Ejection, Slam, Chaos: Pittsburgh Pirates Top 1966 Cleveland Indians 6–4 in TMBA Classic
Baseball rarely follows a script—but this one tore the
script up by the fourth inning.
The Pittsburgh Pirates, behind ace Paul Skenes, grabbed an
early 2–0 lead in the third when Bryan Reynolds lined a run-scoring single. At
that point, it looked like a straightforward night at the ballpark.
Then everything unraveled—in the best possible way.
In the bottom of the fourth, with the bases loaded and
Skenes at the plate (because in the TMBA, pitchers hit), the young ace found
himself jawing with the umpire after a questionable strike call. One word led
to another, and suddenly Skenes was gone—ejected mid–at-bat.
Enter Andrew McCutchen off the bench.
Cold. No warm-up swings worth mentioning. Bases loaded.
Chaos already in the air.
Grand. Slam.
Just like that, the Pirates exploded to a 6–0 lead in one of
the most bizarre—and electric—sequences of the season.
The 1966 Cleveland Indians didn’t go quietly. Joe Azcue
knocked in two with a single in the seventh, and Leon Wagner launched a two-run
homer in the eighth to make things interesting.
But the damage had already been done.
With Skenes long gone, it was Carmen Mlodzinski who steadied
things and earned the win, slamming the door on Cleveland’s comeback bid and
preserving a 6–4 Pirates victory.
A starting pitcher ejected mid–at-bat. A pinch-hit grand
slam. A late rally that fell just short.

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