Pittsburgh Pirates star pitcher Paul Skenes had a disastrous opening day performance against the New York Mets, surrendering five runs and recording just two outs before being pulled from the game. The reigning NL Cy Young Award winner was hurt by defensive miscues and struggled with his command in the shortest outing of his major league career.

NEW YORK — The Pittsburgh Pirates’ opening day turned into a nightmare as their ace pitcher Paul Skenes couldn’t make it through the first inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field on Thursday.
The defending National League Cy Young Award winner surrendered five runs while recording just two outs, matching his career-worst performance for runs allowed. Manager Don Kelly was forced to remove the 23-year-old right-hander after he threw 37 pitches during a disastrous inning that saw the Mets send nine batters to the plate.
Skenes struggled with his control, issuing two walks and hitting a batter while allowing four hits in what became the briefest appearance of his 56 major league starts. Poor defensive play from center fielder Oneil Cruz significantly contributed to the meltdown.
The Pirates had taken an early 2-0 advantage thanks to Brandon Lowe’s two-run home run, but everything unraveled quickly in the bottom half of the first inning. Skenes began by walking leadoff hitter Francisco Lindor, then allowed a soft single to Juan Soto before Bo Bichette lifted a sacrifice fly to cut the deficit in half.
After Jorge Polanco managed an infield single and Skenes walked Luis Robert Jr. on 10 pitches, pitching coach Bill Murphy made a mound visit. The situation deteriorated when Cruz badly misplayed Brett Baty’s line drive, initially moving forward before watching the ball sail over his head for a bases-loaded triple.
Marcus Semien followed with a pop-up to shallow center field, but Cruz lost the ball in the sun and it dropped beside him for an RBI double, giving New York a 5-2 advantage. Cruz, originally a shortstop, transitioned to center field in 2024 before becoming a full-time outfielder last season.
Carson Benge struck out on three consecutive fastballs ranging from 96-98 mph in his first major league at-bat, but Skenes hit ninth-place hitter Francisco Alvarez with an 0-1 sinker, ending his afternoon. Mets supporters cheered loudly as the dejected pitcher made his way to the dugout.
Relief pitcher Yohan Ramírez entered and limited the damage by getting Lindor to fly out with runners on second and third base.
This marked Skenes’ second opening day assignment as he enters his third season in the majors. His performance made him just the eighth starting pitcher since 1906 to surrender five or more runs while failing to complete an inning in a season opener. The two-time All-Star had previously allowed five runs in a game on April 8, 2025, against St. Louis, though he pitched six innings in that contest.
Pentagon Confirms First Use of Unmanned Drone Boats in Iran Operations
Crash Shuts Down Left Lane on I-95 South at Christina River Bridge
New Partnership Lets Homebuyers Use Bitcoin as Down Payment Collateral