We need to talk about Bill Murphy’s walk to the mound, because the thing has somehow become one of the funniest recurring bits of the early Pirates season. Not the mound visit itself. The actual journey. The man moves like he is crossing black ice in dress shoes, and somehow it’s working for all of us.
It’s honestly genius. A clip from the Pirates’ April 12 game against the Cubs made the rounds after Murphy took what felt like an entire commercial break to get from the dugout to the mound. Pirates insider Jason Mackey pointed out the deliberate pace. But it also helps explain why the visit feels effective. By the time Murphy finally gets to the mound, the whole moment has already slowed down a little. The walk may look ridiculous to some. But the purpose behind it looks pretty smart.
Bill Murphy: 19 seconds mound to dugout. Incredible. Slowest pitching coach walk I've ever seen.
— Jason Mackey (@JMackey_PGH) April 12, 2026
Pirates pitching coach’s viral mound visit routine is ridiculous for all the right reasons
In baseball, everybody is always trying to out-think the room. We get pitch design, tunneling, attack-angle, and seventeen different ways to say a guy needs to execute better. Meanwhile Murphy rolls in like he is trying to safely make it across a Costco parking lot, says a few words, and suddenly the game slows down for the pitcher. He’s basically functioning as a reset button with stirrups.
Murphy himself is completely in on the joke. As Pirates sideline reporter Hannah Mears shared, Murphy put it pretty plainly: “I’m a goofy guy… I don’t want to fall.” There’s no fake tough-guy act here, and there’s no overcooked baseball mysticism either. It’s just a pitching coach joking around enough to admit that they are going to take their time because eating dirt on national television would be a brutal look.
Buried underneath the comedy is something the Pirates probably love. A mound visit is not always about mechanics. Sometimes it’s just about interrupting the spiral. Murphy’s pace almost forces that.
That’s why calling it genius doesn’t feel like an overstatement. It’s a little funny, sure. It also fits the exact purpose of a good pitching coach. Murphy was hired away from Houston after spending years building a strong reputation there, and one of the things the Pirates liked most about him was his communication. You can see that already, even in something as simple as a slow walk. He doesn’t seem interested in turning every problem into a lecture. He looks more interested in clearing the fog.
Baseball desperately needs more stuff like this. Real personality and quirks. If Murphy’s superpower is showing up to the mound at the speed of a cautious dad, then so be it. We have seen worse coaching philosophies.
But if Pirates pitchers keep coming out of those visits looking calmer than they did before, we are going to have to admit something else: Bill Murphy might be the slowest-moving genius in baseball.
