBURGH — Something odd has been happening the past few weeks in the town that's home to the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Pittsburgh Penguins — something very strange indeed. People are talking about a professional baseball club called — what was that name again? — the Pittsburgh Pirates.
They are speaking about alien things, matters unfamiliar to a community unaccustomed to talking about baseball in anything but resigned tones. Things like five Pirates headed to the 2013 All-Star team — the first time so many are going since 1972. Things like a homer-slamming slugger nicknamed "El Toro." Things like a closer who leads the National League in saves, a pitching staff that leads the majors in shutouts and a team that has one of baseball's best records — and for a time the past few weeks, had the very best of all.
Too many things have happened between Pittsburgh and its baseball team over the past 20 years to make expectations high — or, more accurately, not enough has happened. But in this, the 21st year since the Pirates last finished with a winning record, the talk in restaurants and bars, on Little League fields and in the concession lines at PNC Park centers around some form of this tentative, hopeful question: Is this finally the year when things change?
"It all feels new," says Manny Sanguillen, a catcher on the 1971 and 1979 World Series title teams who now runs a barbecue stand behind the ballpark's center field fence.
"The fans, they're completely different this year. I walk down the street, they shout over at me. That wasn't happening (the) past few years," Sanguillen said before a game last week.
There hadn't been much shouting at all — either the good kind or the frustrated kind. While two Steeler teams won Super Bowls in the last decade and a Penguin team won a Stanley Cup, the Pirates watched from the cellar as one of the worst pro baseball teams playing in one of the major leagues' best ballparks. Their streak of consecutive losing seasons is unparalleled in major American sports.
Early season runs in 2011 and, more prominently, last year ended with post-All-Star-break implosions that have Pittsburghers skittish about supporting anything related to baseball at least until the back-to-school sales begin. And even after this season's shining start, a recent four-game losing streak — even after the nine-game winning streak that preceded it — produced audible mopery.
"It's tough to be a fan when you lose 20 years in a row," said Jeremy Bromley, 25, watching batting practice one evening last week before he saw the Bucs lose to the Oakland Athletics, 2-1.