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Tag: cristopher sanchez

  • 61 – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Phillies

    On June 22, 2024, Sanchez and the Phillies agreed to a four–year, $22.5 million contract extension. This extension took place in the middle of Sanchez’s development. At the time it seemed like a great deal (it was), and today it is an even better deal. This is the best team friendly contract in the league. But how did we get here?

    The Beginning

    Cristopher Sanchez did not begin his career in Philadelphia. In fact, he was signed by the Tampa Bay Rays as an international free agent in 2013. Sanchez spent time in the Rays organization from 2013 – 2019 but never cracked the major leagues. During the 2019 off-season Sanchez was traded to the Phillies for Curtis Mead. Sanchez did not play for the Phillies in 2020 due to the COVID cancellation of the minor league season. 

    Quick Note: This trade turned into a huge win for the Phillies. Mead was a solid minor league player for the Rays but was never able to make an impact in the bigs. He played parts of the 2024 and 2025 season with the Rays. He was traded in July to the White Sox, where he was optioned to Triple-A.

    Making the Jump

    Sanchez was called up to the club multiple times in 2020 but never made an appearance for the Phillies. This changed when Sanchez was called up to the majors on June 6, 2021. That day, Sanchez made his debut for the Phillies, coming in for the final four outs, in a 12-6 win over the Nationals. Sanchez got his first ever major league strikeouts. He first strike out came against current Phillies shortstop, Trea Turner; and his second came against Juan Soto, on what is now a patented Sanchez change up. Pretty awesome to have your first strikeouts come against those players.

    In 2021 Sanchez made 7 total appearances for the club, starting one game. He finished the year with a 4.97 ERA/1.816 WHIP, with 13 ks and 7 walks over 12.2 innings pitched. These numbers reflect more of what the expectation was for Sanchez. He was supposed to be a nice role player to have on the staff. Instead, he has been able to do so much more. 

    The Development

    In 2022 Sanchez was still a work in progress. He spent most of his time in Leigh Valley with the Iron Pigs but made multiple appearances for the Phillies. This shows that even in 2022 Sanchez was trending to be a big league pitcher, he just didn’t have all the tools yet. He struggled during his time with the Phillies in 2022, mainly featured in a bullpen role, pitching in 15 games with 3 being starts. He finished the season with a 5.63 ERA/1.375 WHIP, with 35 ks and 17 walks over 40 innings pitched.

    2023

    This is where the rise truly began for Sanchez. After being tossed between the minors and majors for parts of two seasons, Sanchez was finally able to make his mark. The lanky lefty was called up to the Phillies on June 17th to bring stability to the 5th starter spot. In his first game he threw 4 scoreless innings and never saw the minors again. 

    Sanchez was able to bring a calmness to the already impressive Phillies rotation by posting a 3.44 ERA/1.047 WHIP, with 96 ks and 16 walks over 99.1 innings pitched. That season Sanchez was an unexpected gift. Minor league call-ups haven’t worked well for the Phillies. I have a hard time remembering the last minor leaguer to make a consistent winning impact on the Phillies.

    In 2022 he had 35 strikeouts and 17 walks pitching 40 innings. The following season pitching 90.1 innings he had 96 strikeouts and only 16 walks. That is the pitcher we are watching today. He always had it in him, whether some of us knew it then (unfortunately have to give credit to my brother here) or not there were flashes. Sanchez pitched 50 more innings, and all of his numbers improved, impressive stuff. 

    2024

    Clearly the Phillies liked what they saw from Sanchez in 2023 because the following season he earned a 4 year, 22.5 million dollar contract. At the time this seemed like a decent deal. Sanchez had not fully proved himself yet but showed he deserved a spot in the rotation. He was a reliable depth piece the Phillies were able to extend for cheap. Then the season unfolded and the contract kept looking better and better for the Phillies. 

    Cristopher threw his first complete game shut out on June 28th, 2024, just six days after his extension. He also went on to win pitcher of the month in June with a 3-0 record, 1.64 era, and 23 ks. With his success in 2023, Sanchez made himself invaluable to the Phillies. He locked up his place in the rotation by posting a 3.32 ERA/1.244 WHIP, with 153ks and 44 walks over 181.2 innings pitched. 

    Although there were flashes in 2023, the 2024 season is when we saw the elite sinker change-up combo begin to take shape. We also started to see Sanchez was going to be more than a rotation depth piece. He was beginning to make his name as a big league player, even though guys like Zack Wheeler and Aaron Nola were aces in the Phillies rotation. Even with his growth, what more could we expect from Sanchez. Did he peak in 2024? Will he be able to take his game to another level?

    2025

    The answer was yes. He took his game to a new stratosphere. Sanchez was unbelievable for the Phillies last season. Wheeler was the early season Cy Young favorite, but as the season progressed Sanchez was pitching just as well if not better than Wheeler. It turns out we had two aces on the staff. 

    The entire 2025 season I was enamored with Sanchez. Every time he took the mound, you were thinking, wow he is just so good. It makes it more special that Sanchez worked his way up through the minors. His development may not be a surprise to teammates, but it certainly was to the fans. The guy was supposed to help stabilize the back end of our rotation and instead became one of if not the best lefty pitcher in baseball. One reason for this is his devastating change-up. The Sanchez change-up is the best in baseball and maybe the best pitch any pitcher has in the league. He finished the year with a 2.50 ERA/1.064 WHIP, with 212 ks and 44 walks over 202 innings pitched, leading to a second place finish in the NL Cy Young.

    Grateful for Him

    Back in 2023, Sanchez showed flashes of talent and was able to cement himself in the majors but wasn’t able to make a consistent impact. He took huge strides in 2024, and his pitching went to a whole new level in 2025. The best part about it, is that it doesn’t feel like a flash in the pan. He is a legit talent that hitters fear. Wheeler went down and Sanchez did not blink. He was phenomenal in both of his playoff starts, putting the Phillies in position to win each of his games. 

    The development of Cristopher Sanchez is one of the biggest jumps I have ever seen a pitcher make. It is a great story to show you don’t need to be a prized free agent or mega prospect to make a difference. Sanchez put his head down and went to work. As I am, all of Philadelphia should be grateful for Sanchez. Because of him the Phillies don’t have to worry about their rotation as much and can focus on acquiring position players. Getting to see him develop from a fringe piece to a consistent starter, and now watching him master his craft, Sanchez’s development story is one for the ages. 

    Photo Credit: Kyle Ross/Imagn Images

    Tags: Cristopher Sanchez MLB Philadelphia Phillies

    Categorized: Phillies

    Liam Mahoney

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  • Jesús Luzardo’s tremendous bounce-back helps Phillies overcome deficit, finish vital sweep of Mets

    When we last saw the Mets and Phillies collide before this week, Cristopher Sánchez was seen kicking a water cooler in the dugout and Jesús Luzardo was shouting at the home-plate umpire while exiting the mound. 

    That was Aug. 25-27 in Queens at Citi Field, where the Mets are notoriously dominant – and where the Phillies are notoriously not. 

    Change the ballpark, change the fortune.

    After taking the first three games of the series, starting with Monday’s 1-0 win behind Aaron Nola’s most significant win of the season, the Phillies churned out two blowout wins by a 20-6 combined score before finishing off the four-game sweep Thursday night by rallying back from a four-run deficit to take the critical 6-4 win.

    Redemption for Sánchez and Luzardo came in the last two wins, with Sánchez slamming the doors on the Mets on Wednesday that guaranteed the Phils would at very least take the series.

    Luzardo showed remarkable poise after allowing four first-inning runs Thursday, silencing the Mets over the next six frames – retiring the last 22 batters he faced – while Otto Kemp, Bryce Harper and Nick Castellanos helped the Phils rally for six unanswered to send the Mets out of South Philly trailing in the National League East by 11 games with just 15 to play.

    The magic number for the Phillies to clinch the NL East is down to 5, and the possibility of a division clinch by the end of the weekend is in play.

    Here are some of the other major storylines from the Phillies’ sweep of the Mets:

    No Trea is OK

    The offense, especially the leadoff spot, passed its first test without Trea Turner and Alec Bohm, although Bryce Harper took home an oh-fer in the opening game from the leadoff hole. 

    Harrison Bader took the leadoff spot the rest of the way and delivered multi-hit games each time, combining to go 7-for-15 with a homer, double, and five RBIs. Bader is on fire, with four consecutive multi-hit games.

    Kemp, up from Triple-A Lehigh Valley again to help replace Bohm, clubbed a two-run homer in the fourth Thursday that cut the Mets’ lead to 4-2 as the Phils climbed out of an early hole, and his RBI double in the sixth tied the game. He also logged two hits, including a homer, in Tuesday’s win.

    Starters humiliate Mets offense

    Aaron Nola’s miserable, injury plagued season potentially came to a fork in the road, as Nola set the tone for the series by turning in his best start since his Aug. 17 return and perhaps inspired some confidence that he can be a functional starter in the postseason.

    Nola has a few more starts before the playoffs to build on Monday’s masterpiece and prove that he can be a starter if he’s needed, but even if Nola’s arrow trends upward, manager Rob Thomson’s decision isn’t being made easy as Sánchez, Ranger Suárez and Luzardo continue to make their cases.

    Suárez is racking up strikeouts at an unseen pace for him, as the southpaw fanned 12 in the 1-0 win Tuesday, giving him double-digit strikeouts for the third time in his past five starts. Consider this from MLB.com’s Paul Casella:

    Luzardo appeared to be en route to another one his implosions from earlier this season, allowing hits to five of the first six batters he faced, but the left-hander did much more than settle down or bounce back. When it appeared he might be knocked out early, Luzardo instead completed eight innings and struck out four of the last five batters he faced and 10 overall.

    Pete Alonso and Juan Soto were no-shows

    When the Mets needed them the most, their superstars couldn’t come through. 

    Alonso went 4-for-15 in the series and fanned seven times while Soto went 6-for-16 with a double and a run scored. Soto homered, but it came with the Mets down 9-1 in the eighth inning Wednesday, as hollow of a homer as there is.

    The supposedly dynamic duo combined to strike out six times in 10 at-bats Tuesday as they had no answer for Suárez. 

    And don’t let Francisco Lindor off the hook. Last year’s runner-up to Shohei Ohtani for MVP went hitless for the entire series in 16 at-bats, as the Mets’ offense was basically punchless out of the first inning Thursday night. 

    The Schwarbarian returned – can he break the record?

    Believe it not, Kyle Schwarber entered the series without a homer since his four-dinger showcase Aug. 28 against the Braves, an eight-game drought that reached nine when he went homer-less Monday night.

    And then came this Tuesday night in the seventh inning, with two on …

    Historic homer No. 50 put the dagger in the Mets by opening a 7-1 lead and made Schwarber just the second Phillie, first since Ryan Howard in 2006, to club 50 homers in season. Howard belted 58 in ’06. The question is: With 15 games left, can Schwarber threaten Howard’s 19-year record and get eight more?

    Schwarber hit 8 in 11 games between July-July 25 that overlapped with 8 in a 12-game stretch spanning the end of July and start of August.

    In short, it can be done.

    What’s on deck?

    The Phillies stay home and welcome a three-game interleague series against the Kansas City Royals at Citizens Bank Park. The Royals are fighting for the American League’s third Wild Card berth, but are behind Seattle, Texans and Cleveland. 

    New Phillies starter Walker Buehler is expected to make his team debut Friday.


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  • Phillies take another series from Marlins, but Trea Turner exits with hamstring injury

    The Phillies took another series down in Miami. 

    They lost to the Marlins, 5-4, on Sunday, but still took two of three for the set to make it three straight series wins ever since that disaster of a trip up to Queens a couple of weeks ago. 

    The bats piled on Friday night while Cristopher Sánchez was stellar again in the first win; Bryce Harper homered, Harrison Bader stayed hot, and Jesús Luzardo held strong for the second on Saturday; then Taijuan Walker bounced back from a bad first frame on Sunday to fight through six innings and afford the Phillies a chance to climb back. They just couldn’t manage that last hit in their lone loss. Otto Lopez’s second homer of the day, a seventh-inning solo shot off José Alvarado, put the game just out of reach despite one last push and a run knocked in by Kyle Schwarber in the ninth.

    The Phillies left the field at LoanDepot Park on Sunday at 83-60. They’re still holding a healthy lead over the Mets in the NL East race, which now stands at 7.5 games, but that lead is about to be put back up to the test again – and with a scare now that they might have to go without Trea Turner for it, who pulled up lame running out a ground ball on Sunday (more on that below).

    They’re returning home to Citizens Bank Park next, and the Mets will be meeting them there for a four-game set beginning Monday night at 6:45 p.m. ET.

    Last time at Citi Field, the Phillies got swept in a rivalry matchup they looked largely unprepared for, and the rest of the season series to this point hasn’t looked much better for them. 

    The Mets are 7-2 against the Phillies to this point in 2025. They have the Phillies’ number, and the Phillies need that to change quickly. 

    Because one good showing this week can effectively put the division away…or create the space for it to be a wide-open race again if it goes south the other way. 

    Aaron Nola is expected to go up against New York’s Nolan McLean to open the series. The season hasn’t been kind to the Phillies’ veteran right-hander, through injury and then a rough return from it, but there would be no better spot for a return to form. He needs it, and the club needs to see something from him as it begins to form its postseason rotation. 

    Ranger Suárez goes Tuesday night against Sean Manaea in a battle of lefties, and then it’s Sánchez’s turn against right-hander Clay Holmes on Wednesday. 

    For those two, it’s simple: Keep pitching lights out, all while the bats try not to get fooled again. 

    It’s a pivotal point in the season for the Phils, that could really help to set the tone for October. Make it count. 

    Trea-Turner-Homer-Phillies-MArlins-9.7.25-MLB.jpgSam Navarro/Imagn Images

    Trea Turner homered earlier in Sunday’s loss to the Marlins.

    A few other notes from Miami…

    • Trea Turner went 4-for-5 in Friday’s win to continue on as the Phillies’ most consistent hitter this season. He got the day off on Saturday, then on Sunday, he hit a solo homer in the sixth, but exited quickly in the seventh after running out a ground ball that was misfired to first.

    The immediate diagnosis is a hamstring strain, per the Phillies (via The Philadelphia Inquirer’s Scott Lauber). Then The Athletic’s Jayson Stark chimed in with the following observation from last season:

    There will be more to learn once the Phillies get back home, and of course, they’ll hope that Turner’s injury isn’t that severe. But it’s not the kind of precedent anyone wants to hear this late into the year. 

    • Nick Castellanos tripled in the second inning on Sunday after hitting a fly ball to center field that Miami’s Jakob Marsee missed the diving catch attempt on. Brandon Marsh scored from the first, and that marked the start of the Phillies’ gradual climb back to making it close. 

    Castellanos finished Sunday 1-for-4 with two strikeouts. Since the All-Star break, he’s slashing .200/.253/.321. He wasn’t in the lineup through the first two games of the Marlins series, and at this point, he isn’t an everyday player anymore.

    Brandon Marsh, Harrison Bader, and Max Kepler seems to be the leading combo in the outfield now. Castellanos should still see time in right field, but it’s being heavily cut into now. He has to play a different role, and he has to find a way to leave an impact with it.

    • Walker Buehler started for the IronPigs in Triple-A on Saturday. The Phillies picked him up last week, and intend to add him into a six-man rotation to close out the regular season. For a club with uncertain right-handed starting depth, they need to see what might be there.


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    Nick Tricome

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  • A Troubling Series in New York – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    The Phillies entered Monday with a 7 game lead in the NL East. A comfortable, yet not comforting lead. While the Phillies have been playing better baseball of late, notably destroying the Seattle Mariners, the Mets have been in a free fall. Before the start of this series the Mets were 14-19 since the All-Star break. 

    Monday was the beginning of a three game set in Queens, the biggest series of the season so far. The Phillies had a golden opportunity to bury this Mets team and take a stranglehold on the NL East. Instead the exact opposite has happened. The Phillies were swept in embarrassing fashion. They held an early lead in the first two games before having meltdown innings. Instead of burying the Mets deeper than they already were, the Phillies have let them climb out of their grave. This series was about more than moving up and down in the standings. It has given the Mets life, energy and momentum. The Phillies awoke their sleepy northern neighbor with bad baseball and a loser attitude. 

    Game 1

    With an early lead and Cristopher Sanchez on the mound you thought there was no way the Phillies lose. Instead they followed the trend of recent playoff losses. Starting the game off great, getting an early 3 run lead. However, the lead should have been much more. The Phillies left runners on base each inning, including Turner, Schwarber, and Harper going down 1, 2, 3 with two guys on and no outs. That simply cannot happen. You have the Mets best pitcher on the ropes, with a chance to put a dent in the bullpen to start the series. And you let him off the hook. 

    This was followed up by a disaster bottom of the 4th inning. A Cristopher Sanchez balk and wild pitch allowed Alonso to advance to third. I would have liked to see a mound visit after the balk. Sanchez never makes a mistake like that and a visit could have limited the damage before it began. The Phillies have been slow to help their starters all season.

    Then the Mets added a few runs through hits but two ground balls, first to Bohm and then to Turner, should have been kept in the infield. The ground balls may not have turned into outs, but it would have saved runs. It was sloppy, lazy baseball from the left side of the infield. The next inning Sanchez had Soto picked off but Harper held onto the ball too long leading to a Stott drop allowing Soto to reach second and eventually score. 

    That was all she wrote for the Phillies. After the meltdown in the fourth the team looked dead. Let’s not forget it was still a 3-3 baseball game. But by the look of the players and the energy they exuded you could see they didn’t have it. The thing is, nothing drastic did the unraveling. It was bad fundamental baseball. The Phillies did everything in their power to let the Mets hang around and then said here’s the lead you can have it. It was a no guts performance from the ball club. They have to be mentally tougher down the stetch. 

    Game 2

    After the disappointing loss on Monday, Luzardo took the mound to try and even the series. In what felt like a must win, the Phillies once again took an early lead. Harper inside-outed a fastball to knock in two runs. The lead was short-lived. The Mets put up 5 runs in their half of the inning. Once again, an early lead was completely gone. And once again, bad baseball was involved. A Bader overthrow allowed two runners to advance, really putting Luzardo against it. 

    At least this game the Phillies showed some fight. An 8th inning home run from former Met, Harrison Bader tied the game up at 5. Duran ended up blowing the game in the 9th as the Phillies division lead shrank to 5 games.

    What stands out from the 9th inning is the impact of the hitters. The Phillies and Mets both had the top of the order in the 9th. The Phillies went down 1, 2, 3. I can’t explain why but they look overmatched. They look to be pressing to do anything. They can’t figure out a way to win at Citi Field and it is infuriating. 

    Game 3

    I wrote my thoughts for the first two games during the day on Wednesday. I was really hoping I could change my tone a little after game 3. That did not happen. The Phillies were swept by the Mets. The division is down to 4 games. It feels like the lowest point for this group since being eliminated by the Diamondbacks in the NLCS.

    You have to give credit to Nolan McClean who pitched eight solid innings. But the Phillies offense showed little fight. They weren’t even able to scrap together a run with their backs across the wall. This is what concerns me. When they are down, the team looks dead. They look like they want to go home. Instead of rallying the troops and scraping together a win to gain a game back in the division they peter out on their way back down 95.

    Take Aways

    It is hard to take any positives away from this series. The Phillies had a golden opportunity and couldn’t take advantage. The way they lost the baseball games is the most concerning. They look like a team afraid of the moment, wanting the big hit, but not making the right plays to win the game. The Phillies need to find a brand of baseball and stick to it. Against the Mariners they were disciplined, hit the ball where it was pitched, and took advantage of their opportunities. Against the Mets, they did the exact opposite. They were overly aggressive, fell short in big situations, and played sloppy baseball. 

    It is hard to figure out what this team’s brand is, because right now the brand is inconsistentcy. The Phillies are consistently inconsistent. This is where a large portion of frustration stems from for the fans. The Phillies need to man up the rest of the season and prove to themselves they are the baseball team they think they are because the fans are not 100% convinced. 

    Even after an excruciating series in New York, the Phillies still control their own destiny. They have a four game lead in the division with 29 games left. The Mets come to South Philly in early September for a huge four game series. All hope is not lost and this team will rally. I still expect them to win the division, but this series was not a good indication of what we could see in the playoffs.

    Photo Credit: Jess Rapfogel/Getty Images

    Tags: Bryce Harper Cristopher Sanchez Jesus Luzardo Kyle Schwarber Major League Baseball Philadelphia Phillies Trea Turner

    Categorized:Phillies

    Liam Mahoney

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

    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.


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Instant observations: Bryce Harper, Nick Castellanos and Bryson Stott even NLDS, save Phillies season

    Instant observations: Bryce Harper, Nick Castellanos and Bryson Stott even NLDS, save Phillies season

    The Phillies just needed to break the seal.

    And they did in a big way Sunday, as a pair of monster home runs and a late triple evened the NLDS at 1-1 in a come-from-behind 7-6 walk-off Phillies victory.

    After blowing a two-run ninth-inning lead, the Phillies drew two walks and Nick Castellanos called game.

    Castellanos was mobbed in the infield as a party erupted in Citizens Bank Park. It was his third game-altering hit of a roller coaster ride in South Philly, one that will long be remembered as the Phillies are back in business following a lifeless Game 1 loss.

    The Mets were the feel-good story in baseball (or at least one of them this October), and they finally ran into a (red) brick wall in the form of the Phillies’ awakened offense. Things head up I-95 to Queens with the best-of-five series all squared up. Here’s a look at the good, the bad and the ugly from a storybook Game 2 win:

    The Good

    • Bryce Harper’s baseball bat carries the weight of an entire city on it. And in the sixth inning, he uncorked an aura of bliss and relief with one swing:

    The offense was in total muck and mire, but hitting can be contagious — and Nick Castellanos caught what Harper had seconds later:

    New life for a game, a series, and a season after two long balls, as the Phillies and Mets were suddenly tied at 3-apiece. The momentum had discernibly shifted.

    There’s something unique about baseball that makes it rightly worthy of the romanticism the sport gets from its hardcore and longtime fans. Other sports like basketball or football surely have momentum changes or hugely impactful plays. But they’re often anticipated, or extremely situational. Baseball can turn at the drop of a hat and it did on Sunday in South Philly.

    • While on the subject of Castellanos — the Phils got another huge hit from the streaky outfielder, when a single in the eighth allowed Harper (after a walk) to go from first to third. That’s when the birthday boy Bryson Stott hit a two-RBI triple to put the Phillies ahead for the first time in 16 innings:

    These are the kinds of big-time plays the Phillies have made routinely over the previous two falls. Insurance came on a weakly hit J.T. Realmuto grounder that Mark Vientos was unable to come up with, scoring Stott and giving Philly a 6-4 edge.

    • It was a tough call for manager Rob Thomson to push typical Game 2 starter Aaron Nola back for regular-season phenom Cristopher Sánchez, whose home-away splits made a compelling case for him to start at Citizens Bank Park– the lefty’s 2.21 ERA and 7-3 record through 17 starts in South Philly this year stood as the third-best home season for a starter in the history of the ballpark.

    Three innings in, with Sánchez looking like he was in cruise control, a single from Francisco Lindor and a two-run blast from the red-hot Vientos put him on the ropes quickly, and the Phillies yet again in an uncomfortable spot. 

    Ultimately it turned out okay, as Phillies’ All-Star had five solid innings and was interestingly lifted after 88 pitches. He received zero run support. It’s really hard to make much of Thomson’s choice, as he’d sign up for two runs allowed every day of the week.

    Sánchez did not make his career postseason debut in his start Sunday — he actually has one under his belt from last season. The hurler tossed two and a third innings against the Diamondbacks in Phoenix last October, in what was essentially an opener role. He allowed two runs in an eventual 6-4 loss in the NLCS (that would tie that series at two games each).

    • Nice to get the taste of three straight home playoff losses out of the Delaware Valley (dating back to Game 6 and 7 of the NLCS last year).

    The Bad

    • We’ll save the lamentations about MLB’s postseason format, and how the Phillies’ second-best record in the majors over 162 games was almost eradicated with the “reward” of having five days off last week. But clearly the rust had some weight. The Phillies had just three hits before Harper’s homer, and the bullpen, well…

    • After five pretty good innings, Thomson lifted Sánchez for José Ruiz, who gave up three hits but most damagingly a home run to Pete Alonso to put the Phils further behind 3-0.

    Later, after the Phillies tied it, Brandon Nimmo took another ace reliever Orion Kirkering deep, again putting the Mets up 4-3. Make that eight runs allowed by Phillies relievers so far in this series. Is it on the manager, or do the players need to perform?

    The Phillies had a very striated bullpen this season, with four reliable killer relievers — Strahm, Kerkering, Jeff Hoffman and Carlos Estévez. Three of those four couldn’t hang on to shut down the Mets and if the Phillies want to claw out a series win, they can’t do it without clean innings from those four arms. Strahm was the worst offender, following up his ugly Game 1 with a two-run game-tying homer to Vientos in Game 2.

    • Trea Turner had a pair of stolen bases in the first inning, and Johan Rojas had one in the third — the ultra-aggressive base running was a sign of just how much the Phillies were pressing, with base runners few and far between up to that point this postseason. Stott was the Phillies’ third base runner of the game in the fourth and he was caught trying to nab third. 

    Alec Bohm was on the bench to start Game 2 after an 0-for-4 Game 1. He was called on to pinch hit, and popped out on one pitch. Edmundo Sosa made an error replacing him at third. What will Thomson do at third on Tuesday?

    The Ugly

    • The bullpen aces giving up clutch hits and home runs to the Mets will be the story of this series if the Phillies falter in it. 

    Take a look:

    Pitcher Reg. Season Games 1-2
    Matt Strahm 1.87 ERA in 62.2 IP 4 ER in 1 IP
    Carlos Estévez 2.57 ERA in 21 IP 0 ER in 1 IP
    Orion Kerkering 2.29 ERA in 63 IP 1 ER in 1.2 IP
    Jeff Hoffman 2.17 ERA in 66.1 IP 5 ER in 0.1 IP

    • They really should name it a “Philly Cheer” when fans sarcastically applaud and cheer for a player, like when Castellanos swung and missed at two atrocious pitches in a row during his fourth-inning at-bat before taking a pitch in the dirt.

    The boo birds were in full swing for a lot of Sunday’s game, replacing the amped-up, high-decibel roars that defined the previous two playoff runs through South Philadelphia. The Phils’ flat offense and desperate approach at the plate was not pleasing to the 46,000 faithful fans in the stands. They let players know when they’re playing well… and when they’re not.

    • During Kyle Schwarber’s third-inning fly out to right — on a line drive that was very close to being a game-tying home run Rojas got some exercise. After a single, the speedy centerfielder threw caution to the wind as he rounded second base on the Schwarber fly out, put on the breaks and retreated to first after the out was recorded, and then did it again as a throwing error allowed him to take second base. He would later steal third. 


    MORE: Bryce Harper on the Phillies’ postseason mentality


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  • Phillies Pitching Staff is the Key to a World Series Championship – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Phillies Pitching Staff is the Key to a World Series Championship – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    The Philadelphia Phillies will begin postseason play in less than two weeks.
    Three games remain on the team’s regular season against the Washington Nationals at Nationals Park.

    The Phillies won the National League East division on Monday night in a 6-2 victory over the Chicago Cubs. This was the franchise’s first division title since 2011.


    The Phillies have one of the most talented rosters in Major League Baseball but does the offense, or the pitching staff have more of a stake in the postseason?


    It wasn’t a walk in the park for the Phillies to get to where they are today. Rob Thomson’s team got off to a historic start in the first half of the season and dominated teams left and right.

    A teamwide month-long slump from the All-Star break raised many questions and concerns about the ball club. The Phillies broke out of that slump and are looking to make some noise in the postseason for the third straight year.


    Phillies Pitching Staff is the Key to a World Series Championship

    Sep 17, 2024; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Zack Wheeler (45) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images
    Sep 17, 2024; Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Zack Wheeler (45) throws a pitch during the first inning against the Milwaukee Brewers at American Family Field. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-Imagn Images PHOTO: Jeff Hanisch/Imagn Images

    The Phillies haven’t had a starting rotation as dominant as the 2024 group since the “Four Aces” in 2011. The Phillies are No. 5 in the majors with a 3.75 combined ERA by their starting pitchers. That’s including the implosion of the No. 5 starter role that has plagued the team all season. The rotation is No. 1 in baseball for complete games and shutouts, and they’re tied with the New York Yankees for No. 1 with 64 wins.

    The starting rotation hasn’t been the only dominant group on the Phillies’ pitching staff. The bullpen has also had an excellent season.

    The Phillies’ bullpen ERA ranks No. 15 in baseball at 3.92. They’ve allowed the eighth lowest amount of hits, runs, and earned runs in their opportunities. They’re also tied for the fifth-fewest walks allowed by any team this season. The starters were able to go deep into games all season, keeping the bullpen fresh and accumulating the fourth-fewest innings pitched among all major league bullpens.

    Out of the Phillies’ eight All-Star selections this year, five of them were pitchers. Zack Wheeler, Cristopher Sánchez, and Ranger Suárez represented the team’s starting rotation, while Jeff Hoffman and Matt Strahm represented the bullpen.


    The offense needs to play well during the postseason to give the team a chance to win games by scoring runs, but the success of the pitching staff is far more important in making a run toward the World Series.

    The postseason is much tougher than the regular season. One to three runs might be all an offense can muster against some of the best pitchers in the league.


    Defense wins championships, and in this case, pitching wins championships.

    PHOTO: Jeff Hanisch/Imagn Images

    Mike Hennelly

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  • No Need to Stress About the Phillies Fifth Starter – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    No Need to Stress About the Phillies Fifth Starter – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    If there’s been one consistent complaint about this Phillies team in 2024, it’s been the fifth starter.

    Taijuan Walker has been a failed experiment since he signed with the club before the 2023 season. Walker was 15-6 with a 4.38 ERA in 31 starts last year, which was nothing to sneeze at. The issue, especially with the fans, came playoff time and the time since.

    Manager Rob Thomson decided not to use the veteran right-hander, which isn’t uncommon in the playoffs. Many teams opt to use a three-man rotation come playoff time to try to gain an advantage over the opposing team. However, Thomson decided not to use Walker at all, even in the bullpen, causing a little bit of controversy.


    The 31-year-old has dealt with injuries all season and is currently on the 15-day IL.

    The Phillies turned to Spencer Turnbull to replace Walker in the rotation.


    Turnbull started the season in the starting rotation

    and pitched very well while Walker was making his way back from injury. He was moved to the bullpen once Walker was healthy before returning to the rotation on Wednesday against Detroit.

    Turnbull left Wednesday’s game against the Tigers after three innings in which he threw 36 pitches due to right shoulder soreness. The right-hander is at risk of landing on the IL as well.

    The Phillies have been one of the top teams in baseball all season, with little holes on the roster. People look at outfield depth and the fifth starter when assessing the Phillies’ biggest needs moving forward into the second half of the season.


    It’s time to stop worrying about the fifth starter.


    Most teams would love to be in the Phillies’ position with four top pitchers in the starting rotation in: Zack Wheeler, Ranger Suárez, Cristopher Sánchez, and Aaron Nola. People don’t usually expect a fifth starter to be dominant or even that valuable to a team’s overall success.

    The Phillies will be fine with Walker as the fifth starter moving forward when he returns from injury. They’ll be fine if Turnbull needs to take over the fifth starter spot down the line. They’ll even be fine if they need to opt for the ever-so-popular bullpen game when the fifth spot in the rotation rolls around.

    Whoever’s pitching on the fifth day won’t be relevant come playoff time. The Phillies will likely use a three-man rotation again, anyway.


    You know a team is good when everyone is complaining about a fifth starter.

    PHOTO: ClutchPoints

    Mike Hennelly

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  • Phillies quick hits: Return home is a success with series win over Padres

    Phillies quick hits: Return home is a success with series win over Padres

    After 13 long days on the road, the Phillies returned to Citizens Bank Park on Monday to play a six-game homestand, beginning with a three-game set against the San Diego Padres. After a disappointing 3-5 road trip, the Phillies rebounded with a blowout victory in the series opener before putting together a thrilling come-from-behind win and ultimately dropping the final game of the series. Here is what jumped out from their series win:

    Cristopher Sánchez gets back on track with seven strong innings

    I wrote about Sánchez’s outstanding season to date before his start in Boston last week; naturally, that day he turned in his worst start in a while. He was on the bump for the Phillies on Monday against a San Diego lineup that has struggled against left-handed pitching all season, and looked fantastic.

    Sánchez’s line Monday night: seven innings pitched, six hits, two runs, one earned run, one walk, five strikeouts.

    Sánchez, whose season-long ERA is now at 2.91, has made a good living forcing ground balls and limiting hard-hit fly balls. He has now faced 325 batters in 2024, and the Phillies’ lanky southpaw has only allowed one home run. He has induced ground balls at a higher rate than any starting pitcher in baseball this season.

    Sánchez’s initial breakout happened thanks in large part to the development of his changeup — which has quickly become one of the best in all of baseball — and reduced velocity that led to much better command. But the Phillies gambled this year that he could dial up his velocity again while maintaining his improve precision, and their bet has paid off. Sánchez looks like the best fourth starter in baseball right now.

    Kyle Schwarber, Rafael Marchán lead offensive masterclass behind Sánchez

    After slowing down for most of the road trip, the Phillies’ lineup got right back to its peak form in their return home, swatting 18 hits on Monday. 

    The Padres sent struggling starter Randy Vásquez to the mound, and the Phillies punished him: San Diego’s right-hander allowed a dozen hits in 4.1 innings.

    Nearly every member of the Phillies’ lineup contributed to this offensive outburst, but there were two stars — one the average fan would expect given the calendar, and one who is not exactly counted on for consistent production at the plate.

    It took a handful of days, but June Schwarber has arrived. The Phillies’ leadoff hitter crushed two home runs Monday — his second multi-homer game in less than a week — and all of a sudden is near the top of the homer leaderboard in the National League. Schwarber’s power had been lacking this season — relatively speaking — despite an uptick in on-base skills. If he can maintain his improved contact while continuing to unleash the power he has long been known for, 2024 will become his most well-rounded season at the plate since he joined the Phillies.

    Marchán — called up last week following J.T. Realmuto’s knee surgery — continued to make the most of his opportunities. The young backstop collected the first four-hit game of his major-league career.

    According to Corey Seidman of NBC Sports Philadelphia, Phillies manager Rob Thomson indicated Tuesday afternoon that the plan is for Marchán to catch starts made by Sánchez and Ranger Suárez, while Garrett Stubbs will be behind home plate when Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola or Taijuan Walker is on the mound.

    Trea Turner makes return

    The Phillies activated Turner from the Injured List on Monday, ending a six-week absence for the team’s star shortstop. Turner had been on fire before his injury, slashing .397/.427/.564 in his last 18 games before being placed on the shelf with a hamstring strain. 

    Turner slashed .343/.392/.460 on the season prior to his injury, teaming with Schwarber to set the table beautifully for run producers like Bryce Harper and Alec Bohm. While Turner has not always been as aggressive on the bases as many expected since signing in Philadelphia, the threats presented to opposing pitchers, catchers and fielders by his speed are palpable.

    Turner expressed confidence that his swing was in a good place entering his return to play — despite declining to go on a minor-league rehab assignment — and backed it up Monday with two hits. For what it’s worth, throughout the first two games of the series it did not appear as if Turner was running at anything resembling his typical top speed — and he received a scheduled day off on Wednesday. None of these are shocking developments, but it’s worth keeping an eye on how Turner looks as the team ramps up his workload in the near future.

    Phillies mount impressive comeback against one of baseball’s best

    After Schwarber obliterated another baseball, the Phillies trailed San Diego 3-2 in the eighth inning Tuesday night after starting pitcher Aaron Nola surrendered three runs in the top of the sixth. With two outs in the bottom of the eighth, San Diego brought closer Robert Suarez into the game for a four-out save opportunity. 

    If that name sounds familiar, there is a good reason: Suarez is the pitcher who famously allowed Harper’s signature home run in Game 5 of the 2022 NLCS that sent the Phillies to the World Series.

    Suarez — who has been unhittable for much of 2024 — was able to retire Trea Turner to end the eighth inning, but things unraveled quickly for him in the ninth. Harper led off the inning with a single in his first plate appearance against Suarez since that rainy October afternoon in 2022. Bohm followed it up with a single of his own that moved Harper to third, Bryson Stott singled in Harper to tie the game, and Nick Castellanos delivered his third walk-off hit of the season — and his fourth hit of the game — with a bloop-shot down the right field line.

    Just like that, a Phillies offense that looked lifeless for the better part of seven innings erupted — just in time to win a ballgame.

    Phillies fail to complete sweep in loss Wednesday despite multi-homer game for Bryce Harper

    Ranger Suárez threw six innings of one-run ball for the Phillies in the series finale, but after Orion Kerkering, Seranthony Domínguez and Gregory Soto had some trouble in the following two innings — without much help from the defense behind them — the Phillies’ offense did not have enough to make up what became a four-run deficit.

    The Phillies only scored two runs, and those came on solo homers from Harper — one of which came against San Diego’s starting pitcher, right-handed knuckleballer Matt Waldron, and the other came against a powerful reliever in Jeremiah Estrada.

    This was Harper’s second multi-homer game of the season — he hit three home runs in a game back in April — and it marked the third time a Phillies hitter had collected multiple homers in a game in just the last eight days.

    The dagger was placed in the Phillies’ hearts in the top of the eighth inning. An error by Bohm gave the Padres an extra chance to break the game open, Soto came into the game with one out and the bases loaded. He got Padres rookie center fielder Jackson Merrill — who homered off Suárez in his first at-bat — to pop out to shortstop Edmundo Sosa. San Diego catcher Kyle Higashioka — very much a defensive-oriented player — came up next, and hit a sinking line drive towards center field. Brandon Marsh charged as hard as he could and dove for the ball, but it got by him and rolled into center field. Higashioka ended up at third base with a three-run triple. It is hard not to wonder if Johan Rojas would have made the play had he been in center field.

    The Phillies have a day off on Thursday before beginning a three-game set against the Arizona Diamondbacks — their first time seeing the 2024 version of the team that eliminated them in Game 7 of the NLCS last season.


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • The Phillies’ 2024 rotation is 2011 levels of dominant

    The Phillies’ 2024 rotation is 2011 levels of dominant

    The Phillies’ starting pitching has stormed out of the gate as one of the best in baseball in the early part of the season. 

    Between Zack Wheeler, Aaron Nola, Ranger Suárez, Cristopher Sánchez, and a resurgent Spencer Turnbull, the five-man rotation has been shutting club after club down, racking up strikeouts in bunches, eating up innings, and even flirting with no-hit bids. 

    They’ve been dominant, which has helped push the Phils to a 15-9 start and compensated for points where the bats and bullpen were searching for their footing. 

    And they’ve been so dominant, in fact, that maybe it isn’t too far-fetched to compare the 2024 rotation so far to the last truly assembled Philadelphia powerhouse: the four-ace lineup of Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels, Roy Oswalt, and Joe Blanton from 2011. 

    Wheeler, Nola, Suárez, and Sanchez – after his three-inning, five-run setback Tuesday night in Cincinnati – have each made five starts, while Turnbull has been through four and will likely make his final one on Wednesday night before moving to the bullpen to make way for Taijuan Walker. 

    Using those as the barometer, here is how the Phillies’ 2024 starting rotation compares to that of the 102-win 2011 club at the same point in the year:

    2024  GS  W-L  ERA  IP  CG  SO  HR 
    Wheeler, R  1-3  2.30  31.1  38 
    Nola, R  3-1  3.16  31.1  26 
    Suárez, L  4-0  1.36  33.0  32 
    Sanchez, L  1-3  2.96  24.1  28 
    Turnbull, R 2-0  1.23  22.0  22 
     2011 GS   W-L ERA   IP  CG SO  HR 
     Halladay, R 3-1  2.41  37.1  39 
    Lee, L  2-2  4.18  32.1  39 
    Hamels, L  3-1  3.13  31.2  34 
    Oswalt, R  3-1  3.33  27.0  21 
    Blanton, R  0-1  5.92  24.1  17 

    Numbers via baseball-reference

    And by that point, the 2011 Phils were 16-8, were well on their way to the best regular season in franchise history, and were heavy World Series favorites the whole way through – you know, until that damn squirrel had something to say about it…

    Anyway, a few other points…

    • If you’re wondering where Vance Worley is in the 2011 table, he didn’t come into the picture until the end of April, when Blanton went on the injured list and the Phillies looked to him to take on the fifth-starting role upon his call-up – a role he ended up pitching well enough in to hold on to for a good while. 

    • Suárez has taken a massive leap as the third starter so far this season and has been so dialed in that he’s on a 25-inning scoreless streak, the longest such streak for a Phillies starter since…Cliff Lee in 2011 (per MLB.com’s Todd Zolecki)

    That calm and effortlessly cool composure on the mound sure looks familiar, too.

    • Complete games feel like a rarity anymore when not considerably all that long ago, it wasn’t surprising at all to see someone like Halladay go the full nine. Suárez has pitched one of the just four complete games so far in 2024. 

    • Wheeler’s record right now isn’t ideal, but a lack of run support through his first three starts, some rotten luck, and a grand slam on his part against the Pirates on April 14 didn’t do him any favors. He bounced back in a major way though with a scoreless 7.1 innings against the White Sox last go around that he was also pushing a no-hit bid for. 

    • A notable difference in the makeup of the 2024 rotation compared to 2011, other than that 2024 isn’t as star-studded of a group: Only Wheeler and Turnbull are the arms in the current rotation who were brought in from the outside. Nola, Suárez, and Sanchez are all homegrown. 

    With 2011, Halladay was acquired via trade; Lee through trade, trade away, then sign back; Blanton through trade; and then Oswalt through trade. Hamels was the only homegrown talent there up until Worley joined him for a bit. 

    The Dave Dombrowski-led Phillies of today do spend a lot of money, but they’re built from within a bit more than most would think at face value. 


    MORE: How a group of Phillies fans are using every triple this season to give back


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    Nick Tricome

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