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  • Phillies 2026 Offseason Check In – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    Credit: Philadelphia Phillies-Facebook

    As the calendar turns to February, the thought of baseball begins to enter people’s minds.

    Pitchers and catchers will report on February 11th, which is just two weeks away.


    While the offseason has been severely underwhelming compared to what fans had expected, the Phillies will still have a formidable roster heading into the 2026 season.


    They took care of business by resigning both Kyle Schwarber to a 5-year, $150 million contract extension and JT Realmuto to a 3-year, $45 million contract. They added a veteran outfielder, Adolis Garcia, who’s spent his entire career with the Texas Rangers, by signing him to a one-year, $10 million contract.

    The Phillies are also hopeful that rookie outfielder Justin Crawford and rookie starting pitcher Andrew Painter will have an immediate impact on the team.

    Credit: Philadelphia Phillies-Facebook

    The problems lie with the fact that they missed out on the big fish in Bo Bichette, who decided that the New York Mets would be a better place for him to win.

    To quote the great movie Dodgeball, “That’s a bold move, Cotton, let’s see if it pays off for him.”

    The Mets pretty much outbid the Phillies by offering him a three-year, $126 million contract. Bichette is owed $42 million with opt-outs after the first and second year. The kicker is that he has an opt-out after the first and second year, so it’s very likely this could be a one-year deal.

    The Phillies also lost key starting pitcher Ranger Suarez to the Boston Red Sox, who signed him to a 5-year $130 million contract. Suarez is a great pitcher, especially in the postseason. Still, his injury history and a history of tailing off at the end of the regular season made the Phillies hesitant to offer him that much money, especially when top prospect Andrew Painter will hopefully be on the opening-day roster in 2026.

    Running It Back

    At this point, it feels like the same team that lost in the NLDS last year, and fans are concerned that this season will involve much of the same. The Mets and Dodgers both got significantly better as the Dodgers went out and signed top outfield FA Kyle Tucker, joining an already absurd lineup. The Atlanta Braves will look to have a bounce-back year as well, hoping guys like Austin Riley, Ronald Acuna Jr, Spencer Strider, and Matt Olson can all stay healthy throughout the season. The NL East will be much more competitive this year, and the Phillies are returning most of the same team.

    Rob Thomson did not take kindly to the term “running it back,” as he made it known in his press conference a few weeks ago that this team is different in terms of the bullpen, the addition of Adolis Garcia, Otto Kemp, and the opportunity that Justin Crawford will have this season as well. We got an outfielder to replace losing Kepler and eventually Nick Castellanos, Otto Kemp, who was solid but is most likely a platoon player, and an improved bullpen despite losing Matt Strahm. That’s some real groundbreaking stuff, according to manager Rob Thomson. I beg to differ.


    The consensus among the Phillies fans I’ve spoken to this offseason is that they’re very underwhelmed with how they handled it. Now that’s a take I agree with. Getting Schwarber back is enormous, and they are hopeful that Adolis Garcia can provide a spark for this team as he has in the past for the Rangers, especially in the postseason. I’m also very eager to see how top SS prospect Aidan Miller looks in spring training this year. It wouldn’t surprise me if he gets called up before June if Alec Bohm is either traded or struggles early on.

    One of the last pieces to fall this offseason will be what happens with Nick Castellanos. The Phillies owe him $20 million next year, which is highway robbery on Castellanos’ end. It’s been expected that he would be traded or released all offseason. While neither has yet to happen, the Phillies will most likely be forced to release him, especially after the way he handled things with Rob Thomson last year.


    Spring Is Upon Us

    Pitchers and catchers report next week in Clearwater, Florida, for the start of 2026 spring training.

    It feels like just yesterday we were watching Kerkering throw the ball over JT’s head while the Eagles lost to the Giants that same night.


    I can’t wait to see what heartbreaking thing happens this year.


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    Matt Saglembeni

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  • Vetting the Free Agent Market – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    With the off-season almost in full effect, the Phillies will look to bolster their roster during the winter meetings. The free agent class isn’t anything special, but there are a few big names available. 

    It will be interesting to see what the Phillies do since most of their roster is under contract. Rightfully so, Alec Bohm and Nick Castellanos are the two names constantly out in trade talks. Whether they trade them for a direct replacement or overall roster improvement is set to be seen. I don’t see them being able to move, say, Castellanos for a quality starting right fielder. It is more likely they would be able to move him for a bench guy or low-level reliever.

    After looking through each position there aren’t a ton of free agents options that stick out to me. Nevertheless, let’s take a look at the potential free agents the Phillies could benefit from. 

    CATCHER

    The obvious re-sign here is JT Realmuto. Not only is he the best catcher on the market, he is still a top player at his position in baseball. I mean just look at some of the other names out there Salvador Perez, Victor Caratini, Danny Janson, James McCann, Austin Barnes, Gary Sanches, shall I go on? There really isn’t a question on what to do here.

    FIRST BASE

    First base is a little more interesting because of Pete Alonso. The Mets first baseman may be the best player available on the market. Alonso has a player option with the Mets but can elect to become a free agent like he did after last season. Alonso, who hit .272 with 38 homeruns and 126 RBIS last season would provide a huge boost to the lineup. He could split time at first base with Bryce, allowing Harper to get the rest he needs at this point in his career. The die hard in me says no thank you to Alonso. He may be a productive addition, but I would struggle seeing that man in a Phillies uniform. 

    Ryan O’Hearn and Josh Naylor were the two other names that stuck out to me, but I don’t see the Phillies having interest in those guys, unless O’Hearn was brought on as a bench bat.

    SHORTSTOP

    The Phillies do not need a shortstop; however, we do need a third baseman. Bo Bichette would be an unreal replacement for Bohm. He will probably receive a massive contract, so I doubt the Phillies can make the money work, but adding Bichette to this lineup would be a difference maker.

    Trevor Story was the other option at shortstop, but I see him returning to Boston. He has a club option (that the Red Sox can reject), however Story was a productive player for the Red Sox this season and he will stay put in Boston.

    Third Base

    The hot corner is up for grabs this year in Philadelphia. Free agent wise Alex Bregman is the most obvious move the Phillies make. He is an experienced player who is an above average fielder and hitter. His offense will provide more consistency than Bohm, and he is more mature which should help the Phillies in the playoffs. Maybe the Bregman move is too obvious and Dombrowski goes another route, but this move makes sense for the Phillies. 

    Eugenio Suarez is another intriguing third baseman, however his age (34) may be an issue for Philadelphia. The Phillies did express interest at the deadline, so he may be on their radar but I don’t see Suarez as a great FA signing for the club. 

    Max Muncy does have a club option, which I expect to be picked up. Muncy would be awesome to have on this roster even at 35. He can play all over the infield and is a proven bat. Unlikely he isn’t a Dodger, but an interesting name that may be available to the Phillies. 

    CENTER FIELDER

    Outfield is another spot the ballclub will look to upgrade this off season. The outfield in Philadelphia is wide open. The two best options for center are Cody Bellinger and Harrison Bader. Bellinger will cost a pretty penny and seems like a guy who would stay in NY, but he would be an ideal fit for the Phillies. He can play all 3 outfield positions and first base. With our current lineup, I wish he batted right-handed, but Bellinger would be a difference maker for this team offensively and defensively. Bader would also be a great signing. He does have a player option, which most likely gets declined making Bader a FA. He provided outstanding defense and vibes to the Phillies last season. Bader would be welcomed back to Philadelphia.

    RIGHT FIELDER

    There is only one right fielder I would be interested in and he would be my ideal FA signing – Kyle Tucker. Still only 29 years old, Tucker will thrive in this Phillies lineup. He can fill in at the four spot behind Bryce, giving him the protection he needs. Although his defense has declined the last few seasons Tucker is still a capable defender and an upgrade over Castellanos. This signing would make the Phillies off-season and only add to their World Series potential. 

    DESIGNATED HITTER

    Easy one here. Sign Schwarber, unless you want Joc Pederson (lol) or Marcell Ozuna (LOL). Pay him what he wants.

    STARTING PITCHERS

    One thing the Phillies are flush in is starting pitching. The Phillies own Ranger Suarez is a free agent, but even if they don’t re-sign him the starting pitching still looks good. There are some big names on this list, but if the Phillies were to add a starter in FA (outside of bringing back Ranger) I could see a name like Zac Gallen or Shane Bieber being connected to the Phillies. With Painter still a little bit of an unknown and the injury to Wheeler, either would be a potential sneaky add to the Phillies, that gives them the pitching depth needed for the playoffs.

    RELIEF PITCHERS

    The bullpen could also use some work. Alvarado has a club option so it is yet to be seen if he will be back. With the need for a left-handed arm, it is likely Alvarado stays with the club. Regardless they need to fill the spots of Romano, Ross, and Robertson. There are a few relievers on the market that should interest Dombrowski. First, Devin Williams. He had a somewhat of a down year with the Yankees but still has electric stuff. Adding him to the bullpen with Duran (and Caleb Cotham) could be deadly. Tyler Rodgers is another name that interests me. Although a little older the submarine pitcher is still highly effective. He could be a useful player but may add too many right-handed arms. The last name that stood out was all-star closer Robert Suarez. Coming off a monster season with the Padres, Suarez can opt out of his contract. Maybe he decides to chase a payday. Unlikely but his arm would be a welcomed addition to the bullpen.

    Photo Credit: Scott Taetsch

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    Liam Mahoney

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  • Stay or Go – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    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

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    Liam Mahoney

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  • Rob Thomson Set to Return as Phillies Manager in 2026 – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

    The Phillies announced on Monday that Manager Rob Thomson will be returning for the 2026 season.

    Thomson will be entering the final year of his contract, making 2026 a true make-or-break season for both Thomson and the Phillies.


    Philadelphia Heartbreak

    It’s been five days since the Phillies lost Game 4 of the NLDS in the most heartbreaking fashion you could imagine. The first series in MLB history to end on an error. Of course, it would happen to the Phillies.

    It took me all day Friday to go through the stages of grief following the loss. I was not angry at Kerkering for a miscue throw to—the. In fact, I completely understand the mental state when you first bobble a ball. Even if you knew where you were supposed to go with the ball, the second you bobble it, panic sets in, and that’s exactly what happened. I know Kerkering can be a good reliever, and I hope he bounces back next year with us.

    Different Year, Same Result

    While my sympathy was with Kerkering, my anger was directed towards Rob Thomson, the entire lineup aside from JT Realmuto, Alec Bohm, and Nick Castellanos. The big three of Turner, Schwarber, and Harper went 1-14 in the Game 4 elimination game. The third season in a row, the big guns disappeared when it mattered most. That part of it is on the players, and while Rob Thomson makes the lineup, he can’t control what pitches these guys are swinging at.

    Rob Thomson controls the bullpen and who comes in certain situations. This is part of his job; Rob Thomson has been horrible at it in the postseason. In 2023, he brought Craig Kimbrel in against the Arizona Diamondbacks, which eventually led to the Phillies blowing the lead and the series. Since that series, Rob Thomson has poorly managed the bullpen when it matters the most. It’s led to the Phillies blowing leads in multiple playoff games over the last few years, including in this year’s series. Going to Kerkering with runners on was a terrible idea from the start. 8/13 inherited runners have scored on Kerkering since August. Having him in the game in that moment was a terrible decision by Rob Thomson. Even leading up to that, one might question why we walked Ohtani in the 7th inning to load the bases? Duran would walk in a run, tying the game 1-1 after Mookie Betts worked a walk. Thomson made a few questionable decisions, but it’s not solely on him to blame.

    What Went Wrong?

    Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

    I touched on the lack of production from Turner, Schwarber, and Harper before, but it’s important to know how flat-out bad these three were in this series. Aside from the Game 3 outburst, these three underperformed when the lights were the brightest. While I still want the Phillies to re-sign Kyle Schwarber, you have to wonder if he decreased his price tag following his poor October showing. Harper and Turner need to figure out a way to make their $300 million price tags worth it come October. Harper had an incredible postseason in 2023 and 2024, but his last two postseason showings have been lackluster. You aren’t gonna win many baseball games when the highest-paid players don’t show up.

    Harrison Bader was injured with a groin injury, which also hurt the Phillies in terms of their lineup. Bader was such a spark for this team down the stretch, and his absence should not go unnoticed. I’m hoping the Phillies could bring him back, but the question is for how much and where he would play. If Bader did play his last game in a Phillies uniform, he was an incredible addition to this team, and it’s a shame he got injured when he did.

    I tip my cap to Alec Bohm and JT Realmuto, who had really strong showings at the plate in the division series. I would love to have JT back behind the plate next year, as he is set to hit free agency. If JT walks, I expect the Phillies to possibly pursue a trade with the Baltimore Orioles for catcher Adley Rutschman. Rutschman would be a nice replacement for the Phillies if Realmuto isn’t on the team next year. With that being said, I do hope JT works out a deal and hopefully ends his career as a Phillie.

    Pitching Excellence

    The starting pitching once again showed up when it mattered most, despite not having Zack Wheeler. Christopher Sanchez pitched two great games and further solidified himself as a true ace during this series. Jesus Luzardo, Aaron Nola, and Ranger Suarez all pitched great throughout the series as well. The starting pitching was dominant all year, and they performed well above expectations in this series.

    Ranger Suarez is the only starting arm that is a free agent this upcoming winter. The big question is, do you pay Ranger Suarez knowing you have a replacement in Andrew Painter coming up? Suarez has been one of the best lefties in the game over the last two years, so although it would hurt to lose him, the Phillies might not be able to afford to keep him. It’s going to be very interesting to see where Suarez lands this upcoming offseason.


    Season Conclusion

    That’s officially a wrap on the Phillies’ 2025 season, as well as my first season covering the team. It was a pleasure to bring you weekly storylines and my thoughts on this ball club throughout the year. The season ended like no one could have expected, with a game-losing error. One of the main things I love about baseball is that you can shake off whatever happened in the game before and get right back at it within a day or two. But in this scenario, having to sit with this feeling all offseason is certainly going to sting.

    While some fans (including myself) are still angry with this team and the result, I can already feel the excitement and optimism of opening day 2026 when the Texas Rangers come to town. Only 163 days until The Bank is packed for Opening Day on March 26, 2026!


    One Last Weekly Prediction: The Seattle Mariners are going to be your 2025 World Series Champions.


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    Matt Saglembeni

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  • No Guts, No Glory – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    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

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    Liam Mahoney

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  • Instant observations: Kyle Schwarber, Phillies come alive to win Game 3, extend NLDS vs. Dodgers

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    The Phillies are still alive, at least for one more night.

    Kyle Schwarber finally connected on his swing and launched two homers into the seats, Ranger Suárez was aces in relief, and though it took the Dodgers handing them a few more golden opportunities, the Phillies’ bats eventually piled on. 

    They took Game 3 of the NLDS in an 8-2 blowout over at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. They’re still trailing the best-of-five series, 2-1, but the important thing right now is that the Phillies are still playing. 

    They’re still breathing. 

    Here’s how…

    The Good

    • It took until the fourth inning of Game 3, stuck in an 0-for-23 drought and with the Phillies’ backs completely against the wall, but Kyle Schwarber finally got one. 

    L.A.’s Yoshinobu Yamamoto left a 2-0 fastball up in the zone, Schwarber got the barrel around to it, and as soon as the pitch cracked off the bat, it was never a question of if it was gone; it was a question of how far it was going. 

    Schwarber obliterated a solo home run 455 feet into Dodger Stadium’s right-field concourse to put his mark on the series after going quiet through Games 1 and 2. 

    He also tied the game up 1-1 after an opening three innings where the Phillies were struggling to get a read on Yamamoto, and the heart of the order followed behind him and started patching something together.

    • Bryce Harper, who had also been struggling to make contact, followed Schwarber up with a base hit and went first to third on a slow-rolling single into center from Alec Bohm right after.

    It was a risky call, but it hurried a throw from outfielder Andy Pages, who was caught off guard and rushed an ensuing bad decision that bounced past Dodgers third baseman Max Muncy and into the L.A. dugout.

    Harper was free to take home on the error. Bohm, who had rushed around to second in the chaos, was awarded third, then scored on a Brandon Marsh sac fly to left.

    The Phillies took a 3-1 lead and some heavy momentum that piled on with a ground-rule double from J.T. Realmuto. They needed that, but the rally halted quickly after, on a Max Kepler flyout and a Nick Castellanos strikeout to let Yamamoto get away.

    • Ranger Suárez was everything the Phillies needed on Wednesday night. That first-pitch homer he gave up to Tommy Edman after he took over for Aaron Nola in the third wasn’t ideal, but the lefty didn’t let it snowball.

    Instead, he posted five innings of one-hit, one-run ball in relief, with four strikeouts and just a walk. Edman’s solo homer was kept to the only damage done, and while it did look a bit dicey at other points, clutch plays like Bryson Stott’s underhanded double-play setup to end the sixth kept the Phillies away from trouble.

    It was a big-time outing, in potentially what could’ve been Suárez’s last appearance as a Phillie, but the curtain hasn’t fallen just yet.

    • Dodgers manager Dave Roberts really seemed to try to hand the Phillies Game 2 back at Citizens Bank Park. Rob Thomson and his club just bafflingly refused to take it, which sent them to L.A. in the 2-0 hole.

    On Wednesday night, Roberts gave them another chance. Longtime lefty Clayton Kershaw, in his farewell season, was called on in relief for the seventh, and thanks to a base-running blunder from Schwarber (see below), the 37-year-old escaped a jam and kept the Phillies to just that 3-1 lead they put together in the fourth.

    Then Roberts decided to leave Kershaw out there for the eighth. What he thought was going to happen? Who knows, but here’s what did…

    J.T. Realmuto homered immediately, Max Kepler drew a walk, Nick Castellanos reached on a fielding error by Max Muncy at third, then after a sac bunt from Stott to move the runners up, Trea Turner looped a base hit to score both runners and put the Phillies up, 6-1. 

    If you thought that would be a night for Kershaw right there, uhh…no. He stayed in to face Schwarber. Schwarber crushed his second homer of the night, a two-run shot, for an 8-1 lead. That was game, as the seats in Dodger Stadium rapidly emptied out.

    Again, who knows what Roberts was thinking, but it gave the Phillies another day.

    The Bad

    • The bottom of the first was an immediate rollercoaster for the Phillies. 

    Aaron Nola had his velocity, hitting 95 mph with his fastball, and got Shohei Ohtani to fly out for the first out.

    Then Mookie Betts stepped up to the plate and worked into a 2-2 count after five pitches. On the sixth, Nola fired another 95 mph fastball, but left it right over the plate. Betts got a hold of the ball and lined it into center.

    Marsh ran to it, and had he tracked it down and played it on the hop, a runner would be on, but only from a very manageable one-out single. 

    Marsh made a decision, though, and tried diving after the ball for the out. He missed. It went rolling to the wall as he lay there, and Nick Castellanos in right was slow to back up the play, which sent Betts storming off to third for the triple. 

    A runner was in scoring position, which hasn’t been anywhere close to a comfortable scenario to have Nola in all year. He pushed through and struck out Teoscar Hernández in four pitches for the second out, but then hit Freddie Freeman with a 0-1 knuckle curve that didn’t break to put runners at the corners.

    Tanner Banks got up in the bullpen and started warming up. 

    Nola fought back for a huge strikeout of Will Smith looking on a full count to get the Phillies out unscathed. But from the jump, they were teetering on disaster, and after Nola had burnt through 22 pitches with movement going on in the pen, it was clear he only had so long.

    • Nola returned for the second and put up a quick 1-2-3 inning, but that was as far as he was going after only 31 pitches, that lone triple allowed, the hit by pitch, and three strikeouts. 

    Suárez finally came in from the bullpen for his first appearance all series, but on the lefty’s very first pitch to start the third, Tommy Edman took him yard. 

    The Phillies, in a do-or-die, were working from behind, 1-0. They would have to climb back to survive.

    Suárez turned it around quickly with a groundout of Ohtani, a lineout of Betts, and another groundout from Hernández to escape, but not before the Dodgers struck that first run. Still, he went on to recover beautifully.

    • The Phillies, starting with Schwarber’s missile of a homer, finally got to Yamamoto in the fourth. In the fifth, they chased him from the game and looked like they were about to go on another rally, but stopped themselves short. 

    Stott singled in the nine hole, Turner followed with a base hit of his own in the next at-bat, and the two executed a double steal of second and third to put runners in scoring position with no one out. 

    Schwarber was up, and Roberts took that as his cue to take the ball from Yamamoto and hand it off to reliever Anthony Banda.

    This was a crucial opportunity for the Phils to build up insurance, but Schwarber struck out swinging on a full count, Harper flied out on the first pitch to shallow right to hold the runners, and after the Dodgers elected to intentionally walk Bohm to load the bases, Banda had Marsh at the plate in the lefty-on-lefty matchup. 

    Marsh, who has notoriously been incapable of handling left-handed pitching, went down swinging on three pitches to let the Dodgers out of the jam. 

    Runs were left on the table. The Phillies still remained up two, but knowing how Game 1 went for them, they were tempting fate.

    • Worse yet, they let the Dodgers exploit that matchup a second time. 

    In the seventh, L.A. called to Kershaw out of the pen. Turner immediately singled off him, Schwarber drew a walk, and Harper lined out to right, but it was a pretty well-hit ball that Hernández couldn’t get a read on until the last second. 

    Then, with Bohm back at the plate, Schwarber gave Kershaw and the Dodgers a gift. 

    A breaking pitch spun into the dirt and got away from catcher Will Smith, but he recovered it and Schwarber caught himself between committing to the steal of second and retreating back to first. 

    He had nowhere to go. 

    Smith made the throw to first, and Freddie Freeman tagged him up for the second out. Turner took third in the process, but Roberts recognized that the Dodgers could intentionally walk Bohm again and have the lefty Kershaw take his chances against Marsh.

    Marsh battled to a 2-2 count, but he flied out to Hernández in right with little concern this time.

    The Dodgers were let off scot-free again, and this one could’ve stood to really haunt the Phillies…

    Had Roberts not stuck with Kershaw for the eighth. He really gave that gift right back to them with that call.

    The End?

    • Not just yet. Game 4 is Thursday night back at Dodger Stadium. 

    The Phillies are still breathing, and Cristopher Sánchez will get another turn up against Dodgers right-hander Tyler Glasnow.


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

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    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.

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  • Ranger Suárez, Phillies drop D-backs series, but with focus on final postseason prep

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    The Phillies dropped two of three in their weekend series to the Diamondbacks down in Arizona, which Sunday’s finale made quickly apparent when they fell into a hole of a 9-2 final.

    Arizona lefty Eduardo Rodriguez tossed six shutout innings on 93 pitches, while Ranger Suárez had a rough day on the mound because of a blow-up second inning that did him and the Phillies in fast. Suárez received the losing decision and dropped to 12-7 after getting tagged for six runs and lasting just four innings.

    It’s hard to get too up in arms about it, though. 

    The Phillies’ postseason ticket is punched. They’ve already won the NL East, and if they can just stay the course at minimum for the last six games coming home, they should outlast even a crazy surge from the Dodgers for the No. 2 seed in the postseason bracket (which is boosted by having the tiebreaker over L.A., too). 

    They’re October-bound, their roster for it looks mostly set, and they appear on track to getting healthier right before. 

    At 92-64, they’re in good shape. It’s just a matter of putting those finishing touches on to clinch that vital bye into the NLDS, and clear up those last couple of lingering questions. 

    The remaining six games against the Marlins and then the Twins coming home to Citizens Bank Park to close out should be more than enough runway for it. 

    Here are a few beats on how they’re looking coming back to South Philly for the last handful of games in the regular season…

    • Alec Bohm returned on Friday night, and in a big way. He went 2-for-5 with an RBI double in the second, then a two-run single in the ninth for the Phillies’ 8-2 pile on in Game 1. He went 2-for-4 with a fourth-inning solo homer in Saturday night’s Game 2 loss, and went 4-for-4 with a walk in Sunday’s overall whimper of a finale. 

    It’s been a rocky, somewhat injury-plagued season for Bohm, but the Phillies’ best chance in October is with him at third. The same goes for Trea Turner at shortstop and at the top of the order, where he should be able to return from a Grade 1 hamstring strain before it’s playoff time

    Having Edmundo Sosa as that ever-versatile and dependable bench bat is a boost, too, but his stint on the 10-day Injured List ahead of the postseason seemed more like a precautionary measure than anything. If anyone needed time to heal up, these last couple of weeks were when to do it.

    • The Phillies are going to be lefty-heavy heading into the postseason with Cristopher Sánchez, Suárez, and Jesús Luzardo as the leading three in their rotation. 

    Suárez ran into trouble on Sunday, but has an overall body of work this season that points to the idea that he won’t have any trouble bouncing back from it.

    But as far as any right-handed depth goes, well, Aaron Nola’s turn was up Saturday. He got through five innings to maintain a 3-2 lead, then the sixth struck, the signs showed, and Blaze Alexander and James McCann hit back-to-back doubles to tie the game before Nola was pulled. The winning run at second for Arizona was surrendered by Tanner Banks two at-bats later, but was still charged to Nola.

    Was it the veteran right-hander’s worst start? No, but it wasn’t anything more encouraging either, because it was another scenario where fans watching were fearfully just waiting for the bottom to fall out. 

    Nola’s 4-10 and his ERA is at 6.46 in what’s just been a brutal year for a longtime face of the club. It’s a tough argument to say he should be trusted with a start in the postseason.

    The other righty option that might be under consideration, though, is interesting. Taijuan Walker started through four decent innings on Friday night, then essentially handed the ball over to Walker Buehler in a long reliever transition. They combined for 7.2 innings with five strikeouts, allowing seven hits, a walk, and two earned runs (both from Taijuan in the first). 

    Maybe that hybrid sort of bullpen game is a way to catch opponents off-guard when a series pushes later into a Game 4 or 5 or 6.

    • Arizona taking the series does play into the Wild Card picture. As of Sunday night, the Diamondbacks’ consecutive wins over the Phils are keeping them afloat and just a game out from the third and final spot behind the Reds and Mets. 

    Obviously, there are scars for fans from the 2023 NLCS with Arizona, but there are even fresher ones from last year’s NLDS against New York, along with the longstanding and heated rivalry. 

    Even if the Phillies’ work ahead of their postseason run is about 95 percent done, there’s still some intrigue for fans, rivalry-wise, on that last push coming down the stretch.

    The Mets, by the way, dropped two straight to the basement-dwelling Nationals and are 4-6 in their last 10.


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

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    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.

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    Matt Saglembeni

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  • The New York Mets Come to Town in September Division Showdown for Phillies – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    Credit: John Jones/Imagn Images

    The Phillies took 2/3 from the Milwaukee Brewers and Miami Marlins last week, helping them maintain a seven-game lead in the NL East.

    The New York Mets (76-67) come to town for a four-game series that can make or break their season.


    The Phillies have an opportunity to make up for what happened in New York just a few weeks ago and bury the Mets.


    The Final Sprint

    The Phillies enter Monday night with their magic number sitting at 13 and the Mets coming to town for a four-game series. To say this series is the most important so far this season is an understatement, especially after the Phillies were swept in New York just two weeks ago. Luckily, the Phillies won’t have to deal with the horrors or parabolic microphones that Citi Field brings. They will have to deal with being without their top hitter, Trea Turner, as he is currently undergoing MRI scans on his right hamstring after he left the game early Sunday. They are unsure how serious the strain is, but it’s not ideal for the Phillies to be without their leadoff hitter for the next few games and possibly even weeks.

    If Trea does end up on the IL, I am curious who Rob Thomson will end up batting leadoff. With the year Kyle Schwarber has had, I feel like you have to keep him at the second spot in the order. I wouldn’t mind seeing Bader or even Stott bat leadoff if Trea misses an extended amount of time.

    Revenge Time

    PHOTO: John Jones/Imagn Images

    As the Phillies enter this series against the Mets, I am feeling confident this team will win at least 2/4, if not 3/4, over the Mets at home. After getting swept on the road a few weeks ago, I would like to think this team has the firepower to get there get back in some way. This is a series where the Phillies need Bryce Harper to tap into some of that postseason energy and deliver some big hits. If Turner is out for this entire series, which is likely, the Phillies will need their big bats in Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper to show up. Schwarber was in the midst of a 0-17 stretch the last time he played the Mets, so I’m hopeful that won’t be happening again this series.

    I’m also looking for Alec Bohm and Harrison Bader to stay consistent as well. Bader has been a great addition to this team as he has made some great plays in centerfield while also coming up with some clutch hits.

    The Phillies will also need a better pitching performance from Aaron Nolan in game one compared to the last time he pitched. Nola has been shaky since returning from the IL, and without Zach Wheeler for the rest of the season, the Phillies desperately need Nola to get back on track. If Nola can have a solid start tonight, that would give both him and the Phillies a much-needed confidence boost heading down the stretch.


    Upcoming Week

    After the Phillies complete their four-game series against the Mets, they jump right into a weekend series matchup against the Kansas City Royals (73-70), a team that is also fighting for a playoff spot. This team is targeting a playoff spot in the American League.

    As of Monday, the Royals are two games back of the final wild card spot in the American League. The Phillies have a big week ahead with a chance to not only bury the Mets but take full control of the NL East with 19 games remaining.


    Weekly Prediction: Bryce Harper has one of those signature series where he crushes the ball and powers the Phillies to a series win against both the Mets and Royals.


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  • Phillies Weekly Recap: Zach Wheeler Out 6-8 Months, Phillies Prepare For NL East Showdown – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    May 23, 2021; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; Philadelphia Phillies starting pitcher Zack Wheeler (45) throws a pitch in the second inning against the Boston Red Sox at Citizens Bank Park. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-USA TODAY Sports

    On Saturday, the Phillies announced that Zach Wheeler would be missing the remainder of the season with venous thoracic outlet syndrome, an injury that requires surgery and has a timetable of 6-8 months for a full recovery. The good news, Wheeler had the blood clot successfully removed. The bad news, the Phillies need to find a way to replace their Cy Young caliber ace for the final stretch of the season and into the playoffs.


    Win It For Wheeler

    No MLB team ever wants to lose its ace, especially a team that has World Series aspirations. For the Phillies, this situation is a new one. Since Wheeler signed with the Phillies, he has been a staple of the rotation, especially in the playoffs. Over the last three years, Wheeler has been great in the playoffs and was the best thing we had to ensure a win in a series. You knew if Wheeler was taking the mound, the Phillies had a decent chance to win the game. Now, with Wheeler gone for the season, it’s going to be extremely hard to replace an arm like his. Luckily for the Phillies, they have three arms I would trust in a playoff series, which is more than a lot of other teams have.

    With Wheeler being gone, I could see the Phillies rolling out a staff of Christopher Sanchez, Ranger Suarez, and Aaron Nola for a playoff series. Getting a first-round bye is massive for this team, as the National League gets the extra day off in between games this year (the leagues alternate each year). With that extra day, the Phillies will only need three arms for the NLDS. Game one starter is easily Christopher Sanchez, with game two belonging to either Ranger Suarez or Aaron Nola. If Rob wants back-to-back lefties, he will go with Ranger. If he wants to mix a righty in there, he will go with Nola. Despite his injuries and inconsistency, I trust Nola to show up and perform in the postseason. Like Wheeler, he has pitched well in the playoffs, and let’s not forget he was our ace at one point. My stance may change by season’s end, but I wouldn’t mind if Nola got the ball in a game two scenario.

    Ranger Suarez is cool, calm, and collected every time he steps on the mound, no matter the game. Having him pitch in a game two or three is not a terrible situation to be in. The Phillies are very fortunate this year to have a plethora of starting pitching, and if the offense can pick up the pitching, this team can still make noise in the postseason. If Suarez can close out an NLCS to send us to the World Series circa 2023, I would absolutely trust him starting a playoff game for us. He has found his groove in his last two starts, striking out 10+ in both. If that’s the Ranger, the Phillies get in the postseason, I will feel extremely confident this team could win a series even without Zach Wheeler.

    Offense Steps Up

    Losing your ace means you’re going to need more contributions from key players on offense. JT Realmuto has been on fire since June, leading all catchers in batting average since then. Bryce Harper has been swinging a hot bat, and Bryson Stott has been thriving in the nine hole. Rob Thompson moved Stott to 9th in the order a few weeks ago, and I have loved it ever since. Not only is Stott hitting more, but Trea Turner has been great since having Stott before the order turns around to him. Turner is hitting .300 and is the current NL leader in hits with 160. On top of Turner playing great defense this year, he is having his best season as a Phillie so far.

    Kyle Schwarber had a down weekend against the Nationals, but still has 45 homers and 109 RBI. He is second in home runs in baseball and leads the majors in RBI. Schwarber has been elite this year, and the Phillies will need his offense to remain consistent as we head down the stretch.

    Upcoming Week

    The Phillies have a massive week coming up, starting tonight against the divisional rival New York Mets (69-61). The Phillies are currently 7 games up on the Mets as we enter play this evening. The Phillies have an opportunity to bury the Mets this week if they can take 2/3 or even sweep them. It’s the biggest series of the season for this team, right off the heels of the Zach Wheeler news. I would like to think this Phillies team has the toughness and resilience to take at least 2/3 from the team that ended their season last year. It’s also ironic that it’s against Wheeler’s former team. After a three-game series against the Mets, the Phillies head back home for a four-game series against the Atlanta Braves (59-71). Another division rival that will be gunning for the Phillies despite being 10 games out of a playoff spot. The Braves would love to play spoiler and take some games from the Phillies.

    This Philadelphia Phillies team enters the biggest week of the season without its ace. It’s time to see what this team is made of and how battle-tested this team truly is. If the Phillies could take 5/7 games overall, it would be an extremely successful week.


    Prediction of the week: Who else picks up this team other than Bryce Harper? Harper and Schwarber power the Phillies this week, both clubbing 3 home runs apiece. A big week means I get to predict big.

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  • Ranger Suárez and Aaron Nola step up in different ways as Phillies win series over Nationals

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    To begin a stretch of 11 straight days with a game, the Phillies played host to the Washington Nationals for three games this weekend, looking to make up for a lackluster four-game set in Washington, D.C. last weekend in which the Phillies split with the last-place Nationals.

    Friday’s game looked like it would be the ideal opener to a series. Taijuan Walker allowed a three-run home run and threw 38 pitches in the first inning, then buckled down and tossed four scoreless frames to keep his bullpen fresh and his offense in the game. Bryson Stott tied the game with a two-run shot in the sixth inning and J.T. Realmuto hit one out in the following frame to put the Phillies ahead. But for the first time, Phillies manager Rob Thomson handed the ball to Jhoan Duran in a save situation and got burned. Duran allowed a double and a single to blow a 4-3 lead, then Realmuto made an error trying to cut down a base-stealer that enabled Washington to take the lead and ultimately escape with a 5-4 victory.

    The following evening, Aaron Nola took the mound against the same Nationals lineup that he failed to get outs against in his return from the injured list last weekend. The process and the results looked a whole lot different this time, as Nola’s velocity went up, his pitch mix changed and he only surrendered two earned runs in six strong innings. A five-run fourth inning – headlined by a three-run blast from Edmundo Sosa – was the difference in a 6-4 win. That time, Duran came in and shut the door.

    Looking to nab another series victory Sunday afternoon, the Phillies sent Ranger Suárez to the mound hoping he could build on a strong outing against the Seattle Mariners on Monday. Suárez could not muster the uptick in velocity that Nola had, but was still on his game. Suárez dazzled to the tune of seven scoreless innings, backup catcher Rafael Marchán drove in three runs in the first three innings and the Phillies never looked back en route to a 3-2 win and series victory. 

    From Suárez and Nola to Duran to a surging offense, everything to know about the Phillies’ weekend series against the Nationals:

    Will Ranger Suárez’s velocity ever come back? How much does it matter?

    Suárez once again did not have much velocity to work with Sunday, and even when the results have been good it has become a troubling trend. Suárez is 29 years old without an enormous amount of mileage; there is no obvious reason why his velocity should regularly be down three ticks from where he was in 2023.

    While Suárez has never relied on overpowering stuff to get outs, his margin for error will continue to be slim if he is sitting around 90.0 miles per hour. Once again, that is right about where he was on Sunday:

    Pitch Suárez’s average velocity in first 19 starts in 2025 (miles per hour) Suárez’s average velocity on Sunday (miles per hour)
    Sinker 90.1 90.1
    Changeup 79.5 79.2
    Cutter 86.2 86.1
    Curveball 73.6 74.3
    Four-seamer 91.3 91.6
    Slider 79.2 79.5

    The confounding part about Suárez is that, still, it is often difficult to argue with his results. And on Sunday, they were there. Suárez consistently got ahead of hitters and was notching quick outs. Diminished velocity forces him to have pristine command, and on Sunday he did.

    Even without much velocity, Suárez was able to generate some whiffs and keep Nationals hitters off-balance. After a rough stretch following the All-Star break, he has now posted back-to-back impressive outings. Monday marked the first time all year Suárez notched 10 strikeouts in a start, and he topped it on Sunday with a career-high 11 punchouts. For the second start in a row, Suárez did not issue any free passes.

    After his terrific start on Sunday – 7.0 scoreless innings pitched, scattering only three hits on 90 pitches (63 strikes) – Suárez is down to a 3.07 ERA in 20 starts (126.0 innings) in 2025.

    Suárez’s success almost never feels inherently convincing or repeatable in the moment. But at some point his track record gets to the talking. 

    Aaron Nola makes significant progress 

    Thomson expressed significant confidence on Saturday afternoon that, despite his massive struggles through 10 starts in 2025, Nola would step up. With Zack Wheeler officially done for the season, another member of this starting rotation becoming a reliable presence would do wonders. Nola has epitomized reliable for much of his career, but this year he just has not had good enough stuff to get by.

    But in Saturday’s 6-4 win, Nola showed signs of his former self.

    Nola’s velocity on Saturday was not just noticeably better than his first start after being reinstated from the injured list, a start in which the same Nationals hitters chased him out of the game in the third inning. Nola was throwing harder than he has all year. His four-seam fastball, which has often sat around 91 miles per hour this year, topped out at 94.1 miles per hour and sat in between 92 and 93.

    That might not sound like a lot, but when you have subpar velocity to begin with, going up even two ticks can make a massive difference.

    “The other stuff plays up,” Thomson said after the game of Nola’s velocity uptick. “It’s just like Taijuan: when he’s got his good fastball going, a tick or two above what he was last year, it makes everything else a little bit better.”

    For Nola specifically, it looked like the improved fastball allowed his signature curveball to be more effective. After the game, Nola had the same takeaway.

    “The fastball felt really good,” Nola said. “I feel like it set up some other stuff, especially my curveball.”

    Nola generated 16 whiffs across six solid innings of work, and his fastball-curveball combination was a major reason why. A particular reliance on that breaking ball could be part of a strategic adjustment on Nola’s part:

    Category Nola’s first 10 starts in 2025 Nola on Saturday
    Four-seamer usage 25.8% 32.0%
    Four-seamer average velocity (miles per hour) 91.5 92.6
    Curveball usage 28.7% 44.3%
    Curveball whiff percentage 35.5% 44.0%

    Nola’s final line on Saturday – 6.0 innings pitched, five hits, three runs (two earned), one walk and six strikeouts on 97 pitches (64 strikes) – was not mind-blowing. He allowed a pair of solo shots in the sixth inning, likely a sign he was running into a wall as he has been known to do later in starts. But Nola looked significantly better than he has in a very long time, and if it is a sign of things to come, the Phillies will have an easier time managing the loss of Wheeler.

    “It’s tough to lose him,” Nola said. “…It’s tough for the team, the city and the organization. But we’re going to do our best to pick him up and go win as many more baseball games as possible and try to win the division.”

    Odds and ends

    Some additional notes:

    • Duran blowing a save and Realmuto compounding it with an error to give the Nationals the lead – and, eventually, the win – was a disappointment on Friday night. But there was no consternation about Duran giving up runs for the first time in his Phillies career from the superstar closer or his manager. Talking about Duran’s blown save, Thomson invoked the name of a closer he spent plenty of time with.

    “Mariano had 80 of them,” Thomson said. “So it’s going to happen every once in a while.”

    Duran will blow another save at some point, but that point was not Saturday. He confidently stated after Friday’s loss that he did not need time to flush the loss and would be ready the next day. Despite allowing a pair of hits in the ninth inning on Saturday, he put up a zero to shut the door.

    • With Nationals lefty Mitchell Parker on the mound on Saturday, Thomson opted to stack his right-handed hitters, starting Harrison Bader, Edmundo Sosa and Weston Wilson with Max Kepler, Brandon Marsh and Bryson Stott all sitting. Usually Wilson plays left field, but on Saturday he started at first base with Kyle Schwarber in left field and Bryce Harper serving as the designated hitter. Nothing was up with Harper physically, Thomson clarified before the game. The Phillies just wanted to give him a day off his feet. Washington’s first run ended up scoring after a play in which Wilson bobbled a ground ball and then a rushed throw to second base ended up sailing into the outfield.

    • As Thomson continues to juggle four outfielders vying for more at-bats, it was a surprise to see Kepler sit against right-handed starters on back-to-back days. But Bader went 3-for-4 on Saturday with two singles and a double, all carrying exit velocities of over 100 miles per hour (two of them neared 110). Those impressive swings, plus Bader’s previous success against Sunday starter Jake Irvin, landed him the start over Kepler for the second day in a row.

    Bader laced a single off Irvin in his first at-bat, later scoring on a two-out, two-run double from Marchán that got the scoring started. Bader walked on four pitches in his next plate appearance, and suddenly Irvin’s day was over after only getting seven outs.

    • Trea Turner reached on a throwing error by Nationals shortstop CJ Abrams in the first inning on Sunday, and in his second at-bat Turner hit an infield single in the hole when the play was too tough for Abrams to make. It was Turner’s 28th infield hit of the season, head and shoulders above the rest of the pack in the majors:

    • When Suárez’s day was done, Thomson summoned José Alvarado for the eighth inning, and for the first time since his suspension came to an end, Alvarado struggled. The strike zone was small, but he put the entirety of Washington’s 7-8-9 pocket on base without recording an out.

    Luckily for the Phillies, Tanner Banks continued to be dominant against left-handed hitters. With the bases loaded and no outs, Banks came into the game with a 3-0 lead, faced the two best hitters on the Nationals and got three outs. Banks quickly spun a double play ball off the bat of James Wood, then induced an Abrams flyout. The damage was limited to one run charged to Alvarado.

    Left-handed hitters were slashing .167/.205/.250 against Banks entering Sunday’s game, and he continued to show just how valuable he can be in October, when every matchup is scrutinized by a manager. Outside of Duran, Banks might be the Phillies’ best bet against lefties right now.

    Up next: The Phillies have Cristopher Sánchez, Jesús Luzardo and Walker lined up to start the next three days, and that is good news. They will be at Citi Field on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday to face the New York Mets with a chance to take a commanding lead in the National League East.

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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Phillies return home with sweep of Mariners in offensive onslaught

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    The Phillies needed to get back home after a 10-game rollercoaster of a road trip, and they needed to come back to the Citizens Bank Park crowd with a performance like this week’s. 

    The bats hit all over the field and into the seats; the starting pitchers, in the face of losing Zack Wheeler indefinitely as their ace at the top, held strong; and though the bullpen still proved shaky overall, so long as they can get to the ninth, their newest closer can and will shut it down. 

    The Phillies swept the visiting – and contending – Seattle Mariners in a three-game series and the first leg of a six-game homestand for the club in South Philadelphia, capping the set off with an 11-2 win on Wednesday backed by 12 strikeouts and six excellent innings from Jesús Luzardo.

    The Phillies are 74-53, and continue to maintain their lead over the Mets for first in the NL East, which now stands at a 6.0-game buffer with the Nationals on deck and then a potentially pivotal trip up to Queens coming up. 

    Their work against Seattle was a good start to lead them into it. They needed that. 

    They needed Ranger Suárez to bounce back. The left-hander was falling back into what looked to be becoming habitual second-half struggles, but with the makeup of the Phillies’ starting rotation suddenly shifting, he rounded back into dominance on Monday night.

    Suárez mowed through the Mariners’ order for 6.2 innings, collecting 10 strikeouts and holding them scoreless until, after 102 pitches, a solo homer from Mitch Garver and a hit by pitch to Dominic Canzone that immediately followed put a blemish on the effort and gave manager Rob Thomson the cue to hand the ball off to the bullpen. (What they didn’t need, though, was Jordan Romano, with a six-run lead, nearly sending it all off the rails in an instant. It’s only getting harder to trust him with any situation anymore.)

    They needed Cristopher Sánchez to continue endlessly rising to the occasion, too. 

    The de facto No. 1 in the Phillies’ rotation now, Sánchez took his turn on the mound on Tuesday night with his changeup as lethal as ever, leaving Seattle’s lineup flailing as he went on to match a career-best 12 strikeouts. When he was pulled in the seventh after allowing a walk, but not before he registered that last strikeout with a 4-1 lead, the left-hander handed the ball to Thomson and walked back to the dugout with the crowd of more than 44,000 not just standing for him, but roaring. (It just happened to be Orion Kerkering’s turn to run into trouble in relief right after, but the Phillies found a way to survive it.)

    Then they really needed that offensive onslaught. 

    By the second inning on Tuesday night, every batter in the lineup had a hit. Bryce Harper went on to crush two homers way into right field, J.T. Realmuto went solo to left for his trip around the bases, and Trea Turner, before either of those, launched a three-run shot over the fence for his first home run at home all season – and what was, then officially wasn’t his 1,500th career hit

    “To be honest with you, I don’t think that’s ever happened to me where I haven’t hit a homer at home for however many games,” Turner said from the clubhouse afterward. “Fifty games sounds like a lot, but we’re 120 games in or whatever it is, that’s pretty crazy that I’ve hit as many as I have on the road and zero at home. It was kind of becoming a joke or just giving up on it because it’s really weird.”

    But it was hard to even realize it had been that long before it, finally, happened. 

    Turner went 4-for-6 leading off on Monday night with two runs scored and five runs driven in. On Tuesday, Turner singled, stole a base, and then scored to spot the Phillies a 3-1 lead. Then on Wednesday, he sailed a pitch to the right-center wall from the jump and flew around the bases for a lead-off triple that went on to tie the game early, 1-1.

    In his last nine games entering Wednesday’s series finale, Turner was slashing .450/.476/.600 with a nine-game hit streak that he quickly stretched into 10. 

    The rest of the lineup has been following his lead.

    “I think for him, and I think he understood, that for us to win, he’s gotta score runs and he’s gotta be on base, utilize the speed,” Thomson said postgame on Tuesday night. “The home runs, they’re gonna come…He’s so important to our offense.”

    As are Harper, Realmuto, Kyle Schwarber, and of late, Bryson Stott.

    Harper singled to begin the eighth on Tuesday night, then Realmuto homered again for the go-ahead. 

    Schwarber tee’d up on his 44th homer of the season earlier in the first, and reached a new career-high 105 RBIs quickly into Wednesday with a sac fly that scored Turner from third, and all as the “M-V-P” chants grow louder. He still has more than a month to keep building his case, and did so with one more homer to pile on late into Wednesday.

    Then Stott, settling in at the ninth spot in the order, doubled and went 2-for-5 on Monday; drew a walk, stole a base, scored, and homered on Tuesday; and doubled to the right-field wall to give the Phillies a 2-1 lead in the second on Wednesday that they never looked back from.

    “I like him right where he’s at,” Thomson said pregame Wednesday of having Stott that far down the lineup. “He’s playing great.”

    And the Phillies need that from him. 

    They needed everything they got at the Bank this week, and more of it as the regular season pushes into its final month. 

    Finally, they needed Jhoan Duran, for the save on Tuesday night and just in general. 

    Because for as unstable as the Phillies’ bullpen can still be, one thing is absolute about it now: If the Phils get to the ninth with the lead, you’re seeing spiders on the screen and triple-digits on the radar gun. 

    Then it’s game over.

    Managing the outfield

    Nick Castellanos sat for Wednesday’s series finale against the Mariners. He sat on Saturday in Washington, too. 

    Before the trade deadline, he was an assumed everyday player, but since Harrison Bader came in from Minnesota, the Phillies have been trying to manage a four-man outfield rotation between Bader, Castellanos, Max Kepler, and a Brandon Marsh on a considerable hot streak of late. 

    In his office ahead of Wednesday’s game, Thomson indicated to reporters that the Phillies will likely continue to operate on that outfield rotation. Well, for now, at least. 

    “I mean, if three guys get really hot and one guy’s not…yeah,” Thomson said, not wholly committing to the idea. 

    But for now, Marsh started in left on Wednesday, Bader in center, and Kepler in right. 

    Marsh went 1-for-4 with a walk and a run scored at the plate, Bader 2-for-3 with two runs scored, and Kepler 2-for-4 with a solo home run in the fourth that put the Phillies ahead, 3-1. 

    Bader and Kepler have both had their struggles with consistency. So has Castellanos, although he did go 2-for-5 in back-to-back games Sunday in Washington and then Monday at home against Seattle before going 0-for-4 on Tuesday night. 

    There’s a balance to be struck now between getting all four outfielders enough rest and at-bats, Thomson explained. The manager also noted that Castellanos’ knee injury, which he suffered up at Yankee Stadium in late July, was another point to be mindful of as he navigates who plays and when. 

    Granted, Thomson acknowledged, too, that Castellanos would disregard that as someone who prides themselves on playing every day.

    But…

    “He’s a good teammate, and he knows that those other guys are good players, too,” Thomson said of Castellanos.

    “I think they’re all everyday players to tell you the truth,” Thomson added. It’s just you gotta keep them all rested and sharp at the same time if you can.”

    Welcome back

    José Alvarado was reinstated from his 80-game PED suspension on Tuesday and was finally back on the mound on Wednesday.

    Called on for the eighth inning, and with a comfortable 8-2 lead to work with, the Citizens Bank Park crowd welcomed Alvarado back with cheers upon PA announcer Dan Baker’s call that he was entering the game. 

    Then the flamethrowing left-hander made quick work of the Mariners: A 1-2-3 inning, with a strikeout of star slugger Cal Raleigh to send them toward the ninth. 

    He didn’t miss a beat. 

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    Nick Tricome

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  • Instant observations: Francisco Lindor’s grand slam sends Phillies home in NLDS loss to Mets

    Instant observations: Francisco Lindor’s grand slam sends Phillies home in NLDS loss to Mets

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    It’s really hard to win a World Series. The Phillies have been around for 141 years and have just two of them.

    Philadelphia won’t win a third this year. Even though at times it felt inevitable. 

    They faltered in predictable ways in Queens Wednesday night, losing in four games to the rival New York Mets in a 4-1 defeat that was preventable in a bevy of ways.

    It was mismanaged. The pitching was horrendous throughout. The hitting was even worse. The fielding was subpar. Or maybe the Mets are just a team of destiny.

    Baseball is over in Philly and a long (much longer than expected) offseason awaits. 

    If you’re a glutton for punishment and want to re-live the torture, here’s one last look at the good, the bad, and some thoughts on the big picture for this team moving forward:

    The good

    • I am tempted to skip this section entirely. But the Phillies kept fighting (or some of them did). Nick Castellanos has been a total beast in this series and he showed grit with a single in the eighth that sort of gave the Phillies hope (trailing by three). It was just for fun, as he was stranded there.

    • Ranger Suárez’s start Wednesday was one of the most bizarre I have ever seen — playoffs or regular season. He loaded the bases two innings in a row, allowed nine baserunners, struck out eight, and somehow didn’t allow a run. He bent, a lot, but did not break. And while he didn’t go as deep into the game as the other starters usually do, he did create a bridge to the Phillies’ top relievers who would subsequently bail him out. Jeff Hoffman inherited two runners from Suárez with one out in the fifth and didn’t allow them to score. But then he ruined the season (we’ll get to that).

    Suárez got 12 swings and misses from Mets batters, many of them from his curveball which was giving New York hitters fits. The only number that matters is the one under “runs,” and by that measure, the Phillies’ fourth starter got the job done.

    • A little good luck helped the Phillies to get on the board first, when a Bryce Harper walk and Castellanos double set the table for an Alec Bohm fielders choice that was weakly hit and Mark Vientos couldn’t handle it, plating Harper for a 4th inning lead, 1-0. It was the first run scored in the first five innings of a game this series since Kyle Schwarber’s leadoff home run in the opener back on Saturday. It was ugly, but a run is a run.

    The bad

    • Carlos Estévez surrendered a grand slam to Francisco Lindor in the sixth inning that basically ended the Phillies’ season. 

    It wasn’t completely his fault — Hoffman left the bases loaded for him. And manager Rob Thomson let Hoffman stay in to load the bases. The Phillies’ hitters posted just one run up to that point in the ballgame. But the Mets cashed in on their third bases-loaded opportunity. It’s playing with fire when you toss around as many baserunners as the Phillies did Wednesday — 15 in all. The implosion was inevitable. As was their season ending with a whimper.

    • Schwarber got a chance at the plate as the tying run in the ninth, after a pair of Edwin Díaz walks, but he struck out and the Mets flooded the field to celebrate.

    • I really wasn’t sure whether to put Suárez’s first inning under the good or the bad. He threw 30 pitches, and allowed two hits and a walk — but was able to wiggle his way out of the early jam with a pair of strikeouts to keep the Mets off the board. His extended workload in the frame all but assured a lot of bullpen reliance in this one.

    • Definitely belonging under the bad category is Bohm’s misfielding of a chopper that could have been a double play, and should definitely have been at least one out. He missed a tag on the runner crossing from second to third, and after his bobbling of the baseball, threw wide of Harper at first, who was unable to make the force out. Another Bohm misstep came an inning later when a dribbler to third wound up as a base hit as he wasn’t able to maneuver a throw. A slicker infielder turns two there, or at least gets one out on the play. Suárez got out of the jam anyway.

    When the Phillies look for upgrades this offseason, they might have to address third base. 

    • Hoffman might have pitched himself out of a job. After tight-roping a Suárez jam in the fifth, he proceeded to give up a hit, a walk and a hit batter — with two wild pitches mixed in — to load the bases with nobody out in the bottom of the sixth. He was lifted with one out, and responsible for all three runners. A grand slam came minutes later. All of this in addition to him having two dreadful outings already in the NLDS. Thomson has shown a ton of faith in Hoffman and it burned him big time repeatedly in this series.

    • It’s really hard to win baseball games when you’re repeatedly playing from behind. We mentioned it earlier, but just two runs over the first five innings of four games in total is unacceptable. They have one of the most talent-laden tops of the order in all of baseball and they have been too often unheard from until it’s too late. 

    Harper hit a double in the sixth — and Bohm walked — and it amounted to absolutely nothing. Thomson left Bryson Stott in with two men on to face a lefty and he grounded out to end the inning.

    • You don’t want to have too many guys slumping at once in the postseason. We’ve documented Bohm’s issues on offense — he is still working out of it. Add J.T. Realmuto to the list. The Phils’ catcher went 0-for-11 for the series and had some missed opportunities with runners on base Wednesday.

    The big picture

    • I want to use this section to share a few stray thoughts from Wednesday’s game and the playoffs at large. It’s hard to make sense of what happened during this brief playoff run. The five-day layoff was definitely one of the biggest reasons for blame. Teams all across the league have seen bye-winning division winners tossed aside by upstart Wild Cards. At the same time, the Phillies have not been the same team since the All-Star break and that is undeniable. It’s really hard to be the best team in baseball for seven straight months, and the Phillies held the title for about five of those. 

    I’m not entirely sure what the solution is. The starting pitching was among the best in baseball, the bullpen was much improved and mostly reliable. And the offense was laden with stars with proven track records. Show me a baseball team without any flaws.

    Very few of the Phillies’ stars came to play when the season changed into the fall. Are wholesale changes needed to the roster? Or are they still only a piece or two away?

    • The Mets fans are very knowledgeable and they care a lot about their team, but there is a huge difference between the behavior in the stands at Citi Field and at Citizens Bank Park. The Phillies fans are diehards. They breathe baseball. Every single excuse they can muster to cheer on their club they do, and they do it loud. At Citi, there were some tense and important moments and it was pretty chill. Even after Lindor’s grand slam and a 4-1 lead, six outs from clinching, the New York fans were quietly in their seats. Ask anyone who’s been to a playoff game in South Philly, it’s never chill. The fans deserve better, and definitely deserved to see more baseball this October.

    The Athletic ranked postseason atmospheres, and the Phillies faithful landed second behind the Padres. I was in San Diego in 2022 and their fans were probably on par with Philadelphia’s. I was impressed but I didn’t think they were louder. Either way, the Phillies ranked second and the Mets sixth. 

    • Wednesday night’s game marked the 34th postseason game for the Phillies over the last three Octobers, the most in the majors. There hasn’t been a parade down Broad Street, but this team has become reliably active in the playoffs and that doesn’t look likely to change in the near future with the current team tentpoles in place for years to come.


    Follow Evan on Twitter:@evan_macy

    Like us on Facebook: PhillyVoice Sports

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    Evan Macy

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  • How Should the Phillies Use Ranger Suarez in the Postseason? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    How Should the Phillies Use Ranger Suarez in the Postseason? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    It’s 4-0 in the bottom of the first inning against the Washington Nationals in the 160th game of the regular season.
    In the previous four games, the lowly Nationals have scored a combined four runs–tonight, they’ve matched that total over 42 meandering pitches from Ranger Suarez.

    Sep 21, 2024; New York City, New York, USA; Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Ranger Suarez (55) delivers a pitch during the first inning against the New York Mets at Citi Field. Mandatory Credit: Lucas Boland-Imagn Images
    PHOTO: Lucas Boland/Imagn Images

    One of those pitches, in a pivotal 3-2 count, was taken 432 feet to left-center by designated hitter Stone Garrett in his very first at-bat of the season. In total, Suarez would scatter 59 pitches over two innings, surrendering six runs on seven hits and two walks in his last start of the season. 

    Just three months ago, Suarez was on top of the world—a leading candidate for the N.L. Cy Young Suarez owned a dominant 10-2 record with a 1.83 ERA in 16 starts through June 25, landing him a spot on his first All-Star team.


    It was a coronation of one of the sport’s top young arms–Suarez had come into the season uncharacteristically healthy and was the team’s best pitcher from Opening Day–no more was he just the team’s best-kept postseason secret; he was a legitimate, top-five starting pitcher in the National League. 

    Unfortunately, Suarez must have flown too close to the early summer sun, and with his innings totaling higher than ever, he began to crash and burn.


    In four starts from June 30 through July 22, Suarez went 0-3 with a 7.71 ERA before landing on the IL with a back injury. Since returning from the IL on August 24, it’s been much of the same: an uninspiring 2-3 record with a 5.74 ERA in seven starts. His velocity has been down. His signature command has wavered. He hasn’t logged a quality start since June 25.In the wake of Suarez’s disastrous second half–and with the emergence of Cristopher Sanchez–the Phillies have demoted Ranger to being the fourth starter in the upcoming NLDS. A decision is to be made as to whether or not Aaron Nola or Sanchez will start Game 2, but regardless, it is known that if the series comes to a fourth game, Ranger Suarez will make the start. 

    Is that the right move?

    I’m not sureif even the Phillies can admit

    that it is at this point. It’s incredibly strange to say that, given just how clutch Suarez has been in the postseason the last two years. It is, however, perhaps the only move that the Phillies can make when your Weapon X turns into a hot mess down the stretch. Behind Suarez–who will assuredly have the shortest of leashes in October–there isn’t much in the ‘pen to eat innings. Taijuan Walker won’t make the postseason roster, and long-man Spencer Turnbull, out since June 26, will attempt to pitch in the team’s intrasquad game this week but hasn’t exactly faced Major League competition in his limited rehab stints in Lehigh Valley.

    While the chances of Suarez making a complete 180 in time for the postseason are unlikely; however, it isn’t all doom and gloom. The depth of the starting rotation, in theory, can allow for one of the team’s top pitchers to not play to the best of their ability while still having success.


    If Ranger can be just 80% of his potential, if he can provide three to five innings of two-run ball and save the bullpen just a little bit, then the Phillies will have a shot.
    And if we’ve learned anything over the last two years, it’s that one chance is all that this team needs to go all the way.

    PHOTO: Lucas Boland/Imagn Images

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    Dylan Campbell

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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

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    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

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    Mike Hennelly

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  • Phillies quick hits: Zack Wheeler dominates, but poor offense leads to series loss vs. Brewers

    Phillies quick hits: Zack Wheeler dominates, but poor offense leads to series loss vs. Brewers

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    After a thrilling series victory over the New York Mets that included two comeback victories and plenty of unsung heroes, the Phillies headed to Milwaukee for a critical three-game set against the first-place Brewers in hopes of nearing a division crown and solidifying their chances of earning a first-round bye in October.

    In the series opener on Monday, some shaky Phillies pitching combined with scarce offensive production resulted in a 6-2 loss, but they rebounded with a decisive 5-1 victory on Tuesday before falling in Wednesday’s series finale, 2-1, after a brutal offensive showing led to a Brewers walk-off hit.

    Here is what stood out from this series between two teams preparing for October baseball:

    Ranger Suárez shows slight progress and avoids injury scare, but Phillies drop series opener

    Monday’s start was a major one for Suárez, who since returning from his second injured list stint of the season had yet to pair sharp stuff and his typical velocity with precise command. Suárez dazzled early, but eventually ran into some trouble, allowing a trio of runs over five innings of work.

    In Suárez’s first 15 starts of the season, he looked like as strong of a contender for the NL Cy Young Award as any other pitcher. He posted a 1.75 ERA across 92.1 innings pitched during that span. In 10 starts since, Suárez’s ERA is 5.61 with opposing hitters batting .305 against the Phillies’ southpaw.

    On the bright side, Suárez was able to shake off a brief injury scare on a play when he stumbled off the pitcher’s mound in the fourth inning and landed on his wrist and then notch an inning-ending strikeout, before coming out and throwing another clean inning to wrap up his day. He also topped 100 pitches for the first time since May.

    Suárez was not bad against the Brewers, but with only two starts left for him to make before October, it is hard to imagine the Phillies having the same level of trust in him that they have in the last two postseasons, in which he has been excellent as both a starter and reliever. At this point, he seems destined for a fourth starter role in October with a decent chance of sporadic relief opportunities.

    Zack Wheeler dominates with fastball in victory Tuesday night

    Wheeler, on the other hand, has earned more trust than any starting pitcher in baseball. What he does every fifth day is entirely predictable, yet oftentimes jaw-dropping. Wheeler made his 30th start of 2024 on Tuesday night, and for the 25th time this season, he allowed two or fewer earned runs. His line — seven innings of one-run ball with six strikeouts, while only allowing four hits and not walking a single batter — was impressive. But how he did it was even more terrifying for opposing hitters: power, power and more power.

    Of Wheeler’s 99 pitches, 76 were either four-seam fastballs or sinkers, according to Baseball Savant. To take complete ownership of a first-place club’s lineup to the degree he did with just heaters is a massive testament to the ride and accuracy he has on those pitches.

    What makes this so ominous for the lineups that will face Wheeler moving forward is that his secondary pitches are also elite. Wheeler already had an excellent cutter, sweeper and cutter, then began throwing an extremely effective splitter this season just to show hitters another look.

    In a day and age where pitchers are often encouraged to dial up their best stuff in shorter starts, Wheeler is able to pitch deep into games on a consistent basis thanks to nights like Tuesday. He can go through an entire order throwing just one pitch, then show all of the hitters new looks as the game goes on.

    Exactly 193 batters have faced Wheeler three times exactly over the course of a game; those hitters are slashing a combined .184/.259/.339 in their third plate appearances against Wheeler. That level of success late in games is preposterous.

    Wheeler has a 2.56 ERA over 186.2 innings pitched in 2024, and he just keeps on getting better. There is no pitcher in the sport the Phillies would rather have on the mound for their first ballgame in October, and they should feel that way. The pitcher Wheeler has become since arriving in Philadelphia is nothing short of phenomenal.

    At the plate, the most noteworthy swing came from Bryce Harper, who thought he had hit a routine fly ball before watching the ball sail over the wall in left-center field for a go-ahead, two-run shot in the sixth inning.

    Harper just might be finding his peak form right before October, a delightful development for the Phillies.

    Aaron Nola settles back in, but Phillies offense fails to do enough in loss Wednesday

    Nola was on the mound for the Phillies in Wednesday’s series finale, and he took the ball very much in need of a quality outing after a pair of disastrous starts. Nola failed to escape the fifth inning in either of his last two appearances, allowing 10 earned runs and 15 hits across starts against the Marlins and Mets.

    In a big start, Nola was terrific. He tossed seven innings, only allowing one run on three hits. He struck out nine batters and only walked one, throwing 97 pitches (61 strikes), lowering his season-long ERA to 3.54 in the process.

    The Phillies got on the board first in this one thanks to Alec Bohm’s first home run since returning to the active roster on Sunday. Bohm went down to get a slider and smoked it to deep left-center for a solo shot in the second inning:

    If Bohm can put together a string of quality performances and Nick Castellanos continues to struggle, Phillies manager Rob Thomson could consider moving Bohm back up to the clean-up spot with Castellanos sliding down to the five-hole. Thomson said that Bohm was hitting fifth upon returning because he wanted to keep Castellanos in a spot where he was swinging the bat well, but Castellanos has been slumping for just about the entirety of his time batting fourth.

    The only run Nola did surrender, though, came on a solo homer from old friend Rhys Hoskins. Across six games between the Phillies and Brewers this season, Milwaukee hit two home runs: one from Hoskins against Wheeler in his first game back in Philadelphia, and his blast against Nola on Wednesday night.

    With the Phillies’ offense struggling and Nola dominating, Hoskins’ solo shot was enough to keep the game tied, 1-1, headed into bottom of the ninth inning. Phillies closer Carlos Estévez entered the game, and the first batter he faced was the phenomenal 20-year-old rookie Jackson Chourio, who laced a triple to the right field corner. A few batters later, Brewers designated hitter Jake Bauers smoked a walk-off hit to give Milwaukee a series victory.

    Up next: The Phillies will now head to New York for four pivotal contests against the Mets, with the ability to clinch a first-place finish in National League East for the first time since 2011 if they win two games in Queens. The Mets have plenty to play for, too, as they look to outlast the Atlanta Braves for a Wild Card spot.

    Taijuan Walker will return to the starting rotation for Thursday’s series opener, and he will be followed by Cristopher Sánchez on Friday, with Suárez and Wheeler set to start over the weekend.


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    Adam Aaronson

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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

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    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

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    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

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    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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  • Phillies quick hits: Phillies split London series vs. Mets

    Phillies quick hits: Phillies split London series vs. Mets

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    The Phillies finally departed Philadelphia late last week for London to play a two-game set against the New York Mets. Once all of the festivities were put to bed, it was time to play baseball. After an emphatic Phillies victory on Saturday, the team squandered a chance to sweep their rivals due to a poor outing from its bullpen. Here is what stood out from the two-game London series:

    Bryce Harper puts on a show in series opener

    It almost felt inevitable that the Phillies’ superstar first baseman would do something special in this series, because he always seems to come up with something when the lights are brightest. In the series opener on Saturday afternoon, Harper slashed a double to the opposite field in the first inning. He spent the bottom of the third inning mic’d up talking to the MLB on FOX announcers while fielding his position, then came up in the top of the fourth and obliterated a baseball into the right field seats. As he came back to the Phillies’ dugout, Harper did a soccer-style celebration, much to the amusement of his teammates. Harper singled in his next at-bat, ultimately finishing the game a triple away from an international cycle.

    On the 15-year anniversary of the famous Sports Illustrated cover in which Harper, then 16 years old, was billed as “Baseball’s Chosen One,” the two-time National League MVP showed once again the flare for the dramatic that has enabled him to surpass expectations loftier than those forced upon perhaps any other baseball player in history.

    Orion Kerkering continues to dominate

    The Phillies’ bullpen has been headlined by the outstanding dominance of Matt Strahm, Jeff Hoffman and José Alvarado. Those three being as excellent as they have been in 2024 has set the table for rookie Orion Kerkering to settle down and focus on making his pitches without being overtaxed or overexposed. 

    With two outs and two runners on base in the sixth inning of Saturday’s series opener, Phillies manager Rob Thomson could have asked starting pitcher Ranger Suárez for one more out as he faced Mets shortstop Francisco Lindor. But in three plate appearances against the Phillies’ left-hander on Saturday, Lindor had two hits and a hard-hit fly ball that was caught. So, Thomson got aggressive and handed the ball to Kerkering, who made his skipper look awfully smart.

    Kerkering buckled Lindor — a four-time All-Star who was slashing .347/.397/.556 in his last 17 games after a rough start to the season — with his devastating sweeper after nearly touching triple-digits with his fastball that he is beginning to look increasingly confident throwing. 

    Kerkering came back out for the seventh inning and struck out Pete Alonso and Brandon Nimmo — neither came on his signature sweeper — before inducing a fly out off the bat J.D. Martinez.

    There were many curious if Kerkering would quickly be forced into a closer role in 2024. Because Thomson has three dominant bullpen weapons, that has not been necessary. But it certainly seems like he would be up to the task if necessary.

    Taijuan Walker cruises, but Gregory Soto implodes in sixth inning

    Walker, the Phillies’ embattled fifth starer, had what was inarguably his best outing of the season in London. Walker only allowed one base-runner across five scoreless innings with six strikeouts before finally running into some trouble in the top of the sixth, allowing a single to Mets catcher Luis Torrens and walking Alonso with two outs.

    Because this series was preceded by two days off and will be followed by an additional day dedicated to travel — and because Walker has struggled as he gets deeper into games all season long — Thomson was likely always going to be aggressive with his bullpen in this one. With the remarkable trio of Alvarado, Hoffman and Strahm all unused on Saturday, it seemed prudent for Thomson to ask those three arms to take down the game’s final 10 outs.

    Instead, though, Thomson called upon the volatile left-hander Soto to try to extinguish the inning by retiring lefty Brandon Nimmo. Soto gave up a run-scoring double to Nimmo, putting the Mets on the board, and then allowed a game-tying, two-run single to Martinez. Soto walked the next batter, and after three runs had crossed the plate for New York, Strahm entered — with 10 outs still remaining for Thomson’s bullpen to take care of.

    Thomson expressed concern before the team departed for London about relievers getting rusty without consistent appearances. Any reliever who pitched in neither London game, he pointed out, would end up going at least five consecutive days without facing hitters. That is likely the reason he handed the ball to Soto, who did not appear on Saturday, rather than going straight to his three horses. 

    With the amount of wins the Phillies have banked this season, focusing on keeping everybody fresh first and foremost — even if there is a short-term expense — is not hard to understand. But it is difficult not to wonder if things would have been easier had Thomson just given Strahm the ball three batters earlier.

    David Dahl keeps on slugging

    If Thomson made an error in judgement in the sixth inning, it is safe to say he made up for it in the seventh inning. With the game tied in the bottom half of the inning, Thomson utilized newcomer David Dahl against a right-handed relief pitcher as a pinch-hitter for Johan Rojas. Dahl, who was playing for Triple-A Lehigh Valley seven days prior, launched a go-ahead home run to right field — continuing his hot start since joining the Phillies’ big-league club.

    Dahl, who slashed .340/.416/.660 and swatted 12 home runs in 43 games for the IronPigs, was brought back to the majors due to the injuries suffered by Marsh and Clemens. Neither of those two are expected to miss much more time, but Dahl is making a compelling case that he deserves to stick on this roster. Dahl, 30, is 4-6 with two home runs and a double since having his contract selected. It is a small sample size, but he has nearly been perfect in his first week with the Phillies’ big-league club.

    José Alvarado struggles with command in ninth inning, Phillies fail to sweep Mets

    After all of the chaos, the Phillies had the Mets right where they wanted them on Sunday, with Alvarado jogging in from the bullpen and his team holding a one-run lead in the top of the ninth inning. But Alvarado simply could not throw strikes. He was not missing by much, but just about everything he was throwing was missing by a bit. 

    It briefly looked like the Phillies’ left-handed flamethrower was on the verge of escaping a disastrous inning with the game tied, but Alvarado ended up hitting Alonso with a pitch to give the Mets the lead. A passed ball by J.T. Realmuto during the next at-bat gave the Mets an additional run of insurance.

    After a brutal performance on Opening Day, Alvarado has been outstanding for the Phillies as the team’s primary closer (though he is occasionally used in earlier innings). But his command has been a bit shaky of late, and it came back to bite him this time around.

    The Phillies will have to settle for a series split in London.


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    Adam Aaronson

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