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Tag: Trea Turner

  • Phillies Offseason Predictions – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Phillies

    Credit: Jayne Kamin-Oncea-Imagn Images

    The dust has settled on the 2025 MLB season with the Los Angeles Dodgers celebrating back-to-back World Series Championships just like everyone expected. With the 2025 season in the rearview mirror, the attention turns to the offseason. One that might be the most pivotal offseason this franchise has had since they signed Bryce Harper in 2019.

    Who’s Back, Who’s Gone

    Right off the bat, it’s very easy to say the Phillies’ top priority is Kyle Schwarber, which I completely agree with. I would love to see Schwarber finish his career in a Phillies uniform, especially after the season he put together last year. As great as his play is on the field, he’s an amazing clubhouse guy, which is another reason why I think the Phillies must re-sign him. It’s going to leave a bad taste in a lot of fans’ mouths if the Phillies don’t offer Schwarber.

    While Schwarber is priority number one, resigning JT Realmuto would be my number two. I think JT should finish his career with the Phillies, and to me, it makes too much sense. He had a great offensive season, considering how slow he started out of the gate. He is familiar with our pitching staff, and I have never heard any of the pitchers he’s worked with complain about how he handles things. Realmuto is still a top catcher in the league despite his age, and there aren’t many other options to replace JT. The key replacement would be trying to trade for Adley Rutschman from the Baltimore Orioles, but I would much rather the Phillies resign JT and not give up any assets.

    Harrison Bader, I would love to have back, but I’m not sure where he would fit. If we could sign him for a year or two, I don’t mind Bader being a nice bridge player until top prospect Justin Crawford gets settled at the major league level. Bader would be a great mentor for Crawford during his first few years at the major league level.

    In terms of who’s gone, I wouldn’t be shocked to see Nick Castellanos traded along with Johan Rojas and possibly even Alec Bohm. Castellanos is the one most likely to be moved, especially with how things were handled with him the last few months of the season. Ever since his incident with Rob Thomson, it’s been painfully obvious that the Phillies want to try and move him.

    Rojas has become expendable with the emergence of prospect Justin Crawford, who should definitely be on the Phillies’ opening day roster as their centerfielder. Crawford hit .334 in Triple-A last season and played above-average defense in centerfield. Mix in 46 stolen bases, and you now have a better version of Johan Rojas in centerfield.

    Alex Bohm could be in a similar situation; however, I don’t know if they will cut ties with him just yet. Top prospect Aidan Miller is still only 21 years old, but he put together a strong season across Double-A and Triple-A last season. Miller broke the Reading Fightin Phils record for most stolen bases in a season with 52. If the Phillies move Bohm, I definitely expect Aidan Miller to be with the big league club this season. Unless Miller puts together an incredible spring, I do expect him to start the season in Triple-A. That means the Phillies would need to try and find a bridge third baseman until Miller is ready. Nolan Arenado is a name to watch if they do end up trading Bohm. However, it wouldn’t surprise me if the Phillies went with Bohm to start the season and then moved him in the middle of the year if Miller is ready and performing.

    Pitching

    In terms of the pitching, getting Zach Wheeler back healthy is the most important thing for this team. The development of Andrew Painter will be something to monitor as well. Ranger Suarez is the big decision this front office will have to make. His performance has statistically tailed off in the second half of the season, and staying healthy has been a struggle. I’m hesitant to throw money at someone who has struggled to stay healthy. It’s going to be an extremely important decision and one that takes a few years to develop before we decide if it was the right move. It all comes down to money, whether they want to give Suarez the contract he deserves.

    If Suarez returns, the Phillies’ rotation will be poised to be a top rotation in baseball again. Christopher Sanchez was your NL Cy Young runner-up after Paul Skenes took home the award last week, which is an incredible accomplishment for Sanchez. A pitcher the Phillies acquired in a trade from the Rays a few years back has turned into a Diamond in the rough. If Wheeler comes back healthy, Aaron Nola bounces back, and Jesus Luzardo builds off of last year’s strong season, then the Phillies could no doubt have the best rotation in baseball.

    Winter Meetings

    Most action won’t start happening until the week of the MLB Winter Meetings, which will occur from December 7-10. That is when the owners and managers will get to work on building their ballclubs for the 2026 season, as everyone has a fresh start for a World Series run.

    Tags: Aaron Nola Aidan Miller Alec Bohm Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Jesus Luzardo Kyle Schwarber MLB Nick Castellanos Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Trea Turner Zach Wheeler

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    Matt Saglembeni

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

    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.


    Tags: 2025 MLB Postseason Aaron Nola Alec Bohm Arizona Diamondbacks Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Christopher Sanchez Craig Kimbrel Dodgers Harrison Bader Jesus Luzardo Jhoan Duran JT Realmuto Kyle Schwarber Los Angeles Dodgers MLB MLB playoffs MLB Postseason NLDS Orion Kerkering Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Playoffs Postseason Ranger Suarez rangers Rob Thomson Texas Rangers Trea Turner

    Categorized: Phillies

    Matt Saglembeni

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  • Phillies Offense Disappears, Rob Thomson Strikes Again – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    The Phillies had the entire city riled up and ready for another deep postseason run after finishing 96-66 and getting a first-round bye. Everyone knew the Dodgers wouldn’t be easy, but when your top three guys refuse to show up when it matters most and your manager continues to make terrible decisions, you won’t often find yourself in a winning situation.

    To be very blunt, the 2025 Philadelphia Phillies are who we thought they were.


    Same Results, Different Year

    The Phillies are down 0-2 and would need to win three games in a row against the Dodgers, with the next two games in Los Angeles. I’m not gonna sit here and feed optimism when this team has given nothing for us to be optimistic about.

    The Phillies are 1-7 in their last eight playoff games. They refuse to work any ABs, and when they do, they end up swinging at what would be ball four most of the time. Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber, and Bryce Harper have disappeared. Those three in this series are 1-21. I’m gonna say that again. The top three hitters in this lineup are 1-21. I don’t care if you’re playing the Colorado Rockies, you aren’t gonna win games with the top three guys on your team going 1-21 at home in a series. The middle and bottom parts of the order haven’t been any better. This team couldn’t hit water if they fell out of a boat right now.

    No one in the order has stepped up and tried to provide a spark. Nick Castellanos had a two-run double in the 9th inning of game two that barely got me excited because I just knew the Phillies were gonna find a way to ruin the situation.

    Rob Thomson Strikes Again

    Following the double from Castellanos, Bryson Stott then bunted with 0 outs, runner at second, which resulted in Castellanos being thrown out at third. I nearly turned the game off. Bunting in that situation comes from the manager, and boy oh boy would I love to know Rob’s thought process behind this one.

    You are handcuffed because, with Bader dealing with a groin injury, you had to save a pitch runner for Bader. You can’t run for Castellanos, but Castellanos doesn’t run well, so what do you do? HAVE STOTT SWING THE BAT. THIS IS BASEBALL!

    I understand the concept of moving the runner over, but once again, Thomson’s lack of baseball feel strikes again. The crowd was finally into it, the tying run is at second with 0 outs, and you bunt into an out at third and kill any rally you had. Just to top it off, Bader would single in the next AB that would’ve likely scored Castellanos. Can’t make this stuff up.

    This 9th-inning debacle by Rob Thomson wasn’t even his worst moment of the night. Thomson decided to go with Orion Kerkering out of the bullpen first when Jesus Luzardo ran into trouble in the 7th. Luzardo pitched a gem in this game and is the only Phillie worth noting from last night. Luzardo had runners on second and third when Thomson pulled him and put in Kerkering.

    Let me remind you, Kerkering has been terrible inheriting runner all season. One look at a stat sheet and anyone who works in baseball would be able to tell you that. Everyone but Rob Thoms, apparently. He puts in Kerkering, who immediately gives up two runs after nearly getting an out at home. The Dodgers would add on, giving themselves a 4-0 lead in the 7th. Since August, Kerkering has let 8/13 inherited runners score when he comes out of the bullpen. That is not good. Going to Kerkering in that situation is a terrible decision, knowing he’s not good with runners on base. I would’ve much rather seen Strahm in that situation, who was up and warm.

    If the Phillies go to LA and lose game three, getting swept in this fashion is more than enough of a reason for the organization to have a long conversation this offseason about the players and staff on this ball club. The team has gotten better every year since 2022, and yet the results are worse and worse. At this point, players and coaches need to be held accountable.

    Heading to LA

    The Phillies will travel to Los Angeles today and play game three of the series Wednesday night at 9:08. The Dodgers will start Yoshinobu Yamamoto (12-8, 2.49 ERA, 201 Ks), and the Phillies will start Aaron Nola (5-10, 6.01ERA, 97 Ks). As you can tell, the pitching matchup heavily leans in the Dodgers’ favor. Maybe the struggling offense will get going since they are away from home.

    The Phillies will be playing for their season Wednesday night and avoid getting swept 3-0 in embarrassing fashion.

    Tags: Alec Bohm Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Harrison Bader Jhoan Duran JT Realmuto Kyle Schwarber Max Kepler MLB Nick Castellanos NLDS Orion Kerkering Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Rob Thomson Trea Turner

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    Matt Saglembeni

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  • Phillies Postseason Expectations and Predictions – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    After a grueling 162-game season, the Philadelphia Phillies finished their season with a record of 96-66, good enough for the second-best record in all of Major League Baseball. They won the NL East with a 13-game lead over the New York Mets, a team that won’t be playing into October after a historic second-half collapse. The Phillies have the luxury of a first-round bye and will open the NLDS at home on October 4th against either the Los Angeles Dodgers or Cincinnati Reds. The best time of year is here; nothing beats October baseball.


    Playoff Expectations

    Win the whole thing.

    The end.

    All jokes aside, this team is more than capable of delivering a World Series title to Philadelphia. The loss of Zach Wheeler is massive, and not having him throughout this postseason run will sting. However, I trust Christopher Sanchez, Ranger Suarez, Jesus Luzardo, and even Aaron Nola enough to hopefully get us deep into the postseason.

    Looking at the pitching first, I would say this is the best overall staff the Phillies have had in recent years. Not only are the starters great, but the bullpen, with guys like Tanner Banks, Orion Kerkering, Matt Strahm, and Jhoan Duran, rounds out one of the best staffs in the postseason. The last few seasons, the Phillies have lacked solid bullpen arms, and this year is the complete opposite. I feel comfortable knowing Duran is pitching in the 9th if we have a 1-2 run lead late.

    As for the offense, that will be the biggest question mark. Last postseason, the bats disappeared. This year, that simply can’t happen. This team is way too talented offensively to go through a slump this time of year. Led by Kyle Schwarber, this Phillies offense should be able to put up runs. The Phillies’ ability to weather the storm with starting pitching to get into the opponent’s bullpen will be interesting to see. They chased too much out of the zone last year, and it eliminated easy walks and ways to get guys on base. If this lineup can stay consistent and play within itself, the team can put up 5-7 runs per game in the postseason.

    Getting Trea Turner will be massive for the top of the order, especially since with Bader moving back down, it will make the lineup longer in terms of depth. Harrison Bader has been the best trade deadline acquisition Dave Dombrowski has made in recent years. His play in CF will be an integral part of a potential Phillies World Series run. The Phillies have lacked a true centerfielder over the last few playoff runs, so hopefully, Bader will be another spark for this team.

    Postseason Predictions

    Right now, I can see the Dodgers beating the Reds easily in the Wild Card round to set up a NLDS matchup with the Phillies. While the Phillies will have home-field advantage, it’s a best-of-5 series for the NLDS. Truthfully, if the Phillies play their brand of baseball, I could see the Phillies taking the series 3-2

    Next, they would face the Brewers in the NLCS, who I’m predicting will go on to beat the Padres in the NLDS 3-1. A Milwaukee Brewers vs Philadelphia Phillies NLCS with the Phillies winning 4-2 in 6 games.

    I do believe this team is good enough to make a run through the National League and win the Pennant this year. The way the Phillies played in the second half makes me highly optimistic that this team will be able to make it to the World Series.

    As for who they will play, my two guesses are the New York Yankees or the Seattle Mariners, which I know could be a shock to some people. I think the Mariners have the offense and the pitching staff that could help spark a run for them. It would be exciting to see Seattle playing in a World Series. If the Yankees end up making it, then it’s time for us to get our revenge for what happened in 2009.

    My overall prediction is the Phillies win the World Series in 6 games, and we’ll have our second championship parade of the year on Broad Street in November!!

    Tags: Aaron Nola Alec Bohm Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Christopher Sanchez Harrison Bader Jhoan Duran Kyle Schwarber MLB Nick Castellanos Philadelphia 76ers Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Trea Turner Zach Wheeler

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    Matt Saglembeni

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  • Turner wins NL batting title, Schwarber leads league in HRs, RBIs as Phillies beat Twins in finale

    Trea Turner won his second career NL batting title, Kyle Schwarber led the league with 56 homes and 132 RBIs and Nick Castellanos capped Philadelphia’s 96-win season with a sacrifice fly in the 10th inning as the Phillies beat the Minnesota Twins 2-1 on Sunday.

    Turner and Schwarber have a few days to enjoy the spoils of their outstanding individual seasons before the NL East champion Phillies play again. The Phillies are set to host Game 1 of the NL Division Series on Saturday.

    The Phillies will try to stay sharp during the layoff with an intrasquad scrimmage on Wednesday night.

    The Phillies finished at 96-66 and are looking to win their first World Series title since 2008. Loaded with All-Stars and an opening day payroll that reached almost $284 million, the Phillies have struggled in the postseason the last three seasons, losing in the 2022 World Series, the 2023 NLCS and last year to the New York Mets in the division series.

    Turner returned from a three-week layoff due to a hamstring injury and went 0 for 2, yet still finished a league-best .304 this season. Turner also won a batting title in 2021, when he led the major leagues at .328 for Washington and the Los Angeles Dodgers. He’s the first Phillies’ first batting champion since Richie Ashburn in 1958.

    Schwarber, eligible for free agency in the offseason, finished one homer ahead of Los Angeles Dodgers two-way star Shohei Ohtani to lead the National League and four behind major league leader Cal Raleigh of Seattle, who hit 60.

    Schwarber fell two homers shy of matching Ryan Howard for the franchise record of 58 set in 2006. He closed out the regular season No. 3 in walks at 107.

    Cristopher Sánchez struck out eight and tossed two-hit ball over 5 1/3 innings — and tipped his cap to a roaring, appreciative crowd — in his final start before he takes the mound in Game 1 of the NLDS.

    Key moment

    Minnesota’s Ryan Jeffers hit an RBI double off reliever Lou Trivino in the sixth, and Max Kepler tied the game 1-1 with a solo homer in the eighth. Castellanos drove in the automatic runner off Cody Laweryson.

    Key stat

    The Twins finished 70-92 and must decide if Rocco Baldelli will return as manager when they open the 2026 season March 26 in Baltimore.

    Up next

    The Phillies await their postseason opponent and the winner of the Dodgers-Reds first-round series.

    CBS Minnesota

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

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


    Six Games Remain

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

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

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

    Playoff Positioning

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

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

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

    Upcoming Week

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


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

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

    Tags: Aaron Nola Alec Bohm Brandon Marsh Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Christopher Sanchez Harrison Bader Jhoan Duran Kyle Schwarber Max Kepler MLB Nick Castellanos Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Ranger Suarez Trea Turner

    Categorized:Phillies

    Matt Saglembeni

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  • Phillies continue dominance over Dodgers, take another series from defending World Series champs

    If they meet the Dodgers again before the season is over, the Phillies have to feel pretty good about their chance of dethroning the defending World Series champs.

    Not only did the scorching hot Phillies come to Los Angeles this week and celebrate a National League East division clinch in the Dodgers’ home stadium by winning the opener of a three-game series, they proceeded to win the series along with the season series (4-2) and bolster their confidence that the Dodgers shouldn’t be viewed as an insurmountable obstacle in their way if both teams meet in the playoffs.

    The Phils didn’t just beat the Dodgers; they sent a message by rallying from deficits in both of their wins. They have now won five straight regular-season series against the Dodgers going back to 2023.

    Looking for the sweep with Jesús Luzardo on the mound Wednesday, the Phillies couldn’t summon the magic one more night, but they did put runners in the ninth to cause a brief scare.

    But the damage was done Monday and Tuesday, as both games were won by the Phillies in final last at-bat.

    J.T. Realmuto plated Harrison Bader from third in the 10th inning on Monday, capping a comeback from down 3-1 in the fifth and clearing the way for the bubbly to pop inside the visitors locker room. 

    The next night, the Phils were staring down a 4-0 deficit – understandable given their postgame festivities the night before – but erupted for a six-run sixth and then got a three-run homer from catcher Rafael Marchan in the ninth that broke a 6-6 tie.

    By the end of Tuesday night, the Phillies had not only clinched the NL East but also made sure that they owned any tiebreaker scenario over the Dodgers for postseason seeding.

    The Phillies left L.A. 5.5 games ahead of the Dodgers in the overall NL standings and just 2.5 games behind the Brewers for the NL’s best record and top seed. More impressively, they wrapped up a streak of 15 games in 15 days in which they went 11-4. They’ also won their sixth straight series since that late-August sweep to the Mets in Queens.

    Some other storylines from the three-game series:

    Bullpen beatdown

    The Phillies, as they typically do, bludgeoned the Dodgers’ bullpen. On Monday, they scored five of their six runs from the seventh inning on, with Byrce Harper belting his 27th homer in the eighth off Dodgers southpaw Alex Vesia, a major piece of their 2024 World Series bullpen.

    On Tuesday, Shohei Ohtani blanked the Phils lineup for five innings but five Dodgers relievers combined to give up nine runs, with lefty Justin Wrobleski getting hammered for 5 runs in one-third of an inning and Marchan touching up Blake Treinen for a three-run shot.

    Really, this is what the Phillies have done all season. According to Stat Muse, the Phillies had scored MLB’s fourth-most runs (743) against relief pitching and had the second-highest batting average (.260) among all MLB teams against bullpens going into Wednesday’s action.

    Schwarber chase

    Kyle Schwarber clubbed his 53rd homer Monday night, making him five away from tying Ryan Howard’s record of 58 from 2008. Schwarber has nine games left to tie or break the record.

    Has he hit five homers in a nine-game span this year? Thanks for asking. The answer is yes. Several times. 

    Schwarber belted five homers in seven games from April 29-May 6, and from May 2 to May 11, and from May 11-20, and from July 2-11, and … well, you get the picture. He’s more than capable of doing it, and the Phillies next stop in Arizona’s homer-friendly Chase Field sure doesn’t hurt his chances.

    What’s Next?

    The Phillies are off Monday before finishing their West Coast trip – and entire road schedule – against the Diamondbacks at Chase Field with a three-game series. Per Matt Gelb of The Athletic, the Phillies will piggyback Taijuan Walker and Walker Buehler on Friday as they set up their rotation to make sure Cristopher Sánchez is their Game 1 starter in the playoffs.

     


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

    Credit: John Jones/Imagn Images

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


    NL East Dominance

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

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

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

    Bader Leading Off

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

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

    Two Weeks Remain

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

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


    Weekly Predictions

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

    Tags: Aaron Nola Alec Bohm Brandon Marsh Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Harrison Bader J.T. Realmuto JT Realmuto Kyle Schwarber MLB New York Mets Nick Castellanos Philadelphia Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Ranger Suarez Trea Turner Zach Wheeler

    Categorized:Phillies

    Matt Saglembeni

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

    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.


    Tags: Aaron Nola Alec Bohm Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Harrison Bader J.T. Realmuto JT Realmuto Kansas City Royals Kyle Schwarber Mets MLB New York Mets Nick Castellanos NL NL East Philadelphia Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Ranger Suarez Rob Thomson Royals Trea Turner Zach Wheeler

    Categorized:News Phillies

    Matt Saglembeni

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

    The Phillies took another series down in Miami. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    A few other notes from Miami…

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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    Nick Tricome

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

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


    September Starts Now

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

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

    Lack of Urgency

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

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

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

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

    New Addition

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

    Upcoming Week

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

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


    Weekly Predictions

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

    Tags: Aaron Nola Alec Bohm Brandon Marsh Bryce Harper Harrison Bader Jordan Romano Kyle Schwarber MLB Philadelphia Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Playoffs Rob Thompson Trea Turner Zach Wheeler

    Categorized:Phillies

    Matt Saglembeni

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  • A Troubling Series in New York – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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

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

    Game 1

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

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

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

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

    Game 2

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

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

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

    Game 3

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

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

    Take Aways

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

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

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

    Photo Credit: Jess Rapfogel/Getty Images

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

    Categorized:Phillies

    Liam Mahoney

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

    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.

    Tags: Aaron Nola Alec Bohm Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Jhoan Duran JT Realmuto Kyle Schwarber Max Kepler MLB New York Mets Nick Castellanos NL East Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Ranger Suarez Trea Turner Zach Wheeler

    Categorized:Phillies

    Matt Saglembeni

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

    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.

    Adam Aaronson

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  • J.T. Realmuto is scorching hot, giving Phils long-awaited cleanup hitter

    If they only had a legit cleanup hitter, imagine what the Phillies could do?

    That was basically the biggest question about the Phillies’ offense for much of the season, as a lineup that routinely started with Trea Turner, Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper – each with on base percentages above .350 – labored through long stretches of being ineffectual, often lending little support to a pitching rotation that ranks among MLB’s best.

    The scariest thought was the Phillies in the postseason and Harper routinely drawing intentional walks as pitchers worked around the top three to face the struggling back six.

    But the Phillies appear to have finally found the right man to protect Harper from the four hole, as J.T. Realmuto’s hot streak that actually started in June has really picked up into July and August.

    At this point, he’s scorching, and not surprisingly, the Phillies’ offense has been among MLB’s best since the All-Star break. The Phillies have scored MLB’s fourth-most runs since the break going into Saturday’s action, second-most in the National League. 

    Realmuto, who clubbed his third homer in the past four games Friday in a 5-4 loss to the Nationals, is showcasing his rediscovered power stoke at an ideal time, as Bryson Stott has also heated up this month (.365 batting average in August) and as Brandon Marsh continues to rebound from his disastrous April in his platoon role.

    “I would say this year, this is definitely the best I’ve felt seeing the ball for sure,” Realmuto told reporters after Friday’s game, when his go-ahead homer in the seventh inning was spoiled by Jhoan Duran’s first blown save as a Phillie. “I just feel like I’m getting my good swing off more often than not.

    How hot has Realmuto been?

    Entering Saturday’s game against the Nationals, Realmuto is on a six-game hitting streak with 10 hits in that stretch. He’s raised his batting average 10 points in the span, up to .279. Only Trea Turner and Alec Bohm have a higher season-long batting average among Phillies hitters.

    In the past seven days, Realmuto has the second-highest batting average, second-highest on-base percentage, best slugging percentage, most homers, and fourth-most RBIs in the team’s batting order. His slugging percentage is a ridiculous 1.000, with 19 total bases in 19 at-bats.

    Here’s how Realmuto compares to other Phillies batters over the past seven days:

    PLAYER BA OBP SLG HR RBI
    J.T. Realmuto .474 .525 1.000 3 5
    Kyle Schwarber .280 .367 .560 2 8
    Bryce Harper .333 .414 .583 2 7
    Trea Turner .552 .581 .793 1 8
    Nick Castellanos .412 .444 .706 1 1
    Max Kepler .313 .313 .564 1 2

    Realmuto, of course, is in the last year of the five-year, $115.5 million deal he signed in 2021 after the Phillies let him first test the free-agent waters. It’s not uncommon to see players have breakout seasons in contract years, but Realmuto’s surge comes after he played just 99 games last season thanks to a midseason knee surgery and slashed just .266/.322/.429, causing concerns that he was no longer one of the game’s top dual-threat catchers as an offensive weapon and defensive stalwart.

    Realmuto really struggled to start 2025, batting just .237 in March/April, followed by .205 in May. On the last day of May, Realmuto was slashing just .222/.293/361 and had just four homers and 21 RBIs.

    Now, he’s up to .279/.333/.415 with 10 homers and 44 RBIs – maybe not the kind of prototypical cleanup hitters stats, but perfectly fine given the production the Phils are getting from the first three batters in their order, and helped by some recent surges from Max Kepler, Marsh and Stott.

    Arguably the most important part of Realmuto’s second-half emergence is that he’s giving the Phils protection for Harper as a right-handed batter that they weren’t getting from Bohm or Nick Castellanos, and he’s been one of their best hitters against right-handed pitching, which will be critical in the postseason.

    Here’s a look at Realmuto in the cleanup spot compared to Castellanos and Bohm:

    PLAYER SLASH LINE HR RBI
    J.T. Realmuto .299/.365/.481 3 7
    Alec Bohm .197/.266/.324 3 9
    Nick Castellanos .237/.279/.381 5 27

    Castellanos has more RBI but also has 194 at-bats from the four hole, while Realmuto and Bohm each have fewer than 80.

    Here’s how they compare against right-handed pitching:

    PLAYER SLASH LINE HR RBI
    J.T. Realmuto .304/.362/.444 8 35
    Alec Bohm .283/.328/.380 11 40
    Nick Castellanos .259/.293/.413 5 31

    Again, Castellanos has more at-bats than Realmuto and Bohm, but Realmuto’s slash line is far superior, and exactly what the Phillies need now and gong into the postseason.

    The only question is: Can he keep this up?


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    Geoff Mosher

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  • Phillies return home with sweep of Mariners in offensive onslaught

    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. 

    Nick Tricome

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  • Bryson Stott made a fix to his swing. He’s been surging for the Phillies since.

    Bryson Stott took a look at his swing and finally realized what needed to be fixed. 

    “Just lowering my hands again,” the Phillies’ second baseman said, “[2023] and the start of [2024] they were pretty low. You take so many swings a day that they started creeping up and creeping up, and didn’t feel it until I started going back and I’m like ‘This looks…something looks weird.’”

    So Stott’s solution was to “just try to simplify it,” and so far, the results have been showing. 

    Stott worked a full count and drove an RBI double to the right-field wall in the second inning of the Phillies’ 11-2 rout of the Seattle Mariners on Wednesday, helping to complete the series sweep in what was a total offensive onslaught down at Citizens Bank Park

    He drove in another run with an opposite-field grounder into left, and the night before, he launched a solo homer into the right-field seats. 

    Since the All-Star break, Stott’s been slashing .300/.387/.500, and 18 games into August entering Wednesday’s series finale, he’s posted an even hotter line of .354/.429/.563.

    The 27-year-old infielder has notably struggled at the plate through the first half of the season, and throughout various spots up and down the lineup. 

    But Stott found stability at the No. 9 spot in the order, and with the adjustment of lowering his hands while he’s in the batter’s box, the payoff has been huge – both for his own production and the Phillies’ overall offensive cohesion, as his hot bat leads right into another with a surging Trea Turner at the top, and then into Kyle Schwarber, Bryce Harper, and J.T. Realmuto at the heart of the order.

    “He knows where the barrel’s at,” manager Rob Thomson said postgame Wednesday of the change to Stott’s swing.

    “You got that guy at the end of your lineup and he gets hot, that really helps your offense,” Thomson continued. “Because it turns it over to Turner and Schwarber and Harp and J.T., who’s swinging the bat well, so that’s a big thing for us.”

    And what can help to yield 48 hits and 29 runs scored across a series like it did this week against the Mariners. 

    Stott can field, run the bases, and has an eye at the plate that can make him an incredibly tough out for opposing pitchers. That much has been known about him ever since he made his way up the Phillies in 2022. 

    The struggle, and concern, for the past year and a half, though, has been on him actually making solid contact and getting on base first. 

    Stott hasn’t done that consistently since the 2023 season, when he slashed .280/.329/.419 through 151 games. 

    But he might be putting the puzzle back together at the plate now. He just needed to get his hands lower.

    “You see the talent there,” Turner said of Stott from the clubhouse postgame. “We all know how good he is. He was a little frustrated with himself early in the year, and just feeling like he was missing pitches that he should hit. That’s kind of the difference.”

    “The at-bats have been really consistent,” Turner added. “Feel like he’s walking quite a bit, too, in front of me. Feel like he’s getting in good counts, swinging at good pitches. He expects that out of himself. It was only a matter of time because we’ve seen him in the past be really good.”

    And he’s doing good right now, which only has the Phillies looking that much better – like capable of piling on 29 runs in three days against a postseason contender better.

    “You always want to play well, but doing that in three games against those arms, and they’re really good arms, should just show you that we can do it,” Stott said. “We need to have the confidence that we can do it.”


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    Nick Tricome

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  • Phillies Weekly Recap: Phillies Maintain NL East Lead, Zach Wheeler Placed On IL – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    The Phillies went 6-4 over their longest road trip of the season, maintaining a 5-game lead in the NL East. As Aaron Nola returned from the IL, Zach Wheeler went on the IL, with an upper extremity blood clot in his right shoulder. Wheeler currently has no timetable for a return.


    Happy To Be Home

    Despite having a winning record on the road trip, the Phillies’ offense struggled at times, and the pitching rotation took a massive hit with Zach Wheeler heading to the IL. The Phillies started this road trip last weekend in Texas against the Rangers, taking 2/3 in Texas. They lost 2/3 in Cincinnati to the Reds, a team fighting for the final Wild Card spot. They closed out their longest road trip of the season with four games in Washington, splitting the series 2/2 with the Nationals. While they head back home with a winning record on the trip, nothing can make up for the loss of Zach Wheeler.

    It was announced Saturday night that the Phillies would be placing Zach Wheeler on the IL with an upper extremity blood clot in his right shoulder. The Phillies have no timetable for his return at the moment, as he will be getting more testing done on his shoulder throughout the week. The Phillies losing their ace down the stretch is brutal, and with no timetable for his return, who knows if he will even pitch again this season. Blood clots are a serious issue, and I can see the Phillies being over-cautious with Wheeler. My best-case scenario is that he comes back with a week or two left in the season to get a start or two under his belt before the playoffs. The worst case is we don’t see him till next spring training. It’s going to be a very interesting next few days as more news is expected to come on Zach Wheeler’s health.

    Closing Out August

    As we enter the final two weeks of August, the race to the postseason is heating up. The Phillies currently hold a 5-game lead over the New York Mets for the top spot in the division. To close out August, the Phillies have a three-game series against the Mariners this upcoming week and then three series in a row against NL East competition. The Nationals come to town this weekend before the Phillies close the month out with a three-game series against the Mets and a four-game series against the Atlanta Braves. These next two weeks will be crucial for the Phillies as they try to set themselves up for back-to-back NL East titles. They have a chance to bury the Mets and take away any last hope the Braves have of making the postseason.

    The offense needs to get it going, and following an 11-run outburst in the final game of the Nationals series, I would hope the offense is starting to find its groove again. Getting Alec Bohm in the lineup is huge, and he showed that Sunday with a homer in his first game back. If the offense can put up 5-7 runs a game down the stretch, the Phillies should be able to use their top-tier bullpen to close out games.

    Speaking of the bullpen, reliever Jose Alvarado is expected to return from suspension this week, which will give the Phillies another hard-throwing lefty out of the bullpen. The Phillies also avoided disaster after newly acquired closer Jhoan Duran took a line drive off the foot Friday night. He was carted off the field as the city of Philadelphia held its breath. They were able to exhale on Sunday after Duran came in and earned a save against the Nationals.

    Upcoming Week

    The Phillies welcome the Seattle Mariners (68-57) to town for a three-game series against a team that’s also fighting for a division. The Mariners are 1.5 games back of the Houston Astros for first place in the NL West. The Phillies have an off day on Thursday, followed by a three-game series against the Nationals in Philadelphia. If the Phillies can finish the week winning 4/6 games, I will be happy.

    Weekly Prediction

    Alec Bohm hits a pair of homers during this homestand, and Christopher Sanchez shines in his first start since the Zach Wheeler news.

    Tags: Aaron Nola Alec Bohm Bryce Harper Bryson Stott Christopher Sanchez Harrison Bader Jhoan Duran Jose Alvarado Kyle Schwarber Matt Strahm Nick Castellanos Philadelphia Philadelphia Phillies Phillies Trea Turner Zach Wheeler

    Categorized:Phillies

    Matt Saglembeni

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

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

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

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

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

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

    The Toast

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

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

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

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

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

    But the party wasn’t on just yet. 

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

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

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

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

    The Party

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

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

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

    It was fitting.

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

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

    And the Phillies did

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

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

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

    “I want my f—ing trophy back!”

    The champagne flew. 

    But there was still work to do.

    The Hangover

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

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

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

    The Final Touches

    The dullness didn’t linger. 

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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    Nick Tricome

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  • Should the Phillies Bring Back Hector Neris? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Should the Phillies Bring Back Hector Neris? – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Former Phillie Hector Neris was DFA’d by the Chicago Cubs earlier this week. Neris, now 35 years old, has pitched to a 3.89 ERA in 46 games with Chicago this season before clearing waivers and subsequently released for the Cubs 18th overall prospect. Neris left Philadelphia in free agency for the Houston Astros where he would beat his former club in the 2023 World Series. In light of the Phillies recent bullpen struggles, does it make sense to bring back the former closer?

    The answer is clearly yes. The issue with Neris’ in Philadelphia was the high leverage innings. Neris isn’t the typical closer and does not have typical closer stuff. It was clear very early in a Hector Neris outing what you were getting. Most nights it was the devastating splitter with a ton of tumble but some nights it was the sinker that had little to no movement which would result in a lot of hard contact. It always seemed as if Neris was walking a tightrope which is not at all something you want in a closer.The veteran right hander could fill the Yunior Marte or Max Lazard role as a low leverage right handed option but with plenty of experience. If you replace Marte, Lazard or Jose Ruiz with a pitcher of Neris’ caliber, it makes the bullpen that much longer.While Neris’ tenure in Philadelphia was certainly a rollercoaster, it was overall a success. He pitched to a 3.44 ERA and is currently 8th in Phillies franchise history in Saves. By all accounts Neris seems to be very well-liked by players, staff, and media. It’s very likely there would be mutual interest in a reunion, so why not take a chance?


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    Evan Carroll

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