ReportWire

Tag: Brandon Marsh

  • Stay or Go – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    Phillies President of Baseball Operations David Dombrowski on his phone during batting practice before the Phillies play the San Diego Padres in game two of the National League Championship Series at Petco Park in San Diego on Wednesday, October 19, 2022.

    With the 2025 Phillies season over we look toward next year. The World Series was played in the NLDS and the Phillies are still on the cusp of a World Series after a few years of playoff disappointment. Let’s take a look at who should stay or go for the Phillies next season.

    Stay

    JT Realmuto  

    He is the best catcher on the market. He is vital to our pitching staff. Look at the growth of Wheeler, Suarez, and Sanchez. Caleb Cotham is phenomenal but JT deserves a lot of credit too.

    For as much as people complained about his regular season hitting, JT actually showed up in the playoffs, hitting .353 with 6 hits including a home run. So spare me age or whatever reason you come up with to not re-sign him. The guy is still a really good ball player. The bigger issue is how much we rely on JT to knock in runs. If the offense can add more production you don’t have to rely on JT to carry the load.

    Kyle Schwarber

    He has got to stay. The lineup would be worse off without him. You can say what you want about his performance in the playoffs, but game 3 shows how important he is to the team. The second he homered everything got going. I am not sure fans realize how much this team would have struggled without his 56 home runs and 132 rbis. You cannot replace that. Pay him whatever he would like.

    Ranger Suarez

    The loss of Ranger Suarez feels inevitable. Andrew Painter should be added to the rotation, but there is still a spot for Ranger. Wheeler is not going to be healthy to start the season and who knows how his recovery will go. A rotation of Sanchez, Luzardo, Suarez, Nola, and Painter is still nasty. Ranger will come at a high cost, but with no salary cap I don’t see any reason for him to leave other than Middleton avoiding a tax. 

    Let’s not forget Ranger has been deadly in the playoffs and Toppers failure to use him in game 1 is a huge reason they lost the series. Ranger needs to be a Phillie next season, even though the feeling is he won’t be.

    Justin Crawford

    Crawford should be on this roster. He will add youth and speed to this team. I think he should have been called up in the second half of last season, but the Phillies decided against it. Since he didn’t get an opportunity last season, it will be interesting to see how productive Crawford will be for the Phillies. The teams biggest mix up this offseason will likely be in the outfield. I would love to see Crawford start in left or center for the Phillies.

    Jose Alvarado

    Alvarado is a really interesting case for the Phillies. He has been one of our better relievers the past couple seasons, but a PED suspension kept him out for most of the season and the playoffs. Alvarado has a $9 million dollar player option, which makes sense for the Phillies to pick up. It is not anything too expensive and they need a left handed arm. I think he stays but feel indifferent on his status.

    Go

    Alec Bohm

    The team needs to move on from Bohm. He just isn’t it. Doesn’t hit for average, doesn’t hit for power, isn’t a great fielder but also isn’t a bad one, and offers nothing on the basepaths. 

    For being 6’5” he severely lacks in power which hurts the lineup (and top 3 hitters) as a whole. You expect your 3rd baseman to have some power, but the Phillies have not gotten that. They do not have a true 4 hole hitter and I would like to see them fill that role at 3rd base or right field. Regardless, it is time to move on from Bohm. 

    Nick Castellanos

    Castellanos has been one of the more interesting players for the Phillies the last few seasons. He is one of the most frustrating players on the team to watch. Free swinger, who gets fooled by the same sequence over and over. But at the same time, he has had many big moments at the plate and even on defense during the playoffs. Overall his hitting has been fine, but his defense is not nearly good enough. In fact, it is awful. His first step is the slowest I have seen, he leaves so many outs on the field that look like he made the correct play but in reality, he physically can’t reach the ball. A new RF is needed. Just move him, I do not care about the return. 

    Maybe Stay Maybe Go

    Bryson Stott

    Stott is an interesting case. He could fit in the same category as Bohm. A player from the “Day Care” not developing as much as we hoped. However, I feel this team has bigger holes to fill than Stott. His fielding is second to none and he makes them an infinitely better defensive team. His at bats leave a lot to be desired but having Sott hit 8th or 9th with his defense helps this team a lot. There is not a logical reason to move on from him. He should stay. 

    Harrison Bader

    Most of the fans would like to see Bader back in CF. The fit is there, but the contract will be the question. He added “something” to this team that was previously missing. Bader was a mold of hitter that fit what the team needed and played great defense; he was missed during the NLDS. Bader coming back depends on his cost, which may end up being too high for Middletown and Dombrowski, but he would make an ideal starting CF.

    Brandon Marsh and Max Kepler

    I decided to pair Kepler and Marsh together. I do not see both of these players coming back together. Throughout the season I assumed Kepler would be one and done, but he came on strong at the end of the year and had a good playoffs. Depending on the outfield options I could see them bringing back Kepler on a cheap deal. 

    I also believe the will hold onto Brandon Marsh. There seems to be a belief in the lockeroom that he can get his hitting figured out. The issue is he cannot hit lefties. So, if Marsh is on the roster next season, he may need to be paired with a right-handed bat. Marsh is an interesting piece because he is still young and has shown potential, but I feel we have seen the player that he is. The Phillies shouldn’t look to move him but if a trade package makes sense, we could see Brandon Marsh on the move.

    Photo Credit: Yong Kim/Philadelphia Inquirer

    Tags:

    Categorized:

    [ad_2]

    Liam Mahoney

    Source link

  • No Guts, No Glory – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    Watching the Phillies in the playoffs the last three seasons has been excruciating. Anyone hoping for something different this season, think again. It ended in a complete disaster. It’s tough not to feel for Kerkering a little bit, but that is an inexcusable error. He has struggled with runners on base all season. It was unfair to bring him in there. The worst part is he ended up making the pitches and got the ground ball. But instead of a calm cool collected throw to first Kerkering panicked. One of the most gut wrenching things I have witnessed. 

    What Really Went Wrong

    We can look up all the stats, splits, and percentages we want. But the eye test tells you all you need to know. The bats failed to show up. Turner, Schwarber, and Harper showed up for one of the four games. But that’s why you lose a series right? The big players didn’t produce. So now they go home. What puzzles me about the offense is their inability to adjust. Now, four straight seasons of chasing pitches at bat after at bat. Every batter wanting to win the game in one pitch. The goal should have been to have the best at bat for the team. Instead guys are up there hacking away trying to have a moment. 

    The Phils made Glasnow throw 19 pitches in the first inning. Even though they didn’t score, that’s a successful inning and part of winning baseball games. You have to make pitchers work. Obviously, the Phillies did the opposite. Glasnow cruised through 6 innings. If the Phillies kept grinding away he should’ve been on the ropes by the 5th inning. There are many ways to blame the offense for the losses. But overall it was their inability to make anything happen. JT and Kepler were really the only two guys to hit, The stars and the bats let the fans and the pitching staff down. 

    Topper, Topper, Topper

    I have many gripes with Rob Thomson. Yes, he has done a great job at bringing this group together. He has the Phillies playing great regular season baseball. They are fun to watch again and in an Eagles city, when the Phillies are good it’s a baseball town. But then, the playoffs. Whatever happened in 2022 is not there anymore. The players have to win the game, but there have been countless decisions from the manager that have hurt the club in the postseason. 

    Game One

    With a fully rested bullpen Thomson decided to bring Robertson back out for the 7th inning. This forced Strahm to come in with multiple runners on. The decision to bring Robertson back out is what cost them. A reliever comes into a high leverage situation with their adrenaline pumping. He did his job and got out of the jam, he should have never gone back into the game. Topper overthinking the bullpen once again.

    Game Two

    The Phillies had life. With no outs Nick Castellanos doubled in Realmuto and Bohm. The offense was finally rolling. Three straight hits. Zero outs. Ninth inning. Citizens Bank Park going absolutely nuts.

    Bunt – ball one. Bunt again – Castellanos gunned down at third. 

    This was one of the worst decisions I have ever seen. The Dodgers couldn’t buy an out in that inning. Even Castellanos doubled on that outside pitch he strikes out on all the time (you know the one).

    All the momentum in the world was on the Phillies side. And then he gave them an out. Rob said here you go a free out and the Dodgers said thank you. In your last at bat in the game, the manager gave the other team an out. I was stunned. Topper has no feel for the game going on around him. He even admitted in his press conference he was playing for the tie. A shocking statement to hear. That is the complete wrong mindset coming from the manager.

    Stott has had multiple playoff moments for the Phillies. He’s come up with big hits each post season. Thomson should trust him to come through. Do you think Dave Roberts would have made Tommy Edmunds bunt in that situation? No chance. Stott wasn’t even given an opportuninty to hit. No doubt in my mind the Phillies win that game if Stott doesn’t bunt.  

    Those were the two big decisions that cost the Phillies in this series. Although, all of this is not on Rob Thomson, I believe this team has gone as far as they will with him. He doesn’t have quite the right feel of how to manage postseason games. He never seems to pull the right strings. It may be time to move on at the end of the season. 

    What’s Next

    This team is clearly in need of a shake up. I am not sure if blowing it up is the right call. Dombrowski should prioritize Realmuto, Schwarber, and Suarez. They haven’t shown up recently, but I believe the core of Turner, Schwarber, Harper, and Realmuto can get the job done. They need to step up in the playoffs, but I believe in those guys. 

    There are a couple of spots the Phillies need to address. They need to find a clean up hitter. The front office should look to upgrade in right and at third. It’s time to move on from Castellanos and Bohm. It would be nice to see Bader back in center. The ship has run its course for some of this crew and hopefully the roster looks a little different next season.

    Photo Credit: Matt Slocum/AP Photo

    Tags:

    Categorized:

    [ad_2]

    Liam Mahoney

    Source link

  • Phillies Enter the Final Week of the Regular Season – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    Last week, the Phillies clinched the NL East title, guaranteeing another year of Red October and the opportunity to play for a World Series. While winning the NL East is nice, getting a first-round bye would be amazing for a team that’s been banged up down the stretch. With six games remaining in the regular season, the Phillies look forward to closing out the season and then preparing for what is hopefully a memorable Red October run.


    Six Games Remain

    The Phillies return home this week with an off day on Monday, so they have time to settle in after the West Coast road trip. While on the road trip, the Phillies took 2/3 from the Los Angeles Dodgers, including the NL East clinching win Monday night. After the emotional series win over the Dodgers, the Phillies would lose 2/3 to the Arizona Diamondbacks, a team fighting for that last spot in the NL Wild Card race.

    I’m not putting much stock into the series loss to the Diamondbacks because they did take the series from the Dodgers. By Sunday, I could imagine the team just wanting to return home.

    The Phillies have six games remaining in the season, all of which are at home. In fact, the Phillies have an opportunity to play at home until game 3 of the NLDS, which would be Wednesday, October 8th. That leaves 17 days in between road games for the Phillies. Something I think will help this team a lot. The Phillies have a three-game series against the Miami Marlins (76-80) and the Minnesota Twins (67-89). It’s kind of poetic that the Phillies are ending their season against the team that traded them their two most important deadline acquisitions. Harrison Bader and Jhoan Duran have been amazing for the Phillies and have certainly performed above expectations. Those six games are very winnable, but the Phillies are still three games back of the Brewers for the one seed, so they would need a miracle to secure that top seed.

    Playoff Positioning

    The Phillies will most likely finish with the two seed in the National League, which is good for the sake of the first-round bye. While some are scared about the time off during Wild Card games, this team needs to get healthy and also give the pitching staff a much-deserved rest. Trea Turner is expected to return for the last series of the season, and Alec Bohm made his return against the Diamondbacks. Bohm homered in his second game back and made his impact felt immediately. Having Bohm back in this lineup is huge, especially with runners on base. Getting Trea Turner back will be another massive boost for the offense, in hopes that he returns to the player he’s been all year. Turner was hitting .305 when he was placed on the IL a few weeks ago.

    While the top three seeds are all solidified, with the Brewers, Phillies, and Dodgers, the other three spots could all be shuffled come next week. The Chicago Cubs are 88-68 and hold the top Wild Card spot, followed by the 85-71 San Diego Padres. Those two spots are very likely to remain the Cubs and Padres. That last spot, however, is completely up for grabs. Yes, that means the New York Mets might miss the playoffs (Bummer). The Cincinnati Reds and New York Mets are both tied with the same record, 80-76, with the Reds holding a tiebreaker over the Mets. The Arizona Diamondbacks are 79-77, just one game back of that last spot. The final six games for these teams are going to be must-watch TV, so if you are a baseball fan, I suggest you tune in.

    While anything can happen in these final six games, I don’t think any Phillies fan would be opposed to the Mets not making the playoffs. The Cincinnati Reds have been a team I’ve liked all year and would be an interesting club to see make the postseason. As for the Diamondbacks, I want our revenge from 2023.

    Upcoming Week

    I expect the Phillies to hopefully win 4/6 games to close out the season. I would like them to finish strong so they go into the bye with some confidence before having to ramp it up again for postseason baseball. We are nearly one week away from the greatest time of year. Buckle up, Phillies fans.


    Prediction of the week: Alec Bohm homers twice at home this week, continuing his great performance since returning from injury.

    Oh, and the Mets miss the playoffs, and the Reds take the last spot.

    Tags:

    Categorized:

    [ad_2]

    Matt Saglembeni

    Source link

  • Let’s Finish Strong – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    The 2025 regular season is quickly coming to a close. The Phillies locked up a second consecutive NL East crown on Monday, winning the division faster than any Phillies team before. The Phillies won a riveting back and forth affair in LA to clinch. 

    Now it’s time to clinch a first round bye and potentially home field advantage throughout the playoffs. The Brewers currently hold a 3 game lead in the loss column. Milwaukee finishes the year against the Cardinals, Padres, and Reds. They likely end up with the one seed, but the Phillies still have a shot at it. The more realistic scenario is going for the first round bye. We hold a 5.5 game lead over the Dodgers for the two seed. Barring a collapse in the last three series the Phillies should be able to lock up home field for the NLDS. 

    Remaining Schedule

    • Sept 19th: @Diamondbacks
    • Sept 20th: @Diamondbacks
    • Sept 21st: @Diamondbacks
    • Sept 23rd: vs. Marlins
    • Sept 24th: vs. Marlins
    • Sept 25th: vs. Marlins
    • Sept 26th: vs. Twins
    • Sept 27th: vs. Twins
    • Sept 28th: vs. Twins

    On my Managing Expectations article I predicted the ballclub to finish the season with 96 wins. Going 41-25 in the second half. They are currently 36-21 since the All Star break. We are right on schedule. The Phillies have been one of the best teams in baseball since the break. Phils have been bitten by the injury bug a little of late and it has not mattered. The lineup has become – plug and play – and the team is thriving. Marsh, Wilson, Marchan, and Kemp have all stepped up. Turner and Bohm went down and you barely notice the difference. This team is starting to have a similar feel to the 2017 Eagles next man up. The role players have really come into their own down the stretch. 

    Looking Ahead

    Are we peaking at the right time? The Phillies limped into the playoffs last season. This time they are playing their best baseball of the year. They may have gotten hot a little early, but with three series left you have to feel great about how the club is playing. 

    The pitching has been phenomenal. Even when a starter gets tagged early, they have been able to keep the game within reach. This gives the best late scoring offense plenty of time to stage a comeback. Which they have done on multiple occasions, more recently against Milwaukee and LA.

    The bullpen has also been solid. Duran brings stability to the end of the game, allowing Topper to use our relievers in the most efficient and effective way possible. Tanner Banks has settled into his role beautifully and Matt Strahm has been lights out. I would like to see Kerkering sharpen up into the playoffs, but he still has great stuff and can get anyone out in a big spot.

    As the standings stand the Phillies would play the winner of the Mets-Dodgers series. The Brewers would play the winner of the Padres-Cubs series. You can talk all you want about trying to avoid the Dodgers or Mets or whoever. But honestly it doesn’t matter. You have to take the field and beat who is in front of you. Do what you can to get homefield and beat who you have to. Let’s go win a World Series.

    Photo Credit: Bill Streicher/Imagn Images

    Tags:

    Categorized:

    [ad_2]

    Liam Mahoney

    Source link

  • Phillies odds and ends: Comeback puts Dodgers in rear view, keeps pace with Brewers

    [ad_1]

    Many fans were sleeping when the Phillies clinched the NL East on, well, Tuesday morning – well after 1 a.m. – with a 10th-inning win over the Dodgers.

    Likewise, folks were probably shocked on Wednesday to discover that the Phillies had beaten the Dodgers again in the second game of a three-game set despite trailing 4-0 after four innings and generating no offense against Shohei Ohtani. 

    The hangover should’ve been expected as the Phillies partied hard after their Monday night/Tuesday morning division-clinching win, but the Phillies beat up on the Los Angeles bullpen, scoring all nine runs off five different Dodgers relievers in the 9-6 win.

    Bryce Harper’s two-run double, Brandon Marsh’s three-run homer and Max Kepler’s two-run shot highlighted a six-run fifth inning for the Phils, and Rafael Marchán’s improbable three-run homer in the ninth broke a 6-6 tie. Jhoan Duran, who blew the save in Game 1, needed just 12 pitches to mow down the Dodgers for his 31st save.

    Here’s the big blast from Marchán, who started in place of J.T. Realmuto:

    In rallying back, the Phillies actually secured another milestone for the season – they ensured that any tiebreaker between them and the Dodgers in the National League playoffs would favor the Phillies.

    The Phillies, who will finish their six-game season series against the Dodgers tonight, have taken four of the five games so far and can finish no worse than 4-2, giving them a head-to-head advantage in a tiebreaker scenario.

    Is it moot? Probably, as the Phillies entered Wednesday’s action 6.5 games ahead of the Dodgers, who would fall into the Wild Card round as the third-ranked divisional leader. The Phillies also own any tiebreaker over the Cubs, who currently sit in the top Wild Card spot, 3.5 games behind the Phils, who also own the tiebreaker against them thanks to a 4-2 series win.

    The Phils also entered Wednesday 1.5 games behind the Brewers for the top seed, but the Phils went 1-5 against the Brew Crew this season, so any tiebreaker would favor Milwaukee.

    Another injury

    As if the recent losses of Trea Turner and Alec Bohm weren’t enough, the Phillies took another hit to the infield when they placed Edmundo Sosa on the 10-day Injured List before Tuesday’s game with a groin strain.

    Per Destiny Lugardo of Phillies Nation, Sosa’s groin strain is considered minor:

    The infield prospect they called up from Triple-A, Rafael Lantigua, was slashing .252/.359/.333 in 124 games with the IronPigs. He had seven HRs and 56 RBIs to go along with 17 SBs.

    Painter improvement? 

    Top Phils prospect Andrew Painter didn’t get that call-up that the Phillies had predicted in the spring would come in July, but he’s on the mound for the IronPigs at home Wednesday against Syracuse, trying to string together two positive outings.

    In his last start, Sept. 10 at Scranton/Wilkes Barre, he scattered three hits and didn’t allow a run through five innings. He also struck out six in a 74-pitch effort – one of his sharpest outings of late. Painter had given up six runs in each of his prior two starts as his ERA ballooned to 5.62, the highest it’s been this season.

    Painter is 1-1 in three starts this season against the Syracuse Mets, allowing 10 runs in 15.1 innings against them with 10 strikeouts and just three walks, but he’s also allowed six homers.


    SIGN UP HERE to receive PhillyVoice’s Sports newsletters.


    Follow Geoff on Twitter/X: @itssnick

    Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice Sports

    [ad_2]

    Geoff Mosher

    Source link

  • Phillies Magic Number Down To One, Clinch Postseason Berth – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    Credit: John Jones/Imagn Images

    The Phillies came into last week preparing for their biggest series of the season, a four-game series against the New York Mets, with their magic sitting at 13. Since then, the Phillies would go on to sweep the Mets, take two out of three from the Kansas City Royals, and now sit just one game away from clinching the NL East for consecutive seasons. The last time the Phillies did that was in 2010-2011.


    NL East Dominance

    As of today, the Phillies are 89-61, 12 games up on the New York Mets (77-73) for first place in the NL East, which is something I didn’t expect to write this season. I truly believed the Mets would be competitive and the NL East would be close for the majority of the season. However, the Mets have played dreadful baseball in September and just snapped an eight-game losing streak yesterday.

    As for the Phillies, they are playing their best baseball of the season right now. The pitching looks great, the offense looks better despite the Phillies missing both Trea Turner and Alex Bohm this week, and the bullpen has found its rhythm. They have found different ways to win games, not just relying on the offense or pitching. Some nights, the pitching staff looks incredible when the offense doesn’t, and vice versa. This team looks like a team built to win in the postseason, and the Phillies are just 12 games away from starting another attempt at a World Series run. The Phillies head out west for six games before returning home for a six-game home stand to close out the season.

    The Phillies currently sit as the two seed in the National League but are only two games behind the Milwaukee Brewers (91-59) as the one seed. If the Phillies could clinch home-field advantage throughout the entire playoffs, that would make me feel much better entering the postseason.

    Bader Leading Off

    Once the Phillies announced that Trea Turner was going on the IL, I was unsure who the Phillies would bat leadoff. In last week’s article, I discussed the potential for Stott or Bader to step into that role. In the first game, Rob Thomson went with Bryce Harper in the leadoff spot, which was questionable and rightfully so. In the next game, Rob put Bader at the leadoff spot, and it clicked. In his first game batting leadoff, Bader went 3/5 with a home run against his former team, the New York Mets. Thomson kept Bader in the leadoff spot for the remainder of the week, and boy, did it work. Bader had a great week and has had an even better start to his Phillies career. Bader has a .349 BA with a .940 OPS in 38 games played for the Phillies. Not only has he delivered offensively, but defensively, he’s been great as well. Bader has made some really impressive grabs in the outfield, and for the first time in a while, it feels like the Phillies have found their centerfielder.

    Dave Dombrowski did an incredible job this trade deadline, not only acquiring Harrison Bader but also Jhoan Duran, who has continued to pitch great for us as the closer. The Phillies added a legit CF and closer and now look like a team primed to make some noise in the postseason.

    Two Weeks Remain

    The Phillies kick off their final road trip of the season tonight, as they open up a three-game series against the Los Angeles Dodgers (84-65), a team that’s fighting to clinch the NL West. This series could also be a potential playoff matchup. The Dodgers have had a down year compared to where everyone expected them to be. Injuries have hit them hard, and the pitching isn’t what they had hoped. The Phillies always seem to play well at Dodger Stadium, so wins in 2/3 games seem likely. They have an off day on Thursday before they play a three-game weekend series against the Arizona Diamondbacks (75-75).

    The Phillies need just one more win on the season to clinch the NL East, and I like their odds to do it tonight at 10:10 EST with Ranger Suarez on the mound.


    Weekly Predictions

    Not only do the Phillies win the NL East this week, but they also overtake the Milwaukee Brewers for the one seed in the National League.

    Tags:

    Categorized:

    [ad_2]

    Matt Saglembeni

    Source link

  • Scorching Phillies slash NL East magic number to 1 with comeback win 

    [ad_1]

    The scorching Phillies are on the verge of cementing the 2025 NL East crown.

    The Phils won their sixth straight game in comeback fashion Saturday night at Citizens Bank Park, earning an 8-6 victory over the Royals. 

    Their NL East magic number sits at one ahead of Sunday afternoon’s series finale. The Mets remained in a dramatic free fall Saturday, blowing a 2-0 eighth-inning lead to the Rangers and losing an eighth consecutive game. 

    Taijuan Walker tallied the win for the Phillies. He threw five innings, allowed seven hits and four runs, struck out three and walked one. 

    Walker looked on his way to a much cleaner start than his four-run first inning last time out against the Marlins, but the first inning’s final out was a struggle. 

    Vinnie Pasquantino doubled with two outs. A Maikel Garcia liner zoomed past Bryson Stott’s dive and into left-center field. Salvador Perez lifted a high full-count cutter 398 feet. All told, Walker wound up conceding three runs and five hits in the first. 

    The Phillies took no time to trim their deficit against Royals righty Ryan Bergert. Brandon Marsh delivered a two-out, two-RBI double to left in the bottom of the first. Over his past seven games, Marsh has eight extra-base hits and eight RBIs. 

    Perez did it again in the third inning. He ripped an 0-2 Walker splitter for his 300th career homer. 

    The Phils pulled to within 4-3 in their half of the third. Harrison Bader led off with a single to post a sixth consecutive game with multiple hits. He’s 15 for 29 over that stretch. After Kyle Schwarber and J.T. Realmuto walked, Bader sprinted home on J.T. Realmuto’s sacrifice fly. 

    The Royals brought in lefty reliever Angel Zerpa to begin the fifth inning and Schwarber clubbed his third pitch over the right-field fence. He’s at 51 home runs with 13 games to go. 

    Bryce Harper then walked, Realmuto reached on an infield single, and Marsh chopped a grounder to second that advanced both runners into scoring position. Nick Castellanos pinch-hit for Max Kepler and came through, hitting a fly ball to center that was easily deep enough to score Harper and put the Phils on top. Otto Kemp — yet another Phillie on a hot streak — followed by nailing an RBI double off of the left-field wall. 

    Walker gave the Phillies scoreless fourth and fifth innings. Tanner Banks was flawless in the sixth and Schwarber provided an insurance run in the bottom of the frame with an RBI single.

    Kansas City got a run back against Matt Strahm in the seventh … and Marsh replied by clobbering a leadoff homer. As a team, the Phils have 42 runs and 64 hits across the last five games.

    The Royals stayed in the contest and scored on David Robertson in the eighth, but Jhoan Duran locked down his 14th save in 15 opportunities as a Phillie.

    While there’s bigger games on the horizon, the 89-60 Phillies’ performances of late haven’t lacked focus whatsoever.

    “We’ve got goals beyond just getting in or winning the division,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson said pregame. “So we’ve just got to keep going, keep winning series. Including this one, we’ve got five series left. And that’s the goal, to win every series.”

    [ad_2]

    Noah Levick

    Source link

  • Finally A Centerfielder – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    Finally a center fielder. The Phillies have been searching for an every day center fielder for the last few seasons. Dombroski has tried plenty of outfield combinations with players like Marsh, Rojas, Hays, Wilson and Kepler. None have worked.

    It seemed like each player out there had one fatal flaw in their game. For example, Rojas added a defensive range to the outfield but provided zero at the plate. Marsh isn’t a true CF and is better suited in left. The Phillies needed to stabilize their outfield and used the trade deadline to do just that. 

    With Marsh better as a left fielder, he needs to be our everyday LF regardless of starting pitcher handedness. You can platoon Castellanos and Kepler in right, while playing Marsh and Bader every day. 

    Harrison Bader is the best center fielder this team has had in the Bryce Harper era. He can make an impact on both sides of the ball and is able to hit left and right handing pitching. Bader should be this team’s everyday center fielder.

    The Addition

    Games Average OBP Hits/BBs RBI HR
    26 .313 .385 25 9 2

    Bader has been awesome for the Phillies so far. In only 26 games Bader is hitting .313 with 9 RBIs. He has brought stability to a Phillies outfield that has needed it for it for years. He has combined clutch hitting with stellar defense. Like his go ahead three run home run vs the Orioles on August 4th, his first bomb with the club. Or when he hit an 8th inning two run homerun to tie the game against the Mets. And don’t forget when he robbed Corey Seager of a homerun. Bader has added a swagger the team needed.

    To compare, Johan Rojas hit .224 this season in 71 games with the Phillies. Rojas also only had one homerun and 18 RBIs. In about a third of the time Bader has knocked in half of Rojas’ RBIs. Rojas only had 34 hits on the season! Bader is already at 25. AND he plays just as good if not better defense than Rojas. I don’t think it can be understated how important of an addition Bader is. He has completely changed the Phillies outfield. Before we had a guy who was an automatic out, now we have a big-league bat. 

    Showing up in Milwaukee

    The two best teams in the National League began a three game series on Monday. Bader had his best game in a Phillies uniform on Monday vs the Brewers. The Phillies took the series opener in perhaps the most entertaining game they played all year. A back-and-forth affair was headlined by Bader and Marsh. Bader was 3/5 with two doubles and 3 RBIs. His biggest hit came in the 8th a two run double to take the lead. He added an insurance run in the 9th with a bloop single to right, proving it was his day. 

    This win would not happen without Harrison Bader. This game showed exactly why the Phillies added him to this team. His combination of offense and defense is essential. He came up with clutch hits to keep the team in the game and doesn’t miss a beat in center. It’s almost weird to have a CF making each catch look easy. 

    The sample size is still small for Bader, with only 91 plate appearances with the team. Even in his short time he has changed the outfield outlook for the Phillies. With centerfield shored up and an extra bat in the lineup, look for Bader to be a difference maker for this team down the stretch. 

    Photo Credit: John Jones/Imagn Images

    Tags:

    Categorized:

    [ad_2]

    Liam Mahoney

    Source link

  • Phillies Weekly Recap: Phillies Maintain Six Game Lead Despite Being Swept By Mets – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    The Phillies got swept by the New York Mets to start the week, shrinking their division lead to four games. After the weekend, the Phillies had taken 3/4 from the Atlanta Braves while the Mets lost 3/4 to the Miami Marlins. With that, the Phillies’ lead went back to six games as we enter the final month of the season.


    September Starts Now

    As the calendar turns over to September, the Phillies lead the NL East by six games, which is something they would’ve loved if they heard that in April. However, the last series at Citi Field proved that playing the Mets on the road is the worst thing that could happen to the Phillies come October. The Phillies have lost 10 straight games at Citi Field, and this past series was no different. The Phillies got absolutely dominated. To put it frankly, the Phillies showed absolutely no fight against the Mets. Something that I will touch on later. However, that debacle of a series went down the drain after they returned home and took 3/4 from the Atlanta Braves. Starting the series off with a four-homer game from Kyle Schwarber, the fourth in franchise history. Thanks to our friends down in Miami, the Marlins took 3/4 from the Mets, bringing the lead back to six games.

    That brings us to today. A six-game lead with 25 games to play in the season. Four of those 25 are against the New York Mets, but this time at home. If the Phillies can take 3/4 from the Mets during that series while maintaining this current lead, they could bury the Mets that series. If that’s the case, this team is going to have to put up way more of a fight than last time.

    Lack of Urgency

    This is something I have avoided all year because I don’t want to doubt Rob Thomson, but with the season coming down the stretch, my biggest concerns are the offense disappearing and Rob Thomson. Last Tuesday, while the Phillies were getting mopped up by the Mets, the umpiring was questionable (as it was the whole series). I was waiting and waiting for Rob Thomson to explode and give his team some kind of juice. Instead, he just sat in the dugout. The night before, he put Jordan Romano in a close game, then immediately gave up four runs. No spark, no flare, not much of anything. A series against a division rival, and the team looked flat. It reminded me of the days of Charlie Manuel. I’m watching, thinking Charlie would’ve lost his mind by now. I’m not even in the dugout, and I can tell this team is flat. Isn’t it part of a manager’s job to motivate their guys when needed?

    Ever since Rob Thomson put Craig Kimbrel back into that Diamondbacks series two seasons ago, I have questioned his bullpen decisions in big-time games over and over again. A clear example of this is putting Orion Kerkering in (a guy who has struggled inheriting runners on base) in a BASES LOADED jam against the Mets. What do you think happened? He gave up runs. For someone who claims to be so analytical, I truly question Thomson’s managerial feel for a game. Yes, baseball is a numbers game, but you also have to go with your instinctive feeling. The fact that we kept trotting out Jordan Romano and his 8 ERA is beyond me. Then, for the organization to cut Joe Ross and not Romano is questionable to me as well. If Romano is on the postseason roster, that tells me everything I need to know about this team. Time and time again, it feels like Rob presses the wrong button, and one wrong push might cost him his job this offseason.

    Now, yes, they turned the page and beat the Atlanta Braves, but is that something we really should be happy about? Beating down on a team that is 62-75. They did what they should have done. I’m not calling for Thomson’s job, but if this team loses in a fashion in which the offense disappears and Thomson mismanages the bullpen (again), I think the conversations are going to get really loud about whether Rob is the guy. This core is not getting any younger, and at some point, you have to explore other options. He’s a player’s manager, but sometimes this city needs a little tough love. I’ve yet to see any spark from any player this year outside of Turner and Schwarber.

    Even Harper has been inconsistent lately. Oh, and can we please cut it out with this “Rivalry” series equipment? Here we are entering the final stretch of the season, and our superstar is worried about his batting gloves and cleats matching the color of our division rivals. Guess what, the Phillies are 0-2 in those games. It doesn’t work.

    New Addition

    Hopefully, that spark is coming soon since the Phillies announced yesterday the signing of Walker Buehler, a right-handed pitcher who was let go from the Red Sox last week. Buehler is a former World Champion with the Los Angeles Dodgers and provides the attitude this Phillies team desperately needs. Buehler offers playoff experience along with a guy you can trust in a big game in big moments. I think this signing is going to be a very beneficial one for the Phillies come playoff time. With Zach Wheeler done for the year, the only righties we have are Aaron Nola and Taijuan Walker. Buehler provides depth at that right-handed pitcher position and can start games but also come out of the bullpen.

    Upcoming Week

    The Phillies have a big week ahead, starting with a three-game series against the Milwaukee Brewers (85-53). They play Monday, Wednesday, and Thursday in Milwaukee with an off day mixed in on Tuesday. A huge three-game series with the top two teams in the NL based on record. The Phillies are currently 5.5 games back of the Brewers for the top spot in the NL. After the Brewers, the Phillies head to Miami to take on the Marlins (65-72) in a three-game series.

    It would be massive if the Phillies could win 5/6 on the week. Especially if they can take at least 2/3 from the Brewers, a team that swept them at home earlier this season.


    Weekly Predictions

    The Phillies’ offense gets back into a consistent groove after a week of inconsistency.

    Tags:

    Categorized:

    [ad_2]

    Matt Saglembeni

    Source link

  • Phillies swept by Mets, with losing streak at Citi Field up to 10 games after shutout loss

    [ad_1]

    Who would have guessed during the winter that Taijuan Walker would pitch in such a big game near the end of August?

    Nobody could have envisioned it for Walker, whose eventual release felt more likely than any appearances of significance. But there he was on Wednesday evening in Flushing, N.Y., jogging to the mound to pitch in a game it felt like the Phillies had to win.

    The Phillies took the field on Wednesday with a 76-56 record, 20 games over .500 holding a 5.0-game division lead. But these are the Mets at Citi Field, and the combination of that team and its ballpark has become torturous for the Phillies. Factoring in last season’s National League Division Series, the Phillies’ losing streak at Citi Field was nine games before Wednesday.

    That included an embarrassing 13-3 loss on Monday night when new ace Cristopher Sánchez surprisingly lost control, and an agonizing 6-5 walk-off defeat on Tuesday in which new closer Jhoan Duran failed to record an out.

    So, this was not just another start for Walker, whose combination of gutty pitching and good luck has enabled him to help the Phillies in a way he was not capable of doing last year. But in the third inning, the Mets tagged Walker for five consecutive hits to open the frame, pushing three runs across. Walker notched a strikeout and induced a double play to escape the jam and was on the verge of completing five innings while limiting the damage to those three runs. But with two outs in the fifth inning, Mark Vientos knocked a base hit up the middle to add another run. Walker was able to get through the inning, completing his night at 5.0 innings pitched and four earned runs.

    Walker’s effort to keep the Phillies in the game was valiant. But when Daniel Robert relieved him in the bottom of the sixth inning, the Phillies had sent the minimum number of batters to the plate. In a game they needed to win — to prove to themselves that they can win at Citi Field — the Phillies’ expensive lineup went dormant. They did so against rookie Nolan McLean, one of New York’s top prospects making his third major-league start.

    McLean’s expansive pitch mix full of absurd movement rendered Phillies hitters completely inept. The first time he faced more than three batters in an inning was the top of the seventh. McLean completed that frame with no serious threat — J.T. Realmuto popped out on the infield after a two-out single from Bryce Harper — and was only at 75 pitches. Finally, McLean allowed back-to-back singles to begin the eighth inning. With no outs and runners on the corners, the Phillies pushed across — you guessed it — zero runs. Nick Castellanos and Bryson Stott hit fly balls too shallow to score the slower Alec Bohm and Harrison Bader hit a dribbler back to McLean, who scattered four baserunners in eight shutout innings.

    That individual failure on the Phillies’ part did not matter much regardless, as the Mets had already given McLean additional margin for error when Tanner Banks allowed a two-run shot to Vientos in the bottom half of the seventh.

    The game was over at that point. To anyone with experience watching these two teams face off, it felt like it was over a whole lot earlier.

    The Phillies lost to the Mets on Wednesday night, 6-0. They have lost 10 games in a row at Citi Field, and in three miserable days their lead in the National League East shrunk from seven games to four. Instead of landing a haymaker to put themselves in position to repeat as division champions, the Phillies were completely outclassed in every way by the team that completely outclassed them in every way last October.

    From Wednesday’s futile showing to the massive disappointments across the two earlier games, everything else to know about yet another horrid showing from the Phillies in New York:

    Odds and ends

    • It was almost jarring to see Sánchez lose his footing on Monday. He did so both literally and figuratively. After three no-hit innings, Sánchez allowed a Juan Soto single, then immediately spun a double play. He gave up a two-out single to Pete Alonso, then his cleat got caught on the mound. Alonso took second base on the balk and things unraveled entirely. In the blink of an eye, a 3-0 Phillies lead had turned into a 3-3 tie.

    Sánchez, whose remarkable transformation as a pitcher has included the development of a stoic nature on the mound, was uncharacteristically rattled. He allowed another run in the fifth inning, returned for the sixth and gave up an additional when he allowed two doubles. David Robertson could not prevent an inherited runner from scoring, and Sánchez’s day ended with six runs (five earned) to his name.

    The Phillies were trailing 6-3 in the seventh inning when Jordan Romano entered the game. By the time the right-hander had recorded three outs, the Mets were leading 10-3. Joe Ross relieved Romano in the eighth inning. By the time he had recorded three outs, the Mets were leading 13-3. The following day, Romano and Ross were removed from the bullpen.

    • Jesús Luzardo brought some serious velocity on Tuesday, a clear sign that he knew the stakes. His fastball nearly touched 100 miles per hour at one point, and despite the brutally small strike zone of a call-up umpire he was able to work his way out of trouble in the first and fourth innings.

    With a 2-0 lead entering the fifth inning, Luzardo also lost it. He bookended two singles with a hit batsman and walk, and suddenly his night was over. Luzardo let out his frustration on the umpire after being removed from the game and was promptly ejected. A degree in lip-reading is not needed here:

    Orion Kerkering entered a game before the sixth inning for just the second time all year with no outs and the bases loaded trying to protect a one-run lead. He failed to do so. All three of Luzardo’s runners scored and Kerkering gave up an earned run of his own.

    Bader’s aforementioned big swing knotted the game up in the eighth inning, and the Phillies put a runner in scoring position later in the inning before Mets closer Edwin Díaz put out the fire. José Alvarado and Díaz then traded scoreless frames, taking a 5-5 game to the bottom of the ninth inning. New Phillies closer Jhoan Duran was introduced to the team’s fiercest rivalry and gave up four consecutive singles, with Brandon Nimmo’s ending the game.

    • As manager Rob Thomson continues to shuffle his outfielders on a daily basis, he went with three different combinations on the grass in this series. On Wednesday, Brandon Marsh sat despite a right-handed pitcher being on the mound. Perhaps it was Bader being rewarded for hitting a clutch home run the night before, even though Bader’s game-tying two-run shot against Ryan Helsley in the eighth inning did not end up leading to a complete comeback.Here is how the Phillies looked in the outfield in each game of this series:

    Day Opposing pitcher LF CF RF
    Monday Kodai Senga (R) Marsh Bader Kepler
    Tuesday Sean Manaea (L) Wilson Bader Castellanos
    Wednesday Nolan McLean (R) Kepler Bader Castellanos

    Each of Max Kepler and Nick Castellanos getting two starts seemed likely before the series, but the same could have been said for Bader and Marsh. Instead, Bader started in center field all three days while Marsh sat on Tuesday and Wednesday.

    Up next: The Phillies are returning home for a four-game series against the Atlanta Braves beginning on Thursday. That precedes a six-game road trip, which will be followed up by another series against the Mets — that time in Philadelphia.


    Follow Adam on Twitter: @SixersAdam
    Follow PhillyVoice on Twitter: @thephillyvoice

    [ad_2]

    Adam Aaronson

    Source link

  • Phillies clinch NL East title, Wild Card bye with series win over Cubs

    Phillies clinch NL East title, Wild Card bye with series win over Cubs

    [ad_1]

    The Phillies got their postseason spot, then their first NL East title in 13 years, and now they have their first-round bye into the NLDS.

    In front of a sold-out Citizens Bank Park crowd for the last time in the 2024 regular season, the Phillies beat the Chicago Cubs 9-6 on Wednesday night to take 2 of 3 in the final homestand, which coupled with a Milwaukee Brewers loss to the Pittsburgh Pirates, bought them a valuable few extra days of rest before the fabled Red October comes back around again. 

    All that’s left now is one more three-game set in Washington against the Nationals, and one last push in a race with the Dodgers to try and claim the NL’s top seed. 

    But it’s been a whirlwind few days for the Fightin’ Phils already. Here’s a rundown of it all…

    The Toast

    The regular-season clock was ticking and magic numbers were shrinking. 

    Red October, at this rate, was a near inevitability, and to an extent, the NL East title, too. But the Phillies still needed to bag a few more games to get there. 

    Last Friday against the Mets up in Queens, the Phils punched their first ticket. 

    Cristopher Sánchez was stellar for five innings, then the bullpen took over and shut New York down, all while the offense teed off for 12 runs on 17 hits. 

    The Phillies won, 12-2, and although they eventually lost 3 of 4 for the series, they clinched their postseason berth at the very least. 

    But the party wasn’t on just yet. 

    In the visiting clubhouse afterward, the team put a hold on the overalls, blaring music, and flying champagne. 

    They made a toast instead, knowing there was more for them to chase after. 

    “This is the first step,” manager Rob Thomson told his club. “We can’t have a countdown, J.T., because we don’t know how many games we’ll have. But when we know, I’ll ask you. 

    “But congrats. This is a huge accomplishment. I love you guys, and this is the first step of many more.”

    The Party

    The Phillies came back to Citizens Bank Park on Monday for their last home series of the regular season. 

    The magic number to clinch the division dropped to one. The first NL East pennant in 13 years was right there for the taking against the Cubs, and in front of the South Philly faithful.

    Aaron Nola, the longest-tenured Phillie, took the mound and tossed through 6.0 innings before the ball was given to Matt Strahm in relief with the bases loaded. But by then, the Phils were already up 6-1, J.T. Realmuto, Kyle Schwarber and Nick Castellanos had put a dent in the Cubs, and Nola was walking back to the dugout with a crowd of 42,000-plus on their feet for him. 

    It was fitting.

    Two years ago, way late into a 2022 season when absolutely nothing felt certain yet, Nola was on the bump with a chance to lead the Phillies into the postseason for the first time in 11 years. He gave them 6.2 shutout innings to kickstart what became the October run of a lifetime. 

    So of course it was him on Monday night, leading the charge on putting another franchise drought of over a decade to bed. 

    And the Phillies did

    The bullpen held the line again and deadline acquisition Carlos Estévez registered the final out to what’s become his signature Dragon Ball celebration as the rest of the team huddled around the mound.

    The white 2024 division pennant was out, the team photo was taken, and now it was time for a party in the clubhouse

    Thomson brought owner and CEO John Middleton in to kick the celebration off. He re-stated the phrase that’s been his whole M.O. since building up this era of Phillies baseball…

    “I want my f—ing trophy back!”

    The champagne flew. 

    But there was still work to do.

    The Hangover

    The postseason spot was clinched, the NL East title was clinched, but the Phillies still had a chase to close out against the Dodgers and Brewers for a bye straight into the NLDS – and possibly the league’s No. 1 seed.

    For the physical toll this season has taken on them throughout, they needed the extra few days’ worth of rest and could’ve moved a step closer to it with another win on Tuesday night. 

    But Tuesday night was the notorious hangover game, and…yeah…

    The Final Touches

    The dullness didn’t linger. 

    On Wednesday night, for the last game in front of the Citizens Bank Park crowd before the postseason, the first-round bye was on the table. The Phillies needed a win and a Milwaukee loss to clinch it. 

    Trea Turner opened with a solo shot in the first, and then Bryson Stott quickly followed up with a two-run double after a Bryce Harper walk and a Castellanos two-bagger to immediately make it 3-0.

    Castellanos came back to homer in third, Kody Clemens put a ball in the center-field ivy in the fourth, Brandon Marsh cleared the deck with a bases-loaded double in the fifth, and then Realmuto drove in a run on a liner in the seventh to withstand two Chicago home runs from Nico Hoerner for the 9-6 win.

    The Phillies did their part, taking the series finale and 2 of 3 from Chicago, while the Pirates held the Brewers to a 2-1 defeat to lock the Wild Card bye in for Philadelphia.

    The series in Washington to tune up and possibly claim the top seed from the Dodgers for full home-field advantage is all that’s left until the calendar flips.

    “I think it’s huge to get these guys some rest, and now we can sort of plan out our pitching for the weekend,” Thomson said postgame. “Our starters, I mean, they’re gonna have to start – [Ranger Suárez], [Zack Wheeler], and Nola – but we can pull them back a little bit.”

    Then it’s on to the real show, which will begin back here at Citizens Bank Park on Oct. 5 for Game 1 of the NLDS.

    “We’re all excited,” Marsh said from the clubhouse. “We worked our butts off for this moment. We’re gonna make the best of it.”


    Follow Nick on Twitter: @itssnick

    Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice Sports

    [ad_2]

    Nick Tricome

    Source link

  • 5 things we learned about the Phillies as they win a big-time series against the Braves

    5 things we learned about the Phillies as they win a big-time series against the Braves

    [ad_1]

    The Phillies took three of four from the Braves in a thrilling and mostly entertaining series in Philly this weekend, surrounding a 7-2 stinker with comeback wins and pitching dominance.

    From a pair of teams that are no strangers — the Phillies upset the Braves in back-to-back playoff series the last two years (ironically 3-games-to-1 each time) — Philly continues to assert dominance. And the timing couldn’t be better.

    Expect to see the Phillies back on top of power rankings and World Series odds next week, as the push for Red October heats up.

    What happens in the regular season will be irrelevant very soon — performing in the playoffs is all that matters. Did we learn anything from their tango with Atlanta that can preview what we might see from this team come October?

    Here are five things we learned from the series victory:

    Primetime players

    The Phillies haven’t played in a playoff atmosphere for nearly a year. Yes, they have had more than a few sellouts. They swept a high powered Dodgers team at home. They’ve thrilled the fans with the most home wins in Major League Baseball.

    But in their series against the Braves, the pressure was on. A Braves series win makes the division a race again. And wth three of the four games broadcast nationally in prime time — the team was in its element. If you remember, the 2023 postseason featured the Phillies prominently placed in the 8 pm time slot for every single game they played. 

    In a tie game in the Sunday finale, needing to win to jump way ahead in the NL East race, the anxiety was high and so was the volume. In the ninth, with Matt Strahm on the mound, the reliever was able tip toe around a bases loaded, one-out jam and give the Phillies a chance to walk off in the ninth.

    When the rivals got to the 11th, Nick Castellanos capped off a series he won’t soon forget driving in a walk-off run. Castellanos has been a monster over the last few weeks but this one is up there:

    They’ve got some fight in them

    The series opener had all the makings of one of those games where the Phillies go quietly into the night without showing much fight. And then after stranding a bunch of hitters on base for the first six innings, Braves manager Brian Snitker made a horrible mistake. 

    After throwing 101 pitches — and dancing around a bevy of baserunners — 40-year-old Charlie Morton was kept in the game to face off against left-handed hitting Brandon Marsh, who has gigantic splits between lefties and righties. 

    This three-run homer in the sixth got the Phillies on the board for the first time in more than 15 innings and put some momentum back in Citizens Bank Park:

    And then in the seventh Castellanos made it feel like October came early with a two-run go-ahead blast:

    From a 4-0 stinker to a 5-4 comeback win.

    Zack Wheeler has a Cy Young case

    Yeah, we knew this before, but amid Phillies pitchers struggling and going through cold streaks, Wheeler has been outrageously consistent all season long and he is clearly among the top three or four pitchers in the conversation for the award — one he’s come close to winning but has never taken home.

    In his start Saturday, Phillies bats supported Wheeler with a pair of solo shots from Edmundo Sosa and Trea Turner and a Sosa triple. But the defense made some potentially critical mistakes (including an error from fill-in third baseman Weston Wilson and some un-turned double plays). 

    It actually could have been three solo shots by the way — but perhaps the catch of the year took one away from Austin Hays in the seventh:

    Amid all of that, Wheeler was his steady self, tossing seven innings of shutout baseball while striking out eight and scattering four hits. It was his career 100th win. 

    Having an ace like Wheeler to rely on could literally be the difference in October. He made a difference every fifth day in August.

    Has Ranger Suárez lost his ace stuff?

    Suárez was another Phillies hurler with a beefy Cy Young campaign leading into the All-Star break, but he hit the skids with four terrible starts in row following a 10-1 stretch with a 1.75 ERA through his first 15. He hit the Injured List and missed about a month before he returned last week. He looked good in five one-run innings in Kansas City.

    But then in Game 2 of the series against the Braves Friday, Suárez looked like the he did right before he missed that month of games. The lefty was roughed up for four runs in four innings. The Phillies offense did little to lift him off the mat, but the start was just the second time (that was not injury related) that he failed to get through five innings this season.

    A healthy Suárez will be getting handed the baseball third in a potential postseason series, and having him pitching like he did in June has to be a very high priority for the team.

    Finally, some relief

    The Phillies had their equivalent to the Eagles’ “gauntlet” of games against contenders over the last few weeks and somehow the team still controls its NL East destiny.

    Starting on July 22 against the Twins, the Phillies had 10 of 12 series against teams in the playoff picture. Over those 32 games, the Phillies won 14 games, including three against the Braves to hold a seven-game lead for the division. With 25 games remaining that’s nearly insurmountable.

    There are eight series remaining in the regular season. The Phillies will face just one team currently in playoff position — the NL Central-leading Brewers at home — and two NL Wild Card hopefuls, the Cubs and Mets (twice). A look at their remaining opponents:

    Dates Team Record
    Sept 3-4 at Blue Jays 66-72
    Sept 5-8 at Marlins 51-86
    Sept 9-11 vs. Rays 67-69
    Sept 13-15 vs. Mets 71-64
    Sept 16-18 at Brewers 79-56
    Sept 19-22 at Mets 73-64
    Sept 23-25 vs Cubs 71-66
    Sept 27-29 at Nationals 61-76

    Follow Evan on Twitter: @evan_macy

    Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice Sports

    [ad_2]

    Evan Macy

    Source link

  • What Does the Addition of Austin Hays Mean for the Phillies? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    What Does the Addition of Austin Hays Mean for the Phillies? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    At first glance, the Phillies’ trade for outfielder Austin Hays from the Baltimore Orioles is not all that exciting.
    Despite making the All-Star team last year, the right-handed hitting outfielder is not a superstar or at least a burgeoning one, like the White Sox’s Luis Robert Jr.

    His game does not explode off the screen–in more limited action this year than in years past, Hays is hitting .248 with just three home runs in 165 plate appearances. So no, Austin Hays as a player is not inherently exciting–but what he could mean for the team in 2024 is. Hays was brought in to fill a gaping hole in the Phillies’ battered and weary lineup: a righty-hitting outfielder. His services cost the team, Cristian Pache and Seranthony Dominguez, opening another hole in the bullpen and starting a conversation around playing time.


    How will Brandon Marsh and Johan Rojas be used now that Hays is on the roster? 


    The initial assumption was that Hays, who positively crushes left-handed pitching–batting .328 with a .894 OPS in 72 at-bats this year–would platoon in left field with Marsh, who hasn’t hit left-handed pitching whatsoever this year.

    Instead, manager Rob Thomson has expressed that Hays would get the chance to start every day. And why not?

    Hays does have the pedigree: from 2021 to 2023, he hit .261 cumulatively, with home run totals of 22, 16, and 16, respectively. He can play all three outfield positions and’ll be under team control via salary arbitration next year


    There is a simple truth to Hay’s acquisition: the Phillies are not comfortable, especially in the postseason, with Marsh and Rojas’ ability to start in the outfield every day.


    Marsh, for all of his lovability and defense versatility, cannot hit lefties to save his life. Rojas, who was sent down to AAA earlier this year, cannot hit any pitcher regardless of which hand throws the ball.In October, the Phillies will invariably face a gauntlet of left-handed pitching.


    Whether Hays starts every day or rotates in a platoon with Marsh, the Phillies are primed to be better prepared against lefties

    PHOTO: —

    [ad_2]

    Dylan Campbell

    Source link

  • Trouble in Paradise: Will a Rash of Injuries Spoil the Phillies’ Hot Start? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Trouble in Paradise: Will a Rash of Injuries Spoil the Phillies’ Hot Start? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    Let’s check the standings. As of Monday, June 3rd, the Philadelphia Phillies are technically the second-best team in all of baseball with a 41-19 record, a half game behind the New York Yankees after Sunday night’s extra inning loss to St. Louis. They are 6.5 games up on their N.L. East rivals the Atlanta Braves in the divisional race and enter tonight’s game against Milwaukee with their ace Zack Wheeler on the mound. So everything’s great right? 

    Eh maybe not. The Phillies’ bubble finally burst last week on their road trip out West. They started by losing two out of three to the far inferior Colorado Rockies. Unfortunate, but annoying for a team playing as well as they have been. Then they lost two out of three to the more adequately matched Giants. Both series saw the team’s signature offense fall flat, their ability to hit with runners in scoring position diminish and their pitching, both from the rotation and the bullpen, struggled. This weekend they rebounded with a series win over the visiting Cardinals, however, those victories came with a cost. 

    On Saturday night, starting pitcher extraordinaire Ranger Suarez took a 106.1 mph line drive to the left forearm with two outs in the bottom of the second inning. Suarez, in his calm, cool, gunslinger fashion, completed the play before exiting into the clubhouse in apparent pain. The Phillies ‘pen dominated the rest of the way and the crafty left-hander escaped without any major injury, but the extent of his injury, a left-hand contusion, is unknown. For now, Suarez is just as likely to pitch in London on Saturday as he is to miss his next three starts. 

    Sunday’s extra-innings loss to the Cardinals brought another casualty to the team’s roster. Outfielder Brandon Marsh came up limping after he rounded second base in the bottom of the eighth inning, clutching his right hamstring and signaling immediately to the dugout for the trainer. Marsh, who was hitting .304 against right-handed pitching, left the game and presumably will miss some time. The exact prognosis of his right hamstring strain is unknown, but the feeling is all too familiar for Phillies fans. Superstar shortstop Trea Turner left May 3rd’s contest against San Francisco after injuring his hamstring and has not seen the field since. Although all news surrounding Turner’s recovery has been positive, a timetable for his return has not yet been announced. 

    So here it is. For the first time all year, the Phillies are facing a little bit of adversity. This month it comes in the form of injuries, a wonky trip across the pond and a tougher schedule. This is baseball, teams don’t live permanently on Cloud 9, they merely rent a house on it for a matter of weeks until they come back down to Earth. The question is, if the Phillies do fall back down, how far will they fall? 

    From all reports, Ranger Suarez’s left arm will be fine in a couple of weeks, so his absence for a start or two shouldn’t be the end of the world. Brandon Marsh’s prolonged absence from left-field, however, does prompt some more significant concerns about the roster. The Phillies have been fortunate that in the wake of Turner’s absence, utility man Edmundo Sosa has filled in superbly, slashing .304/.373/.576 with four triples and four home runs on the season. There isn’t as quite a clear replacement in the outfield, however. Earlier today, the team brought up David Dahl, a 2019 All-Star who leads Lehigh Valley in hits and home runs on the season. The 30-year-old Dahl is a left-handed bat–something that could prove crucial for a number of reasons. One, Kody Clemmons, the seemingly obvious choice to hit from the left-side has been placed on the 10-day IL with back spasms. Clemmons, who has thrived in a utility role this season, isn’t quite as natural in the outfield as he is in the infield, however. Two, bench bats Cristian Pache and Whit Merrifield have both struggled mightily at the plate this year. Merrifield, an $8 million free-agent acquisition, has hit just .176 with two homers across 114 plate appearances. Originally thought to be the stand-in at second base for Trea Turner–with Bryson Stott sliding to shortstop–Merrifield’s offensive shortcomings have paved the way for Sosa to see increased time at short. 

    The outfield has been the team’s weakest unit to date. With the ongoing experiment of Johan Rojas in center, Nick Castellanos’ struggles in right field, Marsh’s up and down performance in left and the less than stellar performance of their two bench bats, the team’s outfield has ranked in the bottom five on the league offensively through the first 60 games. Since the team’s been winning, the group’s poor performance hasn’t been much of a conversation. If the Phillies falter, however, then the outfield is going to be viewed with a far more critical eye. 

     

    [ad_2]

    Dylan Campbell

    Source link

  • For the 30-win Phillies, the Best is Yet to Come – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    For the 30-win Phillies, the Best is Yet to Come – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    Zach Wheeler isn’t happy.
    The Phillies ace, who ranks second in the N.L. in strikeouts, had his worst start of the season on Sunday against the Marlins, allowing six runs on six hits and three walks over just four innings.

    He’s admitted over the first month and a half of the regular season that he hasn’t had his “best stuff.” He’s been battling through some things, often unseen, as his command hasn’t been quite as sharp as it usually is. The catch? He’s currently in the lead for the N.L. Cy Young award, perhaps only rivaled by his battery mate Ranger Suarez, with a 2.53 ERA, 0.99 WHIP, 11.0 K/9, and a .190 BAA. 

    Wheeler’s dominance, in spite of not living up to his own performance standards, is a microcosm of how the Phillies have played this season. Yes, entering Tuesday’s matchup against the Mets, the Phillies have the best record in MLB, up 2.0 games on Atlanta with a gaudy 29-13 start to the regular season.


    And while some degree of regression is to be expected, there is evidence to support the theory that the best is yet to come for this talented Phillies roster. 


    Trea Turner’s Absence

    Since the Phillies star shortstop left May 3rd’s matchup against San Francisco with a hamstring strain–the first victory in a four-game sweep of the Giants–the Phillies have gone 7-2, splitting a two-game set against the Blue Jays and winning three out of four in Miami. Turner’s absence has paved the way for some of the team’s utility players to get extended reps. Edmundo Sosa has taken the opportunity in full stride–entering Tuesday’s matchup, Sosa had made six straight starts at shortstop, hitting .375 (6 for 16) with two triples, two doubles, three RBIs, and most notably, five walks. In 2023, Sosa had a walk rate of just 2.7% in 300 plate appearances. In 2024, he has a walk rate of 11.1% in just 54 plate appearances. 

    Kody Clemens has become the utility man extraordinaire since his call-up to the big leagues on April 22. He has five hits in 15 plate appearances, many of them clutch, including a pinch-hit single in the 9th inning to invigorate a rally against Mets closer Edwin Diaz. He added to his night with a heroic leaping catch at second base in the bottom of the 9th.


    An Opening in the Outfield

    Turner’s absence, combined with a lingering back injury that took Kyle Schwarber out of much of the series against Miami, has shifted the lineup enough to where another young, promising utility man has had a chance to shine: outfielder Cristian Pache. The 25-year-old from the Dominican Republic has seen limited playing time in 2024–in 42 games, Pache has made only 10 starts with just 30 at-bats.

    The rise of Johan Rojas, combined with the presence of Whit Merrifield and starting left fielder Brandon Marsh, has made it difficult for Pache to stand out. However, in the last seven days, Pache has made three starts, hitting .385 with two RBIs in 13 plate appearances. Pache’s physical tools in the outfield, he ranked in the 94th percentile of arm strength in 2023, paired with Marsh’s continued inability to hit left-handed pitching, could pave the way for more playing time in the coming weeks. 


    Bryson Stott’s Resurgence

    Middle infielder Bryson Stott had a tough start to the 2024 season. A strong 2023 campaign had left expectations higher than ever for Stott in his third year with the big league club. Pre-season polls had him ranked amongst the 10 best second basemen in the sport, and his Gold Glove-level defense, combined with his power at the plate and speed on the base paths, primed the 26-year-old for a breakout in 2024. However, things didn’t go as planned. Stott entered the month of May hitting just .225, with more strikeouts (17) than walks (11). He was more of a burden than a contributor, unable to be the power bat in the middle of the lineup that the team envisioned him as. 

    Despite his poor start to the year, Stott remained confident in his abilities and the results have started to show. Along with playing excellent defense at both second base and shortstop, Stott has been on fire as of late, hitting .433 and slugging .700 in the month of May. His emergence into the player he is capable of being will be key to the team’s continued success.


    In the face of adversity, the Phillies have continued to find ways to win.
    With a roster as deep as any in the sport, they’ve proven that they can add to their win total in any way–from bottom-of-the-order contributions against Miami to late-inning heroics in the Big Apple, their depth and tenacity are why the best may still be yet to come for this Phillies squad. 

    PHOTO: —

    [ad_2]

    Dylan Campbell

    Source link

  • Assessing the Phillies’ Starting Outfield Three Weeks into the Regular Season – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Assessing the Phillies’ Starting Outfield Three Weeks into the Regular Season – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    The same thing happened last year. In the midst of the Phillies’ early-season mediocrity, outfielder Brandon Marsh got off to a torrid start.
    According to Newton’s law, however, what comes up must always come down, and Marsh’s hot start petered out to a banal slash line of .277/.372/.458 with 12 home runs, 60 RBI, and 10 stolen bases over 133 games. 

    However, things are not the same as they were last year. After sweeping both the Rockies and the White Sox, the Phillies are 14-8 through their first 22 games, their best 22-game start since 2018. The rotation, which struggled early in 2023, has been magnificent, posting a cumulative 2.25 ERA to start the year. And Brandon Marsh, at least in April, has continued to impress. Through 20 games, Marsh is hitting .288/.324/.561 – a similar line to 2023’s full season – however, he already has five home runs and 13 RBI. 

    In the field, Marsh has been perfectly solid, which is a drastic upgrade in left field from Kyle Schwarber. Save for a few blips, his defense is trustworthy, and his arm, which ranks 5th in arm value per Baseball Savant, has the ability to elevate him from an average corner outfielder to a very good one.


    Left Field

    At the plate, the usual demons continue to plague Marsh, however: left-handed pitching and a high strikeout rate. These are invariably tied together–Marsh’s high strikeout rate of 36.6% is buoyed by his struggles against left-handed pitching. 11 of his 26 total strikeouts come against left-handers. For context, he only has 21 total plate appearances against lefties and is hitting just .197 in that span.

    This year Marsh has made just four of his 20 starts against lefties. In 2023, it was just 18 of 117, or roughly 15%. Against right-handers, Marsh clearly has what it takes to play every day. Unfortunately, the Phillies are going to need to see a marked improvement against left-handed pitching to have the confidence to start Marsh every single day. 

    Center Field

    In center field, the Johan Rojas experiment seems to finally be yielding positive results at the plate. Although his defense has never been a question, Rojas got off to a freezing cold start at the plate; however, the tide appears to be turning. Since starting the season 1-22, Rojas has clawed his way back to a more than respectable .264 batting average with six steals and just eight strikeouts in his 59 plate appearances this April.

    This is thanks to a torrid stretch over the last two weeks in which Rojas has walked just as much as he’s struck out and hit .429/.455/.484 over 34 plate appearances. He’s also stolen five of his six bases in the year. It turns out that when he gets on base, swiping second isn’t all that difficult for the speedy 23-year-old. 

    Right Field

    In right field, Nick Castellanos has had a tough time. In 79 at-bats, Castellanos is hitting just .177 and has yet to log a home run. After a resurgent 2023 campaign, this is not the start the Phillies nor Castellanos were hoping for. Unfortunately, when he’s going bad, it looks awful–he’s constantly caught in between, behind on fastballs, ahead on breaking balls, and unable to generate competitive at-bats.

    With Castellanos, the assumption and hope is that he’ll eventually turn things around. Because while the Phillies are winning, they are doing so largely in spite of him.


    If they can get Castellanos hitting somewhat close to the level that they expect out of him, then the lineup will be even more of a nightmare for opposing pitchers than it already is.

    PHOTO: —

    [ad_2]

    Dylan Campbell

    Source link

  • Revisiting the Brandon Marsh Trade – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Revisiting the Brandon Marsh Trade – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    [ad_1]

    Despite missing the bulk of spring training with unexpected arthroscopic surgery on his knee, Brandon Marsh has been the Phillies’ best and most consistent hitter through the team’s first 16 games.

    Marsh is batting over .300, leads the team in home runs, and is touting an OPS of just under 1 to start the year. Although Marsh was viewed as a platoon piece in left field, set to split time with the newly added Whit Merrifield, he has seemingly taken over the job for the time being. Marsh has proved thus far that he can indeed hit lefties while Merrifield has struggled to find his footing yet offensively. 

    There was a ton of skepticism when the Phillies traded their top prospect, catcher Logan O’Hoppe, to the Angels for Marsh at the 2022 trade deadline. O’Hoppe was highly regarded by the Phillies but the team lacked leverage because O’Hoppe’s path to the majors was blocked by JT Realmuto who was already considered by many as the best catcher in baseball and already signed to a big contract. 

    Marsh was still a great prospect though. Before reaching the majors in 2021, Marsh was ranked as the 53rd best prospect in all of baseball according to Baseball America. His success in the minors had not translated to the majors however as he struggled to put the bat on the ball during his time with the Angels. 

    The trade made sense from a fit perspective as the Phillies had no real options in centerfield. Odubel Herrera’s career had fallen off a cliff at the time and Marsh was under team control until his age 30 season in 2028. 

    Although Marsh isn’t necessarily considered the centerfielder of the future just yet for the Phillies, the conversation is not dead. Johan Rojas’ bat has shown signs of life over the last week, but if Rojas can’t get it together offensively Marsh could very well work his way back into centerfield, and given his start to the season, it wouldn’t be surprising if he never gives it back. 

    Looking back almost two years later, this trade seems like a win-win for both clubs as Marsh has come into his own in Philadelphia after a very good 2023 season and a great start to 2024 while O’Hoppe seems to have a very bright future as the franchise catcher in Anaheim. 

    Photo via Yahoo! Sports

    [ad_2]

    Evan Carroll

    Source link

  • Phillies Quick 6: 2 of 3 from the Nats gets Philly on track

    Phillies Quick 6: 2 of 3 from the Nats gets Philly on track

    [ad_1]

    Nothing like a series against the Nats to get things back on track – well, somewhat. 

    The Phillies took two of three on the road from Washington this weekend, though closing out with a 3-2 loss on Sunday, leaving them within a game of the .500 mark at 4-5 heading to St. Louis next. 

    It isn’t all perfect – it never is with this club – but it’s still early into the season and this three-game set brought some promising signs, though with some more to be concerned about. 

    For now, here are a quick six thoughts on the series to take things into a new week…

    • In the series opener on Friday, a 4-0 shutout win, Aaron Nola got his second turn on the bump and put up 5.2 scoreless innings with only two hits surrendered. He struck out only four and was pulled after 95 pitches, but brought much sharper stuff and a much better performance than his first go against the Braves when he got tagged for 11 hits and six earned runs. 

    Nola is durable and dependable, and when him and Zack Wheeler are at the top of the rotation and fully on, there’s arguably no better 1-2 punch in baseball. We know this.

    But what we also know, and have for years now, is that there are three versions of Aaron Nola, and which one you’re going to get can often be a dice roll. A big key for the 30-year old and longest-tenured Phillie this season is going to be in making sure that he brings out his best stuff as consistently as possible, because his best stuff either has batters whiffing on breaking pitches or reaching for contact on grounders that amount to nothing. 

    Probably pretty safe to say that few fans want to be holding their breath throughout the summer and, hopefully, well into October when the fourth inning rolls around on Nola’s day. 

    Again, early into the season, and we only have a sample size of two here. Let’s see how the rest of April shakes out for him.

    Kyle Schwarber pulled a two-run single into right early into Friday night, then notched another base hit on Sunday after going 0-for-5 in game 2 (with 3 strikeouts). He entered Sunday’s game batting .257 at the top of the order. This time last year, he was batting .158.

    Who said he couldn’t hit for average?

    J.T. Realmuto crushed a two-run bomb in Saturday’s 5-2 win, and Alec Bohm made the highlight reel with an RBI triple and then a barehanded grab in the field. 

    That’s Bohm at his best, and what could quietly make him one of the better third baseman in the NL if he can do that consistently. Sunday, not so much with an 0-for-3 effort and the strikeout to end it offensively, and then an offline throw on a grounder that pulled Bryce Harper off the bag at first to allow an infield hit. 

    Bohm’s come a long way from “I f***ing hate this place” two years ago, but can be a polarizing player within the lineup among fans for what he has offered so far compared to the idea of what he still could in the way of more power (he hasn’t homered yet this season) and sharper fielding.

    Edmundo Sosa started at second on Sunday and did everything he could to push the Phillies to win this one, first with an RBI single into left in the second and then a solo shot to tie it up 202 in the fifth. 

    They didn’t come through this time, but he has really left them in good shape reaching into the bench ever since getting to Philly from the 2022 trade deadline. 

    Brandon Marsh drove in the first run on Friday with a bases-loaded sac fly off Patrick Corbin, a lefty. He really pushed that one into center, too. Then on Saturday in the ninth, he bounced one off the mound and through the middle to score Bryson Stott from second and make it a 5-2 ballgame. 

    On Sunday, Marsh sat and Whitt Merrifield took the start in left with the Nationals sending out MacKenzie Gore, another lefty. 

    It has to be kept in mind that Marsh did only recently return from late offseason knee surgery, but a key point in his development is figuring out how to hit off lefties, and it’s been noticeable that the Phillies have been protecting him from that so far. 

    Again, this is another thing to monitor and see if it might gradually loosen up over the course of the season.

    Johan Rojas also sat on Sunday. He’s a miserable 1-for-22 eight games in. Cristian Pache took over in center, and at this point, you do have to wonder if the scale between what Rojas brings in the field versus what he can do at the plate has tipped, and if the call might be coming to send him down to Triple-A. 

    The situation for the 23-year old entering 2024 was always positioned as a sink or swim one, and so far, he’s struggled mightily to stay afloat with his bat. Some time in Lehigh Valley might be the best thing for him now after bypassing that part of the minor-league climb entirely last season. 


    Follow Nick on Twitter: @itssnick

    Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice Sports

    [ad_2]

    Nick Tricome

    Source link

  • Phillies lose 5th straight, Cubs sweep season series 6-0

    Phillies lose 5th straight, Cubs sweep season series 6-0

    [ad_1]

    CHICAGO — The Phillies lost their fifth straight game and dropped into a tie for the National League’s final wild card berth as the Chicago Cubs swept the season series from Philadelphia with a 2-0 victory on Thursday.

    Philadelphia was tied with Milwaukee at 83-72, pending the Brewers’ game against Miami later Thursday in the opener of a four-game series.

    Seeking their first playoff berth since 2011, the Phillies have lost the first three games of a season-ending 10-game trip and 10 of 13 overall since peaking at a season-best 80-62. Philadelphia has scored three runs or fewer in nine of those 13 games.

    “We’ve got to swing the bats a little bit better than we did, especially with runners in scoring position,” onterim manager Rob Thomson said, “But yeah, we’ve got to turn around here pretty quick. We’re getting good pitching. We’ve just got to string some hits together and we’ll be fine.”

    The Phillies were 22-29 on June 3 when Thomson replaced Joe Girardi as manager.

    Philadelphia holds the tiebreaker against Milwaukee, winning the season series 4-2. The Phillies go to major league-worst Washington for four games, then close with three at AL-best Houston. The Brewers finish with three games at home against Arizona.

    Bryce Harper had three of six hits for the Phillies, who are 1 for their last 21 with runners in scoring position. J.T. Realmuto went 0 for 4 and struck out twice in his 1,000th game.

    Philadelphia had not been swept in a season series of five or more games since Milwaukee went 7-0 in 2015.

    “We’re still in it,” said Harper, the reigning NL MVP. “We have seven games left. We’ve got a road ahead us, but we’ve got to keep playing, got to keep going, not having a mindset about losing and thinking about that.

    Harper said the team assembled by President of Baseball Operations Dave Dombrowski was postseason caliber.

    “We’ve got a great team here,” Harper said. ”We’ve got a lot of great players. Dombrowksi put this team together to win games and get into the playoffs. You know, we need to do that.”

    Rookie Javier Assad (2-2) allowed five hits in five innings as he rebounded from pair of rough outings when he allowed eight runs in six innings. Keegan Thompson gave up one hit over three innings for his second big league save and first this year.

    Patrick Wisdom doubled twice and drove in a run and Seiya Suzuki was 2 for 3 as the Cubs completed a three-game sweep in which they limited the Phillies to three runs. Chicago has won eight of nine overall and swept the Mets in New York two weeks ago.

    “It’s fun to play well. It’s fun to win,” said Ian Happ, who drove in Chicago’s second run. “But those are the little things that motivate you as you kind of come down the stretch and being able to compete against good teams that are in playoff position.”

    Ranger Suárez (10-6) gave up two runs and seven hits in six innings. He had been 4-0 in 12 starts since a June 29 defeat to Atlanta.

    Three of Chicago’s first four batters reached. Wisdom’s first double drove in a run in what would have been a bigger rally had Willson Contreras not been out at home on Happ’s chopper to Suárez,

    Suzuki tripled with two outs in the fifth when center fielder Brandon Marsh lost his deep fly in the sun and the ball dropped in front of him, inches from his glove. Suzuki scored on Happ’s single.

    Happ made a nifty sliding catch of Marsh’s fly at the left side wall for the first out of the ninth.

    SUZUKI RETURNS

    Suzuki played his first game after returning from paternity leave in Japan.

    LOSING COUNT

    After singling in these second, Jean Segura was tagged out by Assad to end the inning after he wandered off first after losing track of the count to batter Nick Maton. The count was 3-1, but Wrigley’s antique center-field scoreboard showed ball four. Segura pointed the scoreboard, to no avail.

    TRAINER’S ROOM

    Phillies: OF Nick Castellanos was held out the starting lineup for a rest day, but pinch hit in the ninth and got an infield single. He returned Tuesday after missing three weeks with right oblique strain.

    UP NEXT:

    Phillies: LHP Bailey Falter (5-4, 4.21) and RHP Noah Syndergaard (9-10, 4.12) will start in a day-night doubleheader Friday. Both were sent to the team’s hotel in Washington in advance.

    Cubs: Adrian Sampson (3-5, 3.23) faces Cincinnati’s Graham Ashcraft (5-4, 4-18) on Friday as Chicago opens its final home series.

    ———

    More AP MLB: https://apnews.com/hub/MLB and https://twitter.com/AP—Sports

    [ad_2]

    Source link