Pirates @ Brewers
Friday, 7:40 PM ET | American Family Field, Milwaukee, WI
The best pitching matchup of the entire Friday slate lands under the American Family Field roof. Paul Skenes arrives fresh off a sophomore campaign that has somehow outpaced the Rookie of the Year season that made him the face of the Pirates. Brandon Woodruff counters in the kind of return-to-form year that Milwaukee has been waiting on for two seasons. Both aces have been the best pitcher on their respective staff through the opening three weeks, and the NL Central standings make this a genuinely important early-season series in a division where every head-to-head matters.
Skenes' pitch arsenal is the sport's most complete right-handed profile. His four-seam fastball sits mid-to-upper 90s with late life that generates whiffs at the top of the zone, his splinker is the put-away pitch he unveiled in his rookie year, and his slider remains the highest-spin breaking ball in the majors by a meaningful margin. His command within the zone has tightened, and his walk rate has continued to trend toward elite territory. Against a Brewers lineup that leads the NL Central in contact rate but ranks middle-of-the-pack in power, the structural edge is Skenes' ability to get called strikes on the splinker early in counts.
Woodruff's return has been the quiet NL Central story. His sinker has regained the depth that made him a Cy Young finalist, and his changeup is generating the swings-and-misses it did at his peak. He's working deeper into games than he did during his injury-shortened 2025, and his walk rate is back to career averages. The structural question is whether his fastball velocity holds through the sixth inning, something that was a limiting factor last year. Against a Pirates lineup that runs Bryan Reynolds, Oneil Cruz, and a developing supporting cast, his sinker at the knees against left-handed pull hitters is the single biggest factor.
The NL Central stakes are the game's overlooked angle. Milwaukee has carried a division lead through most of April, but Pittsburgh has been within striking distance and owns the rotation piece that no one else in the division has. A Pirates win in the opener of this three-game set shifts the divisional math in a meaningful way, and a Brewers response against Skenes is the kind of statement win that stabilizes a first-place team. Home-plate umpire assignment and the early-April roof conditions will matter at the margin, but the starter matchup is the entire ballgame.