In a stunning Opening Day meltdown, reigning NL Cy Young winner Paul Skenes was tagged for five runs in the first inning, marking the shortest and worst start of his young career. This isn’t just a blip—it exposes critical vulnerabilities for the Pittsburgh Pirates.
The baseball world was stunned on Thursday when Paul Skenes, the Pittsburgh Pirates’ ace and coming off a unanimous Cy Young award, failed to record an out in the first inning of Opening Day against the New York Mets. Skenes gave up five earned runs on a combination of hits and walks, exiting after just 37 pitches—the shortest and most disastrous start of his career [Athlon Sports].
To understand the magnitude of this collapse, consider Skenes’ trajectory. At just 23 years old, he has already compiled a 1.96 ERA over 320 and 2/3 career major league innings with 386 strikeouts. His performance in the 2024 World Baseball Classic for Team USA, where he posted a dominant 1.08 ERA, solidified his status as baseball’s premier young pitching talent. That he could be so thoroughly roughed up in his first start of 2026 seemed unthinkable [Athlon Sports].
The inning unfolded rapidly. With bases loaded, center fielder Oneil Cruz misjudged a line drive off Brett Baty, watching it sail over his head for a bases-clearing triple. This play alone accounted for four of the five runs charged to Skenes.
On the very next at-bat, Cruz lost a pop fly off Marcus Semien in the sun, allowing Baty to score from third. Neither play was charged as an error, so all five runs were earned against Skenes, inflating his ERA to 67.50 to start the season [Athlon Sports].
Beyond the defensive miscues, Skenes’ own performance was alarmingly uncharacteristic. He walked both Francisco Lindor and Luis Robert Jr. after extended at-bats, and hit Francisco Alvarez with a sinker—only the 13th hit-by-pitch of his career. His swing-and-miss rate plummeted to just five against the Mets, with three of those coming from rookie outfielder Carson Benge in his major league debut [Baseball Savant].
This raises the question: is this a one-off blip or a sign of deeper issues? Several factors could be at play. First, Skenes returned from a taxing World Baseball Classic, where he shouldered a heavy workload for Team USA. The timing of the WBC, just before the MLB season, has long been a concern for pitchers’ readiness. Second, the Mets’ overhauled lineup, featuring new acquisitions and aggressive approaches, may have presented a tougher challenge than anticipated.
For Pirates fans, the immediate reaction is panic. Skenes is the cornerstone of a team with World Series aspirations, and his instability in the first inning—a frame where pitchers often set the tone—is deeply troubling. However, it’s crucial to remember that even the greatest pitchers have bad days. The real concern lies in the underlying metrics: the diminished swing-and-miss, the lack of command evident in the walks and HBP.
Looking ahead, the Pirates must monitor Skenes’ workload closely and assess whether the WBC impact lingers. Oneil Cruz, while defensively responsible for four runs, is still adapting to center field after moving there in 2025, so his mistakes may be temporary. But Skenes’ effectiveness is non-negotiable for Pittsburgh’s success.
In the coming weeks, watch for Skenes’ pitch velocity, spin rates, and especially his chase rate—how often batters swing at pitches outside the zone. A continued drop in swing-and-miss would signal a significant issue that could alter the Pirates’ season trajectory.
While one start doesn’t define a career, for a pitcher of Skenes’ caliber, this is an unprecedented low. The Pirates’ hope is that this was a perfect storm of circumstances—Cruz’s inexperience, WBC fatigue, a hot Mets lineup—rather than a newfound vulnerability. But with high expectations in Pittsburgh, every start will be scrutinized.
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