Dan Johnson takes you through his preview, prediction, and best bet for today’s baseball game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Colorado Rockies.

The Rockies (16-26) and Pirates (23-19) meet again at PNC Park with the series already tilted by what happened Tuesday night. Colorado spent most of the opener chasing Paul Skenes, who carried a no-hit bid into the seventh and turned the game into another reminder of how difficult this park can feel when Pittsburgh gets rotation control. The Pirates won 3-1 without needing a bullpen parade, and Oneil Cruz’s three-hit night gave the offense a little more carryover than the final score suggests. Now the matchup changes shape: Mitch Keller gives Pittsburgh another stable starter, but Jose Quintana gives the Pirates a softer, more traffic-friendly left-handed look than the one Colorado saw from Skenes. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Colorado Rockies.

Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.

Keller’s profile is built more on command, contact management and homer suppression than overpowering swing-and-miss, but that works against a Rockies lineup whose road production has been the problem all season. He comes in at 4-1 with a 2.87 ERA, and the advanced indicators still support a legitimate edge: 3.14 FIP, 3.93 xFIP, 11.3% K-BB rate, 41.5% ground-ball rate and a 94 Stuff+ mark. Quintana’s surface line is much more fragile. The 3.90 ERA is livable, but the 5.75 FIP, 5.93 xFIP, 0.8% K-BB rate, 32.0% ground-ball rate and 80 Stuff+ profile all point in the same direction. He is not missing enough bats, he is walking too many hitters, and his low-velocity mix has to live on sequencing instead of dominance.

Cruz is the primary damage bat because he is the one Pirate who can turn Quintana’s lack of margin into one swing before the inning even fully develops. He already owns 10 HR, 15 SB, a .225 ISO and 126 wRC+, and Tuesday’s two-double game matters because it showed his timing reappearing in this park. Pittsburgh’s overall offense has enough support around him to make the traffic stick: Brandon Lowe has 10 HR, a .297 ISO and 155 wRC+, Bryan Reynolds brings on-base stability, Nick Gonzales is hitting .321 with a 17.5% K rate, and Spencer Horwitz has a 16.4% walk rate against only a 12.9% strikeout rate. The projected lefty-matchup lineup is less explosive if Lowe and Horwitz sit, but Cruz, Gonzales, Reynolds, Ryan O’Hearn and Marcell Ozuna still give Pittsburgh enough contact and damage lanes against a pitcher whose strikeout-walk profile invites longer innings.

Rockies vs. Pirates pick, best bet

Colorado’s counter is real enough to keep this away from a lazy Pirates run-line play. Mickey Moniak has been the Rockies’ best force bat with 11 HR, a .344 ISO and 161 wRC+, Hunter Goodman has 10 HR and a .260 ISO despite a 36.9% strikeout rate, and Troy Johnston has been a useful left-handed table-setter at .328/.393/.467 with a 132 wRC+. That group is exactly why Keller’s night is not automatic; Colorado has left-handed bats that can punish fastballs and make a first-five team total uncomfortable. The larger road translation still drags the Rockies back down. Their dangerous pockets are concentrated, while Tovar, Castro and Karros have been soft spots in the projected order, and Keller’s ability to keep the ball in the yard makes Colorado’s scoring path feel thinner than Pittsburgh’s.

That is why the market shape matters. Pittsburgh’s moneyline is already sitting around -185, the run line asks a good but imperfect offense to create margin, and the full-game total of 8.5 needs Colorado to contribute more than I want to trust away from Coors. The first-five Pirates team total has appeal because Quintana is the pitcher to attack, but it also compresses the bet into one narrow window against a projected lineup that may not include all of Pittsburgh’s best overall bats. The full-game team total gives the Pirates more ways to get there: Quintana’s walks and air contact early, a middle-relief bridge from a Rockies staff that has not been clean, and a Pittsburgh offense that can score without needing a pure home run environment. PNC’s 58-degree setup and modest wind make me less interested in the game over, but they do not erase the five-run path for the home side.

The best bet is Pirates team total over 4.5 (-110). Keller is the foundation for the game script, but the wager is really about Pittsburgh getting nine innings against Quintana and the softer parts of Colorado’s staff instead of paying the tax on the side. Quintana’s 11.0% K rate, 10.2% walk rate, 5.75 FIP and 5.93 xFIP give the Pirates too many ways to build traffic, and Cruz’s current form gives them the clearest swing to turn that traffic into crooked-number damage. The way it loses is Pittsburgh’s lefty-matchup lineup drawing walks without the extra-base hit that breaks the inning open, but Quintana’s lack of separation and Colorado’s late-inning pitching still point to five Pirates runs as the cleanest ask on the board.

Pick: Pirates team total over 4.5 (-110). Final score projection: Pirates 6, Rockies 3.

Best bet: Pirates TT o4.5 (-120) vs. Rockies

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