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Tag: Zack Wheeler

  • Learning more about Zack Wheeler’s unusual injury

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    Zack Wheeler was in the thick of the NL Cy Young race, and was the best Phillies pitcher on a staff full of aces. Then it all suddenly stopped.

    He didn’t break a bone, or tear a ligament. He developed a blood clot. The Phillies rightly shut him down, had the clot in his shoulder removed and put him on the shelf for the season. It was then revealed he needed thoracic outlet decompression surgery to alleviate venous thoracic outlet syndrome.

    This is a rare surgery, but it’s not unheard of. 

    Dr. Dinesh Dhanaraj, the Attending Orthopedic Surgeon at St. Mary Medical Center in Langhorne, weighed in on some of the specifics of Wheeler’s injury, to help us understand what might happen to him career-wise if/when he returns next year.

    (The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and guest authors and do not reflect any official policy or position of any MLB team or a team’s athletic physicians.)

    “It’s a serious health issue,” Dhanaraj said. “The fact that he had a blood clot removed is the beginning of this problem, a life-threatening problem. A blood clot can travel all the way to your lungs and cause a pulmonary embolism and be fatal, the good news is he is out of the woods, he had that prevented.”

    His health is the most important thing. Wheeler is a family man, and at 35 entering the last few years of his career anyway. It was recently reported that the hurler planned to retire after his monster three-year, $126 million deal wraps up after the 2027 season.

    So what is his baseball outlook?

    “It’s not like a sports injury… it’s an anatomic variant in people, they have an extra cervical rib, instead of where the normal ribs come off they have an extra rib, it actually presses on the soft tissue,” the doctor said. “It pushes on it and causes compression. They’ll remove the rib to release the pressure.”

    There won’t be a ton of rehab when he’s post surgery. It’ll just be healing.

    “It’s removing an area of compression so it’s mostly pain,” Dhanaraj said. “It’s not structurally where you need ligament to heal or a bone to heal or tendon, it’s mostly pain threshold, but it’s not like they’d be having him throw fastballs for a couple months.”

    There is some precedent with this injury when it comes to top-of-the-line starting pitchers. Here’s how things panned out for a handful of pitchers who had surgery for thoracic outlet syndrome: 

    Pitcher Time missed Performance after
    Merril Kelly 6 months 130 starts, 3.60 ERA since
    Josh Beckett 9 months Pitched one more year, 2.80 ERA
    Threw a no-hitter in 2014
    Chris Carpenter 2.5 months Returned briefly to toss 40 innings,
    did not pitch again after 2012 postseason
     Tyler Thornburg 12 months 62 starts, 5.37 ERA since
    Stephen Strasburg 11 months Pitched 4.2 innings, then retired
    (complications)
    Matt Harvey  9 months  Pitched 98 games, 6.15 ERA since 

    The track record is varied. Kelly had a fruitful career. Beckett, Carpenter and Strasburg tried to return with various — and brief — results. Thornburg actually pitched for a few years after his TOS surgery but his ERA and performance were noticeably worse. 

    Wheeler has been one of the better pitchers in baseball for the last half decade. He recovered and was even stronger after Tommy John surgery 10 years ago. If anyone can do it, it’s Wheeler.

    But there isn’t much of a roadmap for him to follow. The flame-throwing pitcher will need to chart his own course, and the Phillies certainly hope it means two more years of dominating in Citizens Bank Park. 


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    Evan Macy

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  • Phillies ace Zack Wheeler diagnosed with venous thoracic outlet syndrome, out for remainder of 2025 season

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    Zack Wheeler has been diagnosed with venous thoracic outlet syndrome, with thoracic outlet decompression surgery recommended, the Phillies announced on Saturday afternoon. The Phillies added that the timeline for that procedure is generally 6-8 months.

    For Wheeler, the 2025 season is over. Phillies President of Baseball Operations Dave Dombrowski confirmed as much to the media minutes after the announcement was made, speaking alongside Head Athletic Trainer Paul Buchheit. Dombrowski said there is every expectation that Wheeler will return to pitching after his recovery.

    Dombrowski – and, moments later, Phillies manager Rob Thomson – expressed disappointment for Wheeler but made clear they believe the team still has more than enough to win a World Series.

    “Of course it’s never good to lose a Zack Wheeler, your number one pitcher,” Dombrowski said. “I think we have starting pitching depth that’s capable of pitching well for us, pitching well in the postseason. Again, you’re never going to replace an individual like that.”

    Thomson, meanwhile, said he has been operating as if Wheeler would not return in 2025 since the discovery of a blood clot landed the right-hander on the injured list last Saturday.

    Wheeler’s last few starts were riddled with uncharacteristic struggles with command – possibly caused by ongoing soreness in the same right shoulder area where he needed surgery. Buchheit was asked if Wheeler’s prior shoulder discomfort was tied to this far more serious situation.

    “He wasn’t exhibiting any of the symptoms that ultimately drove us to get Washington Nationals doctors involved in evaluating,” Buchheit said. “…We do think that they were independent, and typically these things kind of have a cluster of symptoms, symptom patterns. He wasn’t exhibiting any of those until we had him evaluated [in Washington D.C.].”

    Buchheit said that Wheeler experiencing “heaviness” was what prompted the additional tests, which revealed the results leading to first a procedure on Monday to remove the blood clot in his right upper extremity and in the coming weeks, the thoracic outlet decompression surgery.

    While the daunting timeline rules out Wheeler for the remainder of 2025 and could jeopardize his ability to be available for Opening Day 2026 – Dombrowski was not yet ready to speculate about the latter issue – Buchheit said the team caught this early, which will be in Wheeler’s favor.


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • Phillies return home with sweep of Mariners in offensive onslaught

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Then they really needed that offensive onslaught. 

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

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

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

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

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

    The rest of the lineup has been following his lead.

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

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

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

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

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

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

    And the Phillies need that from him. 

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

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

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

    Then it’s game over.

    Managing the outfield

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    But…

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

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

    Welcome back

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

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

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

    He didn’t miss a beat. 

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    Nick Tricome

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  • NLDS: Phillies’ bullpen melts down in Game 1 loss to Mets, wasting brilliant Zack Wheeler start

    NLDS: Phillies’ bullpen melts down in Game 1 loss to Mets, wasting brilliant Zack Wheeler start

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    Game 1 played out in the scenario many fans were fearful of.

    Zack Wheeler was excellent, Kyle Schwarber made an immediate statement with an emphatic lead-off homer, but then the Phillies’ bats went silent the rest of the way, sitting on a narrow lead that the momentum-riding Mets have proven they can flip in an instant. 

    And the second the Phils reached into the bullpen late, it happened.

    The Mets put together an eighth-inning rally to win 6-2 on Saturday at what 45,000-plus wanted to be an electric Citizens Bank Park – to kick off a Phillies postseason run hanging on World Series-or-bust ambitions.

    Instead, New York’s still riding their late-year high, while the Phillies are now working from behind 1-0 in the best-of-five National League Division Series. 

    “You can’t harp on this one,” Bryce Harper said from the Phillies’ clubhouse postgame. “You gotta understand, you gotta flush it, and come back tomorrow.”

    Game 2 is Sunday. Lefty Cristopher Sánchez has the nod for it to try and even out the series. But until then, here’s how Saturday fell apart…

    Played with fire

    The Mets showed it not even a full two days ago: You give them even the narrowest of openings and they’ll flip a game completely on its head. 

    They stole the Wild Card series with a ninth-inning rally in Game 3 against the Brewers on Thursday, and the Phillies came in knowing how dangerous they were because of it

    On Saturday, Zack Wheeler more than did his part, throwing a dominant and clutch seven-scoreless innings in a 1-0 game. 

    Then the ball was given to Jeff Hoffman in the eighth. He gave up a single to Francisco Alvarez and walked Francisco Lindor with no one out. 

    The crack was right there. The Mets blew it open. 

    In a 1-2 count, with Hoffman and the Phillies desperately needing an out, Mark Vientos roped a pitch into left, which was more than enough for pinch-runner Harrison Bader to score from second and for Lindor to get to third.

    The game was tied, the Phillies were in trouble, and manager Rob Thomson had to take the ball from Hoffman to bring in Matt Strahm hoping he would hold things there.

    He couldn’t. 

    Brandon Nimmo singled to drive in Lindor, and then Pete Alonso hit a sac fly to center to let Vientos tag up and score.

    The Mets were up 3-1 and the Phillies had lost their grip on the game in an instant as the home crowd fell into a pit of dejection and frustrated boos.

    Strahm and the Orion Kerkering gave up two more runs before it was over. The Mets went up 5-1, and the bullpen had completely melted down.

    “They smelled blood in the water,” Strahm said postgame. “They got scrappy and we got got.”

    Wheeler silenced the Mets’ lineup all day, but they survived him for long enough to get into the Phillies’ bullpen, with the benefit of the Philadelphia bats not doing much to give themselves a cushion outside of Kyle Schwarber’s lead-off bomb in the first. 

    This was the reason to be afraid of the Mets, the reason why Thomson said the day before that the second the Phillies get a chance offensively, they have to put the hammer down

    The Mets came in hot, are playing with nothing to lose, and aren’t ever truly dead. 

    The Phillies played with fire, and they got burned. Now they’re in a 1-0 hole. 

    Offensive power outage

    Schwarber crushed the lead-off home run to make it 1-0 Phils out of the gate, but then that was it. 

    He hit a single in the third, but that was the only other Phillies hit up until Harper doubled and then Nick Castellanos singled in the eighth to put runners at the corners. The Phils couldn’t make something out of it though. Alec Bohm grounded into a force out to end the inning right after. 

    The Phillies only had five hits, a homer, and an RBI on their last licks to show for what was a bullpen game for the Mets.

    New York’s decision to start Kodai Senga after an injury-riddled season and a several-month layoff was a bit of a shocker, but it was an opportunity for the Phillies to pounce early. 

    With Schwarber’s lead-off shot, it looked like they were going to, but then Senga settled in and used that notorious “ghost fork” to get through two innings. 

    Then the Phillies just had no answers for the Mets’ relievers. 

    “There was some chasing there tonight, for sure,” Thomson said postgame. “We gotta get back in the zone, we gotta start using the fields, it’s what I talk about all the time. Just put better at-bats together.”

    This was one of the concerns from the Wild Card bye layoff and one of the lingering fears from how the postseason ended last year. 

    The bats are cold, and they just squandered what should have been a massive opportunity to start the postseason off right. 

    Now the Mets are in the driver’s seat.

    “It’s the same thing, man. Chasing balls in the dirt, didn’t work deep into counts like we should’ve,” Harper said from the clubhouse after. “We gotta understand what they’re gonna try to do to us and flip the switch as an offense immediately.” 

    If they don’t, the immediate hole stands to get deeper real quick, and there might not be any coming back from that.

    Blink and you’ll miss

    It’ll get lost in the shuffle now because of how Saturday ended, but Wheeler was absolutely brilliant in his Game 1 start.

    The Phillies took the field. The crowd roared as the spinning towels created a blinding sea of red.

    Then Wheeler stunned the Mets in their place. 

    The ace right-hander retired the first three batters on 11 pitches, all strikes, and with only one of them put in play – Lindor’s line out to first leading off. 

    Vientos and Nimmo who followed in the 2 and 3 holes? They struck out swinging. They never stood a chance. 

    Against a New York club rolling in with all the momentum from the Wild Card round against Milwaukee, Wheeler stepped on the mound and brought the Mets to a screeching halt as the noise of 45,000-strong caved in from overtop of them. 

    It set the tone right away in favor of the Phils. It just didn’t hold.

    “What can you say, man? He threw the crap out of it again,” Harper said of Wheeler’s effort. “Anytime he goes out there, he gives us a very good chance to win and I thought he just threw the ball great, really good to see. 

    “Obviously, I feel like as an offense we wasted that start.”

    Bang.

    And so did Schwarber catching a 1-1 pitch up in the zone with not a single person in the building having to think twice about it. 

    Leadoff homer to the second deck in right field. 1-0, Phils. 

    Two years ago, when the idea of the Phillies being back in the postseason was still only just a dream, Schwarber, as a pricey new free-agent signing, stepped up to the plate as the lead-off man against Oakland on Opening Day and golfed a pitch into the seats of a South Philly crowd that erupted

    No one knew it at the time, but that was the start of the chain reaction that led to everything this era of the Phillies would become. 

    Last October, in Game 1 of the NLCS, he didn’t wait on Zac Gallen and launched the first pitch he saw from the Arizona hurler into orbit. If you asked anyone right then and there, they would’ve said the Phillies were well on their way back to the World Series – up until they weren’t. In the short term though, the Phils won that game and were in good shape to start.

    Schwarber is a highly unorthodox choice for a lead-off hitter. Always was, and always will be. But it works for the Phillies, and when he gets a hold of one with that lightning-quick swing, there’s no one else in baseball that can instantly dictate the outlook of a game from the jump quite like he can. 

    He tagged Senga right away on Saturday, and though the rest of the offense quieted down after to its own detriment, it got the Phillies’ postseason run instantly rolling – or so it looked. 

    Lead-off home runs from Schwarber are huge, but only if the Phillies build off them.

    Under control (until it wasn’t)

    Kept to a 1-0 game through seven innings, there were moments where the Mets could’ve capitalized – a Jesse Winker walk in the second, a Vientos single and another walk to Nimmo to put two on with no out in the fourth, a pitch that caught Starling Marte’s hand high and inside to put him on first with one out in the fifth, and then a walk to Lindor to start the sixth.

    Wheeler was fazed by none of it. 

    Here’s how he responded to each situation, respectively:

    • A four-pitch Marte groundout on a sinker to Bryson Stott at second to end the second. 

    • Clawing back from a 2-0 count against Pete Alonso to catch him on strikes looking, then forcing Jose Iglesias into another grounder to second that got flipped into an inning-ending double play to nail down the fourth. 

    • After hitting Marte, Wheeler punched out Tyrone Taylor and Francisco Alvarez back-to-back swinging to call the fifth – Taylor went down on fourth pitches and a splitter. Alvarez lasted for six, whiffing on a sweeper. 

    • A three-pitch strikeout swinging of Vientos, a two-pitch pop out from Nimmo to second, and then a huge K of Alonso on a splitter to get through six.

    The Mets showed how dangerous they can be with the ninth-inning surge from Game 3 of the Wild Card round to close out the Brewers. If they have even a faint glimmer with the way they’re playing right now, they can and will hurt you. 

    So Wheeler needed to keep the New York lineup under control, even at the slightest hint of trouble.

    He shut them down. 

    Wheeler’s line after six innings stood at just one hit, three walks, and nine strikeouts. His pitch count was at a manageable 89 pitches (55 of them strikes), and his stuff was so effective that he had the Mets swinging and missing 24 times by that point. 

    Wheeler came back out for the seventh, the lead was still 1-0, and the margin for error was growing thinner. He got Iglesias to pop out, but then he walked Winker. The Phillies got a reliever up in the bullpen. The ace kept his composure. 

    Marte popped out to short on four pitches chasing after a sweeper, then locked into a 3-2 payoff pitch, a 97-mph fastball jammed Taylor into a soft grounder up the middle that Trea Turner had the read on. Wheeler was in the clear after seven, and the fans were all on their feet for him waving the rally towels in unison as he walked back to the dugout. 

    No one was breathing easy, but Wheeler held it together with seven stellar, scoreless innings to give the Phillies the chance they needed. 

    The eighth and on was trusted to Hoffman and the bullpen. They couldn’t hold the line, the bats couldn’t come up with anything else, and it all went to waste.

    “It stings,” Hoffman said. “You definitely want to capitalize on an outing like that. He did everything he could to keep us ahead in that game. Obviously, he did an unbelievable job. We’ll try to hold on to that one next time.”


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    Nick Tricome

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

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

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

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

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

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


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

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


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

    Is that the right move?

    I’m not sureif even the Phillies can admit

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

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


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

    PHOTO: Lucas Boland/Imagn Images

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    Dylan Campbell

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

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

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

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


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


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

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


    Phillies Pitching Staff is the Key to a World Series Championship

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

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

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

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

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


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

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


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

    PHOTO: Jeff Hanisch/Imagn Images

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    Mike Hennelly

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  • Phillies fall three times to Mets, have work left to clinch NL East

    Phillies fall three times to Mets, have work left to clinch NL East

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    It would have been nice to quiet the crowd in Queens — the Phillies’ I-95 rivals enthusiastically rooting on the red hot Mets as they make an unlikely push for a playoff spot.

    But the Mets took three of four in a pivotal series against the Phillies this weekend, delaying Philly’s NL East celebration, at least for another day.

    Philadelphia wasted a gem of a start from Zack Wheeler, who went seven innings in the finale of the series, striking out eight while allowing a pair of runs in a razor thin 2-1 loss. His Cy Young case continues to be undeniable. 

    The Phillies basically surrendered the series opener, sending Taijuan Walker to the mound in a feeble effort to sport a serviceable fifth starter (who will not be relevant come postseason time) in an ugly 10-6 defeat. The offense mashed Friday, as they clinched a playoff spot with a 12-2 win. On Saturday Ranger Suarez did enough to keep the Phils in it but the offense mustered just three runs in a 6-3 loss.

    All of this was just short of the team’s first stated goal — clinching the division title. Here’s what you need to know, as the Phillies still have a ton to play for in the closing week of the regular season.

    The NL East

    After falling in three of four games in Queens, the Phillies’ still have a magic number of two to win the division — with six games remaining (three against the Cubs and then the Nationals). With a five-game lead over the aforementioned Mets in the NL East, a combination of two wins/Mets losses locks things up. 

    A pair of wins, a win and one Mets loss, or two losses paired with two Mets losses gives Philly the crown for the first time in over a decade. New York will have its hands full needing to go at least 5-1, or 6-0 against the Braves and Brewers, each on the road to even have a chance at shocking the baseball world.

    A first-round bye

    Assuming an NL East title, there is another huge prize left to play for. The Phillies currently hold the No. 2 seed in the National League, leading the NL Central champion Brewers by three games with six remaining. So they very much hold their seeding fate in their hands.

    It’s a little controversial, based on recent history, as to whether the bye is a good thing. It offers between four and five days off to a baseball team that has played 162 games without more than a day off (besides the All-Star break) for six months. The Phillies were actually beneficiaries of not having a bye in each of their last two campaigns. They handled the best two-of-three Wild Card rounds with aplomb. In 2022 they swept St. Louis and then beat the well-rested Braves in four games. In 2023 they swept the Marlins and beat the well-rested Braves in four games again.

    In those last two postseasons, teams with a first-round bye went 3-5 in the divisional round.

    The Phillies should be in the column of wanting the time off. Getting the rotation set and resting their clearly less than 100% players will certainly be a boost for the Phils, who very much need a breather.

    A combination of three wins from the Phils and losses from the Brewers would lock up that No. 2 seed. The Brewers face the Pirates and then the Mets to finish their slate.

    The No. 1 seed

    The top seed in the NL comes with some perks — the biggest of these is home-field advantage in every round of the postseason. Philly has the most home wins in baseball this season, and their home-field advantage in the postseason was abundantly clear in each of the last two Octobers. 

    Here’s a look at all of baseball (including the AL) and where things stand on September 22:

    Team Record GB
    Dodgers* 93-63
    Phillies 92-64 1
    Yankees 92-64 2
    Padres 90-66 3
    Guardians 90-67 3.5
    Brewers 89-67 4

    The Phillies hold a tiebreaker over the Dodgers* — so in reality they are a half game out of the the top seed in the postseason. They need to finish with the same record as the Dodgers. 

    This one will come down to the wire. L.A. will play the playoff-bound Padres and then they lowly Rockies. The Yankees are also threats for home-field in a potential World Series, and they’ll finish up with the Orioles and Pirates.


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    Evan Macy

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Zack Wheeler dominates with fastball in victory Tuesday night

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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    Adam Aaronson

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  • 3 reasons to panic, to stay calm after Phillies drop another series

    3 reasons to panic, to stay calm after Phillies drop another series

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    The number one reason to stay calm about the Phillies after their dreadful 4-13 stretch heading into Sunday afternoon — they have Zack Wheeler.

    Looking to avoid an embarrassing seven-game losing streak, the Phils ace and Cy Young hopeful put together a gem in Seattle, tossing nine shutout innings, allowing two hits and striking out eight.

    The number two reason to stay calm about the Phillies — the offense finally opened the floodgates in the eighth inning of the final game of a three-game set, adding to a Kyle Schwarber lead-off homer with five runs in the frame. It was a stanza that included a two-run homer for Bryce Harper (who had a three-hit day), as well as one for Bryson Stott. 

    As a result, the Phillies ended their skid and avoided a sweep for the second straight series against an AL contender. However, they still lost their sixth straight series and are not exactly riding high right now.

    After being pulverized 10-2 in the series opener Friday, they lost in heartbreaking walk-off fashion as newly acquired reliever Carlos Estévez walked in the losing run in Game 2. A 6-0 finale saw the Phillies finally return to winning ways. But with the Dodgers ahead Monday, it won’t get easier anytime soon.

    Is it time to panic? Should fans keep calm and carry on? Here’s a look at three reasons why each reaction is reasonable right now:

    🚨 Their NL East lead has dropped to just 6 games

    In what seems like a totally different season from where things are now, the Phillies had a monster 11 game lead in the NL East  back in the spring, when the vibes were immaculate in South Philly.

    As readers are no doubt aware, the Phillies have free-fallen to just a six-game lead over the Braves in the division. It was not supposed to have gotten this close. It’s actually remarkable that the Braves haven’t made it even closer, as Philly has a 5-13 record in its last 18 games, and the Braves have squandered a few opportunities — like splitting a four-game set against the last place Marlins.

    There are 51 games remaining and the seven final games between the Phillies and Atlanta will be monstrously important. 

    🧘 There are three Wildcard spots

    In each of the last two seasons, the Phillies have entered the postseason by the skin of their teeth. They were the final Wildcard team in 2022, and went on to the World Series, losing in six games. Last season they were unable to keep up with the Braves and clocked in as a Wildcard team once again, winning two series and coming a single win from a second straight NL pennant.

    Many credit the revised playoff format — one that gives the best teams a 3-4 day break — as the cause for why teams like the Braves, the Dodgers, the Astros and other dominant teams fall short in October. There is little doubt the Phillies are among the top six teams in the NL and even a limping finish should still provide them a berth into the playoffs.

    🚨 Philadelphia might be cursed

    The Phillies collapsed already, remember? Leading the Diamondbacks 3-2 in the NLCS at home, the Phils went on to lose two games in a row (after leading the series 2-0 to start). But this is a city of collapses — so maybe it’s just a reality.

    A few months ago, the Sixers totally fell apart after having one of the best first halves in the NBA, bowing in a first round exit to the Knicks. Just before that, the revamped Flyers appeared destined to make the playoffs before expected, but totally faltered in the spring, missing the Wildcard by four points. And a few months before that, the Eagles totally disintegrated after a 10-1 start gave way to an 11-6 finish and divisional round exit. 

    The vibes are bad. It feels like another collapse. Run for the hills…

    🧘 Statistical regression was inevitable, it’s a long season

    The Phillies had a record eight All-Stars this season. They had a bevy of players boasting MVP and Cy Young credentials through the season’s first half. Some of them, like Bryce Harper, Zack Wheeler and Trea Turner have track records for success. Others were totally out of nowhere in their domination, like Alec Bohm, Ranger Suárez and Cris Sánchez.  

    In addition, Philly had one of the weakest schedules in memory to start the year, barely brushing up against contenders until the weather got extremely hot. They’re in the middle of a brutal stretch. We outlined it last week, with the rest of August looking like this:

    Opponent Record
    at Dodgers 63-45 (1st)
    at Diamondbacks 57-51 (3rd)
    vs. Marlins 39-68 (last)
    vs. Nationals 49-59 (4th)
    at Braves 57-49 (2nd)
    at Royals 59-49 (3rd)
    vs. Astros 55-52 (2nd)
    vs. Braves 57-49 (2nd)

    It gets easier after that. According to tankathon.com the Phils have the 15th toughest schedule of 30 teams the rest of the way.

    🚨 The pitching and hitting are both epically slumping

    Presented without comment — some before and after stats for the Phillies offense and pitching, looking at their drop off since the All-Star break in July. Everything except for the team record is up to date as of Sunday afternoon:

    Stat Before ASB After ASB
    Record 62-34 (1st) 5-12 (29th)
    Runs 477 (3rd) 57 (25th)
    BA .259 (3rd) .229 (24th)
    ERA 3.41 (6th) 5.10 (26th)
    WHIP 1.15 (2nd) 1.40 (26th)

    Not good, Bob.

    🧘 Adversity can be a good thing

    There’s an argument to be made that a Phillies team that breezes to a 110-win season, never has any setbacks, never knows what it feels like to be knocked down — might not be a team built for a World Series run in a long postseason.

    The Phillies have now been through the ringer this season, and there is still more than a month and a half of it to go. They’ve had debilitating (though thankfully short-term) injuries (Harper, Kyle Schwarber, Turner, Suárez and others). They’ve now faced a six-game losing streak with trouble on the road, trouble at home.

    They have been bad against good teams, bad against bad teams, shut out offensively and knocked around on the mound. The Phillies control their own fate and then some, still leading in the division with an inside track to a No. 1 seed in the National League. The opportunity to bounce back is there, and there’s still a chance they find their best baseball at the exact right time. Stay calm and carry on.


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    Evan Macy

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

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

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

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

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


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

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


    Turnbull started the season in the starting rotation

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

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

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


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


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

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

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


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

    PHOTO: ClutchPoints

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    Mike Hennelly

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

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

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

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

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


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


    Trea Turner’s Absence

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

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


    An Opening in the Outfield

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

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


    Bryson Stott’s Resurgence

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

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


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

    PHOTO: —

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    Dylan Campbell

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  • The Phillies’ 2024 rotation is 2011 levels of dominant

    The Phillies’ 2024 rotation is 2011 levels of dominant

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

    Numbers via baseball-reference

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

    Anyway, a few other points…

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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


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


    Follow Nick on Twitter: @itssnick

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    Nick Tricome

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  • 5 awards from the Phillies’ sweep of the White Sox

    5 awards from the Phillies’ sweep of the White Sox

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    If your offense is struggling, a series against the Chicago White Sox is the perfect remedy. Over the weekend in South Philadelphia, the Phillies swept the Sox, improving their record to 14-8 as they’ve won their sixth-straight game. Watching the standings in April is certainly premature, but, hey, the Phillies are currently a Wild Card team in the National League. They’re right where they need to be.

    Here are my five awards from the series, highlighting everything from Alec Bohm to the iconic Phillie Phanatic…

    The “Twice As Nice” Award: Alec Bohm ✌️

    In Friday’s Phillies victory, Alec Bohm smacked a three-run home run in the first inning:

    Two innings later, he hit another three-run homer:

    Bohm showcased some true power there, going opposite field on the first blast and then driving his second home to deep left center. He could be on his way to replicating the 20-homer, 97-RBI campaign he posted in 2023.

    The “Almost No-Hitter” Award: Spencer Turnbull and Zack Wheeler ❌

    How about this Phillies rotation right now? Spencer Turnbull is only getting starts due to other pitching injuries, but he has a 1.23 ERA across four starts so far in 2024. In Friday night’s 7-0 win, Turnbull pitched 6.1 innings before allowing his first hit of the night. He finished out the inning for an evening of seven scoreless frames. Huge. 

    Taijuan Walker is making rehab starts and is on his way back to the majors to re-join the rotation, but can you really take Turnbull and move him to the bullpen with the way he’s pitching? It’s undeserving to either Turnbull or Cristopher Sánchez (2.53 ERA in four starts, 10.5 strikeouts per nine innings). 

    Optics could play a role here. Walker, despite struggles at times in 2023, is in the second year of a contract worth $72 million. Would the Phillies really make him the longman in the bullpen? It feels doubtful. Why not trot out a six-man rotation for a bit and see how that goes? 

    The next day, another Phillies starter flirted with a no-hitter. Cy Young Award candidate Zack Wheeler pitched 7.1 innings of no-hit baseball. He currently leads the majors in strikeouts. Elite stuff.

    Wheeler’s phenomenal performance aired simultaneously as Game 1 of the Sixers’ first round matchup with the Knicks on Saturday night. It conjured up images of 2010 when Roy Halladay tossed a perfect game while the Flyers were playing in the Stanley Cup Finals against Chicago. It was a bit of a double whammy, however, as Wheeler wasn’t able to finish out the no-hitter and, of course, the Sixers lost in crushing fashion

    The “Crushing the Vibes” Award: Ricardo Pinto 🤦

    Saturday was a breeze for the Fightins. They threw up a crooked number on Chicago, scoring nine runs. Wheeler took a no-hitter into the eighth inning. In what should’ve been an easy-as-anything ninth inning, things quickly took a turn for the worse.

    In some mop-up action, the Phils turned to Ricardo Pinto for the top of the ninth with a nine-run lead. Pinto proceeded to allow five runs. He exited the game with the tying run coming up to the plate. Again, they began the inning with a nine-run lead. Nine! When it matters most, Pinto won’t be out there on the mound, but it did leave a bitter taste for what should’ve been a complete beatdown. 

    The “They Swept a Little League Team” Award: Phillies 🤣

    This turn of events from the White Sox looks more like a Babe Ruth League team from 7th and Bigler than a major league ball club:

    Yakety Sax” should be played over that video. The Phils tied the game after that and never looked back in an 8-2 victory.

    The “This Should’ve Been the City Connect Look” Award: Phanatic hats 🧢

    With its atrocious font and clash of colors, the Phillies’ City Connect uniforms have been panned. A look celebrating the greatest mascot in all of sports, the Phanatic, would’ve been much better. Phils fans saw what might have been when the team wore their batting practice Phanatic caps on Sunday in honor of the mascot’s birthday.

    10/10 cap. At the very least, these should replace the current red and blue caps the team wears with their cream uniforms.

    During his birthday festivities, we received an update on the Phanatic’s dating history, too:

    I’d love to hear what the Kelce brothers have to say about that!


    Follow Shamus & PhillyVoice on Twitter: @shamus_clancy | @thePhillyVoice

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    Shamus Clancy

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  • Zack Wheeler officially gets the nod on Opening Day

    Zack Wheeler officially gets the nod on Opening Day

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    Zack Wheeler will start for the Phillies on Opening Day, manager Rob Thomson revealed to reporters after Sunday’s game against the Blue Jays.

    It will be his first Opening Day start and snaps Aaron Nola’s streak of six straight for the Phils.

    The Phillies’ top two starters have the most relaxed demeanors you’ll find and neither has cared who got the nod. Nola was asked about it on March 7 and deferred to Wheeler, saying “Wheels should take it, he’s earned it.”

    He certainly has. As a Phillie, Wheeler has become one of the best pitchers in all of baseball. He was recognized as such with the monstrous annual average value on his new contract extension. Wheeler will make $42 million per year from 2025-27, the fourth-highest AAV of all-time.

    In four seasons with the Phillies, Wheeler has gone 43-25 with a 3.06 ERA and 1.06 WHIP and missed only six starts. He’s made an All-Star team, won a Gold Glove, finished second and sixth in Cy Young voting and compiled an already memorable playoff resume. Wheeler’s appeared in 11 playoff games with 10 starts and his 0.73 WHIP in the postseason is the lowest ever.

    Wheeler will likely draw Braves ace Spencer Strider at 3:05 p.m. on March 28 at Citizens Bank Park. The teams have a built-in off day on March 29, and Nola could start Game 2 on March 30. He and his wife, Hunter, are expecting their first child the first week of April, so the timing could affect the Phillies’ first or second cycle through the rotation. Players can miss up to three games on paternity leave.

    Wheeler has looked sharp in all three spring starts despite missing time early in camp for the birth of his third child. He didn’t pitch until March 5 but kept himself busy with bullpen sessions. He’s gone two, three and four innings, allowing just two runs.

    “Pumped,” Nola said shortly after it became official that Wheeler would be with the Phillies through at least the end of 2027.

    “It’s great for the team, the organization, the city. He’s a stud and I love being his teammate. He’s one of the best pitchers in the game.

    “It’s a pretty special team. Being able to get to the playoffs the last two years with roughly the same guys, it’s pretty special to have the same team and hopefully for years to come.”

    Wheeler has pitched extremely well against his first opponent, the Braves. As a Phillie, he’s made 15 starts vs. Atlanta and gone 6-3 with a 2.49 ERA and 0.92 WHIP. He’s struck out 113 and walked 17 in those 97⅔ innings against baseball’s best lineup over that period.

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    Corey Seidman

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  • Why Zack Wheeler Might be Worth Every Penny of his 3-year, $126 million contract extension – Philadelphia Sports Nation

    Why Zack Wheeler Might be Worth Every Penny of his 3-year, $126 million contract extension – Philadelphia Sports Nation

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    The Philadelphia Phillies believe that their soon to be 34-year old ace Zack Wheeler is still evolving. That’s why on Monday, they inked him to a three-year, $126 million contract extension. The extension, which starts in 2025 and runs through the 2027 season, will make Wheeler the third-highest paid pitcher in Major League Baseball with an AAV of $42 million. 

    Since coming to the Phillies in 2020, Wheeler has only gotten better with age. Once a promising, yet injury-ridden middle of the rotation starter for the New York Mets, Wheeler has blossomed into the staff ace of one of the best teams in the National League, if not all of baseball. In his five years with the club, Wheeler has 43-25, with a 3.06 ERA over 629.1 regular season innings. In the last four, he has led all starting pitchers in WAR and per Baseball Reference estimates, he’s 19.6 of his 28.7 Wins Above Replacement since signing with the Phillies. Wheeler has been equally dominant in the postseason, with a 2.42 ERA across all appearances. His pairing with Aaron Nola has become one of the deadliest one-two combinations across the sport, paving the way for the team’s recent postseason success. 

    Wheeler’s extension, however, isn’t just a showing of gratitude for what he has done for the team. It’s an investment, especially as an extension, into what he can be for the next four seasons. The Phillies are hopeful that Wheeler, who remained relatively healthy over his tenure with the team, will continue to be a workhorse even as he progresses into and beyond his mid-thirties. There’s reason for optimism: because he missed significant time earlier in his career with the Mets, Wheeler has 1,378 and 2/3rds innings in the majors. Cole Hamels, through his age 33 season, racked up 2,362. Roy Halladay had tallied 2,297. 

    What’s even more noteworthy, however, is that Wheeler has continued to evolve as a pitcher. Upon arriving in Philadelphia, Wheeler found success by significantly increasing his 4-seam fastball usage. Last season, Wheeler incorporated a sweeper–a slower version of his cutter, with horizontal break–to slot in between his low-90s cutter and low-80s curveball. His sweeper became his best swing-and-miss pitch last season, leading his arsenal with a 39.2% whiff rate. This year, Wheeler looks to revive his splitter for the first time since 2018, in his unyielding quest to baffle opposing hitters. It’s an encouraging sight for an aging power pitcher: as Wheeler’s fastball velocity has dipped from the upper to the mid 90s, he’s continued to add different ways to stay elite. 

    In 2018, owner John Middleton spoke to the press about spending “stupid” money to improve the team, after a sixth consecutive losing season. And yes, Middleton did end up spending an inordinate amount of money to bring the Phillies to the brink of a World Series championship. Hardly any of it, however, has been stupidly spent–including the cumulative $244 that Wheeler will pocket at the end of his contract extension. Perhaps a better way to phrase it is that the Phillies have a stupid amount of money to spend and are willing to spend it on the right player. The front office knew that retaining Wheeler would cost upward of a franchise record $40 million per year. Their willingness to spend it on Wheeler is both an admission–of his value to the team and their willingness to spend inordinate amounts of money on the players they want the most–and a bet, that the last few years of Wheeler’s career will be enough to carry them into deep into October, time and time again.

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    Dylan Campbell

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  • Astros’ Peña 1st rookie hitter to win World Series MVP

    Astros’ Peña 1st rookie hitter to win World Series MVP

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    HOUSTON — Jeremy Peña’s key to success was keeping his head dry.

    Capping a freshman season like no other, he became the first rookie position player to win a World Series MVP award Saturday night after hitting .400 in the Houston Astros’ six-game victory over the Philadelphia Phillies.

    “The hardest part was just blocking everything that’s not part of the game,” Peña said. “There’s a saying that you can’t sink a ship with water around. It sinks if water gets inside. So I just try to stay strong and keep the water outside my head.”

    Peña also won a Gold Glove and was the AL Championship Series MVP. The 25-year-old shortstop became the first hitter to win those three prizes in a career, according to OptaSTATS — and he did it all in his rookie season.

    “It has a lot to do with my family, my upbringing,” he said.

    Peña praised Dusty Baker, the Astros’ 73-year-old manager. When Baker made his major league managerial debut for San Francisco on April 6, 1993, the leadoff hitter for the other team was Peña’s father, St. Louis Cardinals second baseman Gerónimo Peña.

    “Dusty Baker’s a legend in the sport,” Jeremy Peña said. “Not just because he’s been around. He’s had success at this game. He brings the best out of his players. He gives you the confidence to just go out and play hard and let the game take care of itself.”

    Peña singled to chase Phillies starter Zack Wheeler in Game 6, giving the Astros two baserunners for the first time. Yordan Alvarez followed with a go-ahead, three-run homer that sent Houston to a 4-1 victory.

    Peña finished the postseason with a .345 batting average, four homers, eight RBIs and a 1.005 OPS. He also became the first rookie shortstop to win a Gold Glove, as well as the first to homer in the World Series.

    Just 24 when he was handed the starting job at the beginning of the season after Carlos Correa left as a free agent, Peña became the third rookie at any position to earn World Series MVP, joining a pair of right-handed pitchers: the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Larry Sherry in 1959 and Miami’s Liván Hernández in 1997.

    Peña’s 18th-inning homer completed a Division Series sweep at Seattle and he hit a go-ahead drive off Noah Syndergaard in Game 5 of the World Series. His Game 2 jersey is headed to the Hall of Fame.

    “You have to make tough decisions in this job, and Jeremy’s making it look like it was an easy decision, and it wasn’t,” Houston general manager James Click said. “Carlos is a great player, and he’s been a huge part of this franchise. But to do what Jeremy did, to step in and elevate his game in the playoffs, it just speaks to his hard work, his character and the talent that he has. There’s not that many special guys on the planet that can do what he just did.”

    Peña became the ninth player to win MVP of a League Championship Series and the World Series in the same season. He batted .353 with two homers and four RBIs against the Yankees in the ALCS.

    The only other player to win an LCS MVP award, World Series MVP and a Gold Glove during their career was pitcher Orel Hershiser, who took all three prizes with the Dodgers in 1988.

    Peña hit .291 with 22 homers and 63 RBIs during the regular season and likely will finish high in AL Rookie of the Year voting. Seattle outfielder Julio Rodríguez is the favorite.

    Others to win LCS and World Series MVP in one year were Pittsburgh’s Willie Stargell (1979), St. Louis’ Darrell Porter (1982), Hershiser (1988), Hernández (2003), Philadelphia’s Cole Hamels (2008), the Cardinals’ David Freese (2011), San Francisco’s Madison Bumgarner (2014) and the Dodgers’ Corey Seager (2020).

    Only four other rookies were LCS MVPs: Baltimore right-hander Mike Boddicker in 1983, Hernández in 1997, St. Louis right-hander Michael Wacha in 2013 and Tampa Bay outfielder Randy Arozarena in 2020.

    Peña thought back to last year’s Game 6 loss to Atlanta at Minute Maid Park, where he joined the Astros but was inactive.

    “These guys were left with a bitter taste in their mouth last year,” he said. “Me being in the dugout last year, I didn’t want to experience that again.”

    ———

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

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  • Realmuto, Phils rally past Astros in 10 to open World Series

    Realmuto, Phils rally past Astros in 10 to open World Series

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    HOUSTON — A timely swing by J.T. Realmuto propelled the Philadelphia Phillies to an unlikely win in the World Series opener.

    A terrific stab by right fielder Nick Castellanos gave him that shot.

    Realmuto hit a solo home run in the 10th inning and the Phillies, saved by Castellanos’ sliding catch, rallied past the Houston Astros 6-5 Friday night.

    Down 5-0 early against Astros ace Justin Verlander, the Phillies became the first team in 20 years to overcome a five-run deficit to win a World Series game.

    They can thank Castellanos for getting the chance. Known much more for his bat than glove, he rushed in to make a game-saving grab on Jeremy Peña’s blooper with two outs in the ninth inning and a runner on second.

    “All in all, it was a great game, a great come from behind victory, and it just showed the resilience of the club again and how tough they are and they just never quit,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson said.

    Realmuto, who hit a tying, two-run double in the fifth off Verlander, completed the comeback when he led off the 10th by sending a fastball from Luis García into the seats.

    Realmuto hoped for the best as he saw right fielder Kyle Tucker pursuing the ball.

    “Once I saw him running back to the wall, I was thinking in my head, ‘Oh, please just don’t catch it, just don’t catch it.’”

    He didn’t, the ball sailing just beyond his reach.

    Realmuto circled the bases in a scene he dreamed about as a kid.

    “Oh, absolutely. Yeah. Absolutely. I mean Wiffle Ball games in the backyard, the whole 3-2, bases-loaded, two-out situation. I probably had 7,000 at-bats in that situation growing up,” he said.

    And did he usually deliver?

    “Every time, yes,” Realmuto said, laughing.

    Realmuto became the first catcher to hit an extra-inning home run in the World Series since Carlton Fisk waved his walk-off fair in the 12th inning of Game 6 in the 1975 Series against Cincinnati at Fenway Park.

    Big-hitting Bryce Harper added two singles for the Phillies in his World Series debut. The two-time NL MVP is batting .426 (20 for 47) with five homers this postseason.

    Tucker homered twice for the Astros, who had been 7-0 in this postseason.

    “Disappointing, yeah, for sure,” Verlander said. “I need to do better. No excuses.”

    Houston had a chance in the 10th when Alex Bregman doubled with one out. After Yuli Gurriel drew a two-out walk, David Robertson bounced a wild pitch that put runners on second and third.

    Pinch-hitter Aledmys Díaz was then hit by a 2-0 pitch from David Robertson — but plate umpire James Hoye ruled that Díaz leaned into the pitch and didn’t permit him to go to first to load the bases.

    Díaz grounded out on a 3-1 pitch to end it.

    The last team to blow a 5-0 lead in the World Series was the 2002 San Francisco Giants, who squandered their chance in Game 6 to close out the Angels and win the title under manager Dusty Baker.

    Baker saw it happen again this time as manager of the Astros, by the same 6-5 final score.

    The 106-win Astros hadn’t lost to anyone since Philadelphia beat them on Oct. 3 behind Aaron Nola to clinch a wild-card spot as a third-place team and earn its first playoff trip in 11 years.

    Houston raced out to a big lead thanks in large part to Tucker’s two homers. But the Phillies stormed back as Verlander again struggled in the World Series.

    Perfect as he took a 5-0 lead into the fourth, he exited after the fifth with the score 5-all. That left him 0-6 with a 6.07 ERA in eight career World Series starts — hardly the line for a pitcher who’s expected to soon pick up his third Cy Young Award.

    The Astros fell to 0-5 in World Series openers and dropped their first game this postseason after sweeping in the AL Division Series and AL Championship Series.

    Seranthony Domínguez pitched a scoreless ninth to get the win when Castellanos made his stellar play.

    With Jose Altuve on second base after his two-out single and stolen base, Peña hit a ball that came off the bat at 68 mph and went only about 200 feet. Castellanos ran a long way, then with a lunge made the inning-ending catch while sliding to the ground.

    Right before the pitch, Castellanos moved in a little closer.

    “That was just what my instincts told me to do. I just thought he had a better chance of trying to bloop something in there than torching something over my head,” he said.

    In the opener of the NL Division Series against Atlanta, Castellanos drove in three runs and helped preserve the lead with a somewhat similar catch in the ninth of that 7-6 win.

    “I’ve had a couple people say that it seemed like a carbon copy of each other,” he said. “But I’m just happy that an out was made and we were able to go on and win both those games.”

    In the World Series for the fourth time in six years — and after losing to Atlanta in six games last year — these Astros are looking to give Baker his first title as a manager and get their second championship after winning it in 2017, a title tainted by a sign-stealing scandal.

    The surprising Phillies, who have two championships, are in the World Series for the first time since 2009. They bounced back from a 21-29 start that led to manager Joe Girardi’s firing.

    Tucker had the orange-clad home crowd rocking early as he became the first player in franchise history with a multi-home run game in the World Series. One of the few players in the majors to hit without batting gloves and suddenly exuding attitude, he had four RBIs a year after finishing the Fall Classic without one.

    The normally mild-mannered Tucker punctuated his first homer with a nifty bat flip and mixed in an expletive as he screamed toward the dugout while beginning his trot.

    Nola took a perfect game into the seventh inning in his last trip to Minute Maid Park, more than three weeks ago when Philadelphia secured its first playoff spot since 2011. Things didn’t go nearly as smooth in his return Friday.

    Tucker sent an off-speed pitch from Nola soaring high and into the seats in right field to put Houston up 1-0 with no outs in the second. Gurriel, Chas McCormick and Martín Maldonado added singles for another run.

    Peña, the ALCS MVP, doubled to open Houston’s third before Yordan Alvarez grounded out. He was initially ruled safe, but the Phillies challenged the call, and it was overturned.

    Bregman, who was Nola’s roommate at LSU, walked before Tucker went deep again, knocking a ball into the stands behind the bullpen in right-center to extend it to 5-0.

    Verlander, who had an MLB-best 1.75 ERA in the regular season, allowed six hits and five runs in five innings. He joined Roger Clemens as the only pitchers in major league history to make a World Series start in three different decades but still could not claim that elusive World Series win. Friday was his 12th career start in a postseason series opener, tying him with Jon Lester for most in MLB history.

    Verlander, who started his third Series opener, retired the first 10 batters before Rhys Hoskins singled with one out in the fourth. Harper and Castellanos singled for a run and Alec Bohm hit a two-run double to cut the lead to 5-3.

    Brandon Marsh opened the fifth with a double before Kyle Schwarber walked. Realmuto sent them both home with a double off the wall in left-center to tie it at 5-all.

    UP NEXT

    Philadelphia’s Zack Wheeler opposes Framber Valdez when the series continues Saturday night.

    ———

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

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  • MLB Playoffs: Guardians-Yankees ALDS Game 5; Astros await

    MLB Playoffs: Guardians-Yankees ALDS Game 5; Astros await

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    For the second night in a row, the only playoff game on the schedule features the New York Yankees facing the Cleveland Guardians.

    This time, it’s Game 5 at Yankee Stadium to decide their American League Division Series after New York staved off elimination Sunday, tying the series 2-all with a 4-2 victory in Cleveland behind $324 million ace Gerrit Cole.

    Aaron Civale (5-6, 4.92 ERA) starts for the Guardians, his first career postseason appearance. Jameson Taillon (14-5, 3.91) goes for the Yankees after taking the Game 2 loss in a playoff debut that marked his first major league relief outing.

    Taillon allowed two runs and three hits without getting an out. Civale hasn’t pitched since Oct. 5, but he’s won his last three starts with a 3.18 ERA. The right-hander was on the injured list three times this season.

    The winner heads to Houston for Game 1 of the best-of-seven AL Championship Series on Wednesday night against Justin Verlander and the rested Astros.

    Houston reached its sixth straight ALCS by completing a three-game Division Series sweep of Seattle when rookie Jeremy Peña homered in the 18th inning Saturday for a marathon 1-0 win over the Mariners.

    AL West champion Houston (106-56) went 4-3 against the Guardians this season and 5-2 versus the Yankees.

    With a history of postseason heartbreak, Cleveland teams are 1-7 in winner-take-all games — losing their last seven.

    The young Guardians are trying to end Major League Baseball’s longest current World Series championship drought in their first year after a franchise name change. Cleveland hasn’t won it all since 1948.

    Here’s what else to know about the MLB playoffs Monday:

    MONDAY’S SCHEDULE (All times ET)

    ALDS Game 5: Cleveland at New York Yankees, 7:07 p.m., TBS

    A LONG TIME COMING

    The San Diego Padres haven’t reached the World Series since 1998. The Philadelphia Phillies haven’t made it since 2009.

    One of them is going to the final round this year.

    The all-wild card matchup of Philadelphia and San Diego in the NL Championship Series features two teams that have known mostly losing in recent years. The Phillies are in the postseason for the first time since 2011, and the Padres are making the franchise’s third-ever NLCS appearance.

    “This is what the city’s been waiting for for a long time,” San Diego slugger Manny Machado said.

    Game 1 is Tuesday at Petco Park. Zack Wheeler is expected to start for Philadelphia, and Yu Darvish takes the mound for San Diego.

    The Phillies went 4-3 against the Padres this season, last meeting on June 26.

    “I don’t think any of us are shocked about where we are,” Phillies slugger Bryce Harper said. “We’re really excited about the opportunity ahead for us, and we’ve taken every opportunity and tried to go with that. And we’re just all excited as a club and a group that we can go out to the West Coast and play.”

    The best-of-seven matchup features a fun twist, too — Phillies ace Aaron Nola facing his older brother, Padres catcher Austin Nola.

    HARRISON’S HOMERS

    Aaron Judge and Giancarlo Stanton are the biggest sluggers in the New York Yankees’ power-packed lineup. But who knew the Cleveland Guardians would have such a hard time keeping Harrison Bader in the ballpark?

    Bader hit his third homer of the AL Division Series for his hometown Yankees on Sunday night, an early two-run shot that gave them a 3-0 lead on the way to a 4-2 victory in Game 4.

    Bader’s first three postseason homers have been his first three long balls with the Yankees. They acquired him from St. Louis in a surprising deal for starting pitcher Jordan Montgomery at the Aug. 2 trade deadline, but the Gold Glove center fielder didn’t make his New York debut until Sept. 20 because of a foot injury.

    “To be able to do it in a Yankees uniform is definitely sweet, no doubt about it,” Bader said.

    The 28-year-old Bader grew up a Yankees fan just north of New York City and went to Horace Mann School, located 5 miles from Yankee Stadium.

    “Every day I wake up, it feels good to be a Yankee,” he said.

    Bader’s three homers in the series are his three longest this season.

    RELIEF REPORT

    Both managers are expected to empty their bullpens in the Division Series finale between the Guardians and Yankees, though Cleveland’s top relievers are probably fresher.

    Working his third straight day, New York left-hander Wandy Peralta earned a save in Game 4 on Sunday night, retiring three batters on just seven pitches.

    Yankees manager Aaron Boone said it’s possible Peralta could pitch in his fifth consecutive game Monday, and Game 2 starter Nestor Cortes is also available in relief.

    New York’s depleted bullpen blew Game 3 on Saturday, when the Guardians became the first team in 168 postseason games to overcome a multi-run deficit in the ninth inning and beat the Yankees.

    Cleveland manager Terry Francona is confident Civale will pitch well, and after that he’s got Trevor Stephan, James Karinchak and All-Star closer Emmanuel Clase — his top three relievers — all rested and ready.

    ———

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

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  • MLB Playoffs: Phillies, Dodgers take early NLDS leads

    MLB Playoffs: Phillies, Dodgers take early NLDS leads

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    Nick Castellanos and the Philadelphia Phillies can put the defending World Series champion Braves on the brink of elimination. Same for the Dodgers against the rival Padres.

    Meanwhile, the Mariners and Guardians get a day to shake off tough losses to the Astros and Yankees, respectively.

    The best-of-five National League Division Series pitting Phillies vs. Braves and Padres vs. Dodgers are set for their second games Wednesday, while the American League clubs get a day off.

    Castellanos carried a big load with his bat in a 7-6 Game 1 victory Tuesday over Atlanta. But despite driving in three runs, his glovework was what really had people talking.

    Frequently maligned as part of a subpar defensive outfield, Castellanos sprawled out for a potentially game-saving catch in the ninth inning, snuffing out Atlanta’s rally from a six-run deficit.

    The grab helped lock up the Phillies’ third straight win to open this postseason — an unexpected run months after they fired manager Joe Girardi and replaced him with Rob Thomson.

    Here’s what else to know about the MLB playoffs today:

    TODAY’S SCHEDULE (All times ET)

    NLDS Game 2: Philadelphia at Atlanta, 4:35 p.m., FOX

    NLDS Game 2: San Diego at Los Angeles, 8:37 p.m., FS1

    BRAVE NEW OCTOBER

    Dansby Swanson and the Braves haven’t rediscovered last year’s World Series magic. They’re hoping it’ll show against Game 2 Phillies starter Zack Wheeler.

    Atlanta didn’t look like a defending champion Tuesday. The Braves stranded nine runners in their Game 1 loss, an aggravating day that had the usually cool-headed Swanson slamming his bat and helmet to the ground midgame.

    They showed signs of life late, when Matt Olson’s three-run homer cut the deficit to one in the ninth inning. They’ll ask Game 2 starter Kyle Wright to carry over that momentum — something he did well while leading the majors with 21 wins this season.

    CLOSED OUT

    The Dodgers can take a 2-0 series lead over San Diego with a win Wednesday. They’ll send three-time Cy Young Award winner Clayton Kershaw to the mound against Padres ace Yu Darvish.

    If Kershaw and the Dodgers win a second World Series in three years, it may be without eight-time All-Star Craig Kimbrel in the bullpen. And that’s by choice.

    Kimbrel was left off Los Angeles’ NLDS roster, a decision manager Dave Roberts made two weeks after demoting Kimbrel out of the closer’s role.

    Kimbrel was 6-7 with 22 saves and was booed at times in his first season in Los Angeles as the replacement for Kenley Jansen. Kimbrel leads active pitchers with 394 career saves and has never blown a postseason chance in 23 appearances, although he has a subpar 4.13 ERA in those games.

    Chris Martin pitched the ninth inning in LA’s 5-3 win Tuesday night, converting his first postseason save in 15 career appearances.

    NO JOSHING

    Yankees slugger Josh Donaldson is catching heat from fans even after a satisfying Game 1 win in New York.

    The 36-year-old was embarrassingly thrown out on the bases after prematurely going into a home run trot on a ball that bounced off the top of the wall during New York’s 4-1 victory Tuesday. Donaldson didn’t run hard, and he didn’t answer questions about it from reporters after the game, either.

    It was hardly the first time Donaldson’s lack of hustle became an issue for the Yankees this year. Boone pulled him aside after an incident Sept. 5 and told him, “Let’s not let that happen.”

    FREAKED OUT

    Relief pitchers David Robertson of the Phillies and Phil Maton of the Astros were left off their clubs’ Division Series rosters after freak injuries.

    Robertson, 37-year-old in a resurgent season for the Phils, injured his right calf jumping to celebrate Bryce Harper’s home run in a clinching Game 2 victory over St. Louis during the wild-card round. He’s not with the team in Atlanta, instead going back to Philadelphia for a PRP injection.

    “He’s devastated,” Thomson said. “He really wanted to pitch in the series. And he knows how big a part he is to this club. And he’s very disappointed.”

    Maton says he broke his right pinkie finger when he punched a locker in frustration after Houston’s regular-season finale. He’s out for the remainder of the postseason. He called the outburst “shortsighted and ultimately selfish.”

    ———

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

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  • Los Angeles Dodgers’ Julio Urias Among Four Players To Watch In NLDS

    Los Angeles Dodgers’ Julio Urias Among Four Players To Watch In NLDS

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    It’s on to Round 2 of Major League Baseball’s four-tiered postseason.

    The Division Series round begins Tuesday with four best-of-five series. That comes on the heels of last weekend’s Wild Card round.

    It will be the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres squaring off and the Atlanta Braves facing the Philadelphia Phillies in the National League. In the American League, it will be the Houston Astros against the Seattle Mariners and New York Yankees versus the Cleveland Guardians.

    Here is a look at one key player from each team involved in the NLDS.

    JULIO URIAS, DODGERS

    The left-hander gets the start in Game 1 against the Padres. That is all you need to know about how much the Dodgers value the bespectacled 26-year-old.

    Urias was 17-7 in the regular season with a 2.16 ERA in 31 starts. He led the NL in ERA and was second in wins behind the Braves’ Kyle Wright, who had 21. Urias also had a sparkling 0.960 WHIP while striking out 175 batters in 166 innings.

    Despite his age, Urias also has plenty of postseason experience with five career starts and 17 relief appearances. He has a solid 3.52 ERA and 0.988 WHIP over 53 2/3 innings.

    Urias can become a free agent at the end of next season. It seems likely the Dodgers will try to sign him to a long-term contract extension this coming winter.

    YU DARVISH, PADRES

    Darvish will likely make only one start against the Dodgers after winning Game 1 of the NL Wild Card Series against the New York Mets. He is scheduled to pitch Game 2 against Clayton Kershaw and it will be a chance for redemption for the veteran right-hander.

    In 2017, Darvish started Game 7 of the World Series and got hit hard by the Houston Astros. He was tagged for five runs in 1 2/3 innings and took the loss.

    The Padres will look for Darvish to pitch like he did against the Mets when he allowed only one run on six hits in seven innings. That followed a regular season in which he was 16-8 with a 3.10 ERA in 30 starts.

    Darvish’s six-year, $126-million contract he signed with the Chicago Cubs expires after next season. He will be 37 then but could still land a significant contract.

    DANSBY SWANSON, BRAVES

    The shortstop is eligible to file for free agency five days after the World Series. However, the Braves have been very public about their desire to sign Swanson to a long-term extension.

    The 28-year-old had arguably the best of his seven seasons in the major league this year. He played in all 162 games and hit .277/.329/.447 with 25 home runs and 18 stolen bases. Swanson was also a plus defender with nine defensive runs saved.

    The one knock on Swanson, though, is he did have a swoon after the All-Star break. He hit .294/.353/.481 in the first half but .254/.298/.404 in the second half.

    Regardless, he will command a large contract if he reaches the open market.

    ZACK WHEELER, PHILLIES

    The Phillies raised some eyebrows when they signed the right-hander to a five-year, $118-million contract as a free agent during the 2019-20 offseason. Wheeler’s lifetime record at that point was 44-38.

    However, the Phillies clearly knew what they were doing. After finishing second in the NL Cy Young Award voting last season, Wheeler went 12-7 with a 2.82 ERA in 26 starts this year despite being slowed by forearm tendinitis.

    Wheeler worked 6 1/3 shutout innings and allowed just two hits against the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 1 of their NL Wild Card series. The 32-year-old from the Atlanta area is 10-7 in his career against the Braves with a 3.16 ERA in 24 starts.

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    John Perrotto, Senior Contributor

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