The Pirates will open a seven-game homestand with the Nationals and Rays in town, bringing together two clubs that have already shown the sharp edges of April baseball.
Washington entered Friday at 4-8, last in the NL East and 1-5 at home after being swept by the Dodgers and dropping two of three to the Cardinals. The Nationals have scored enough to stay relevant, averaging 5.92 runs through 12 games, but their 6.06 ERA and 24 home runs allowed through the same span have left little margin for error.
Tampa Bay arrives with a 5-7 start and a middle-of-the-pack standing in the AL East after dropping two of three to the Cubs this week. The Rays did go 2-1 at Minnesota, and they have leaned early on Chandler Simpson, who had a team-high 18 hits and was batting.391 through 12 games, and Yandy Diaz, who was hitting.362 with three homers and 10 RBIs.
Read Also: Pittsburgh Pirates Host Padres Vs Pirates After Three-Game Win Streak
The setup matters because both teams are still trying to sort themselves out while the schedule keeps moving. The Nationals entered Friday among the highest-scoring teams in baseball, but their pitching staff was last in the majors by ERA. The Rays are carrying early production from Simpson and Diaz while also pushing ahead with plans for a new ballpark that they want open in time for the 2029 season.
Read Also: Marcell Ozuna’s quiet exit from Atlanta ends with Pirates deal and .756 OPS
For Pittsburgh, the homestand offers a quick read on two clubs headed in different directions for now. For the Nationals and Rays, it is another chance to prove that the first two weeks were only a beginning, not a verdict.






