The holidays might be over but the Pittsburgh Pirates aren't finished shopping as they have targeted free agent Preston Wilson in their search for a right fielder, baseball sources said Sunday. Wilson, 31, split last season between Colorado and Washington, hitting .260 with 25 homers and 90 RBIs in 139 games. However, he also struck out 148 times, which goes against new Pirates manager Jim Tracy's philosophy of having hitters who make consistent contact and avoid striking out. Wilson was fourth in the major leagues in strikeouts behind Cincinnati's Adam Dunn (168), Seattle's Richie Sexson (167) and Philadelphia's Pat Burrell (160). Wilson struck out in 25.7 percent of his plate appearances, the worst mark among the major-leaguers who qualified for the batting title. Wilson led the National League with 141 RBIs in 2003 for Colorado. However, he also had a NL-leading 187 strikeouts in 2000 while playing for Florida. Wilson, the stepson of former New York Mets center fielder Mookie Wilson, has a .264 lifetime batting average with 171 homers, 591 RBIs and 110 steals in 948 games over eight seasons with the New York Mets (1998), Florida (1998-2002), Colorado (2003-05) and Washington (2005).