Endy Rodriguez’s spring surge shows why Pirates need him healthy

It's kind of wild how quickly we can forget what Endy RodrĂ­guez was supposed to be for Pittsburgh — until he starts squaring up baseballs again and the whole roster suddenly looks less stuck in neutral.

RodrĂ­guez is the rare Pirates piece who can change the shape of the lineup and the roster at the same time. This spring, he's already flashing that impact — hitting .375/.444/.875 with a homer and three RBI in eight at-bats.

It's a tiny sample, sure, but it's also the point: when RodrĂ­guez is physically right, the bat plays immediately.

Endy RodrĂ­guez is forcing the Pirates to imagine the good version again

The annoying part is we've barely gotten a real look at it. RodrĂ­guez finally showed up on July 17, 2023, and the first run was a mixed bag — 57 games, a .220 average, three homers, plenty of "welcome to the big leagues" at-bats where pitchers didn't give him anything for free. But even with the rough edges, you could see it: he fit, and his value was always going to be the fact that he could help you in more than one spot.

Then his elbow turned into a multi-year roadblock. The original injury happened in winter ball, and it led to UCL reconstruction (Tommy John) and a flexor tendon repair in December 2023, wiping out his entire 2024 season. And just when 2025 finally looked like the slow re-entry year, his throwing arm flared up again. He returned for only a small sample, got shut down in June with elbow issues, then underwent an ulnar nerve transposition in August. 

So when he shows life this spring — when the Pirates are comfortable moving him between catcher/first/outfield work — it's a flashing sign pointing at Pittsburgh's clearest path to getting more dynamic without spending big.

The Pirates can't settle for "fine" production at catcher. They need a real edge. If RodrĂ­guez is healthy, he gives them one. A switch-hitter who can move around the diamond and keep the lineup from sacrificing offense just to make the positions fit.

The spring surge is exciting, but it's also a reminder: the Pirates' best version of their roster still has Endy RodrĂ­guez in it.

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