Ryan O’Hearn had been one of the Pittsburgh Pirates’ best offseason success stories. Jake Mangum’s return from the injured list should have been one of the cleaner pieces of good roster news they have gotten lately.
Instead, the two moves arrived attached to each other — and that makes the whole thing feel a lot less encouraging.
The Pirates placed O’Hearn on the 10-day injured list with a right quad strain after he exited Saturday's loss to the Philadelphia Phillies, a diagnosis that immediately takes some shine off Mangum’s activation. Pittsburgh is getting back a useful outfielder and energy player, but the cost is losing one of the few bats who had consistently justified the club’s offseason faith.
O'Hearn has been one of the Pirates’ most productive hitters this season, giving them legitimate left-handed thump and stability at first base and right field. For an offense that has spent much of the season trying to manufacture consistency, losing O’Hearn even for the minimum 10 days is more than a minor inconvenience.
Pirates lose Ryan O'Hearn to injury in devastating blow to lineup
The way the injury happened only adds to the frustration. O’Hearn made an awkward move while trying to avoid Alec Bohm on the baseline as he chased a foul pop-up in the second inning on Saturday. He still completed the play, but the aftermath was enough to force him from the game. His own description — that anything beyond a walk or slow jog made his leg feel like it was “grabbing” — does not exactly sound like something the Pirates can wave away as routine soreness.
Quad strains can be tricky, especially for a player who needs to move between first base, the outfield and the bases. Even if the IL stint ends up being short, the Pirates will have to be careful. Rushing O’Hearn back before he can run comfortably would risk turning a manageable injury into a lingering one.
Mangum’s return does help. He gives Don Kelly another outfield option, more athleticism and a player who had already become an easy fan favorite before landing on the IL. His presence should lengthen the roster in some ways, especially defensively and on the bases. But it doesn't replace O'Hearn's bat.
The Pirates got back a useful piece while losing one of their most important offensive contributors. For a team already trying to squeeze enough run production out of an imperfect lineup, O’Hearn’s injury diagnosis cancels out what should have been a positive roster development.
Mangum’s return matters, but O’Hearn’s absence matters more.
