Showing posts with label future. Show all posts
Showing posts with label future. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Phillies Take Stock On The Day Off

GAME RECAP: No Game Yesterday
Phillies take the day off after a successful weekend series in Miami which improved their season record to 4 games ABOVE .500!

PHILS PHACTS:
  • Morgan is looking for his first win over the Braves. He is 0-3 lifetime with a 4.00 ERA against them. However, he has pitched well at Turner Field. Though he lost both decisions, the lefty has a 2.77 ERA in two starts there.
  • Wisler lost his only appearance against the Phillies. He went just 4 2/3 innings, yielding seven runs on eight hits.
  • Wisler is looking to turn things around at Turner Field this season. In three starts, he is 0-1 with a 4.42 ERA. Wisler has given up 10 runs (nine earned) on 16 hits over 18 1/3 innings.
NEXT GAME:


After an off-day on Monday, lefty Adam Morgan gets the nod on Tuesday when the Phillies conclude their road trip with a three-game series in Atlanta. First pitch is set for 7:10 p.m. ET. Morgan has allowed three earned runs in each of his previous two outings this season, with no decision in either. Matt Wisler, fresh off his best performance in the Major Leagues, goes for the Braves. The right-hander threw one-hit ball over eight innings on the road against the Mets last Tuesday. Wisler struck out four batters while walking two. He also hit a batter in the Braves' 3-0 win -- his first of the season. 

PHILS PHACTS:


Joseph Could Be Nearing Majors – There has been a little more interest than normal lately in the happenings at Triple-A Lehigh Valley. Specifically, can anybody there help the Phillies' offense? One name to watch closely is Tommy Joseph, who has been crushing the baseball with the IronPigs. Joseph joined the Phillies in July 2012 in the Hunter Pence trade with the Giants. But a series of concussions and injuries derailed the 24-year-old's catching career. Now a first baseman, Joseph is hitting .392 (31-for-79) with seven doubles, six home runs, 17 RBIs and a 1.126 OPS in 23 games. Joseph could be playing his way to his big league debut. "I think this is what our scouts saw when they recommended him in that trade," Phils player-development director Joe Jordan said. "We're seeing the healthy, confident version of him and what he can do. He's making a case." The Phillies outrighted Joseph from the 40-man roster in October, but he remained in the organization because he had not accrued enough time in the Minor Leagues. It could be a lucky break for the Phils, who looked to have nothing to show for from the Pence trade. "There's an opportunity here, if he can swing the bat and play the position," Phillies assistant general manager Scott Proefrock said prophetically in October. "We don't really have a first baseman at the upper levels." If Joseph reaches the big leagues, it would be a fantastic comeback story considering his history with concussions. Plus, there are few players in the organization more liked or highly regarded, so it seems everybody is rooting for him. "We're pleased more from a personal standpoint than anything, because he's gone through a lot challenges," Jordan said. "He's looked great since Spring Training, and he just hasn't quit hitting." Defensively, Joseph has room to improve at his new position, but if he keeps hitting like this, everybody can afford to be patient. "He's very, very invested in it," Jordan said about Joseph learning first base. "He's a smart guy and I think he understands that he's got to be able to do that. He's not bad out there. I think the offense is coming easier right now, which is good because he's spending a lot of time and effort on the defensive side."


Other Minor Updates – Everybody also wants to know about the progress of Double-A Reading shortstop J.P. Crawford and Lehigh Valley outfielder Nick Williams. They are two of the Top 100 Prospects in baseball, according to MLBPipeline.com. Crawford (No. 3 overall, No. 1 among Philadelphia's prospects) is hitting .270 (27-for-100) with four doubles, two home runs, six RBIs and a .781 OPS for Reading. He has walked 24 times and struck out 19. Williams (No. 60 overall, No. 3 among the Phils' Top 30) is hitting .280 (26-for-93) with two doubles, two triples, two home runs, 15 RBIs and a .709 OPS at Triple-A. "Nick got off to a rough start," Jordan said. "He got his feet underneath him, but he's getting exactly what he needs: Triple-A experience, Triple-A pitching. That's a challenge J.P. is going to be ready for in the near future. He's doing what we need him to do. There's a lot of good arms in the Eastern League, so he's not suffering at all being there for the time being. He's doing a great job."

Today In Phils History – Today started an interesting sequence of events in 1959 after a game started by Jim Hearn was suspended. Hearn took the loss when the game was completed in July despite the fact that he had since been released and had retired. Definitely a first, at least to my knowledge. Speaking of unique occurrences, it was on this day in 1967 when Hank Aaron hit the only inside the park homerun of his career off of Jim Bunning. Years later, in 1980, another Hall of Fame picture fell victim to the inside the park homerun as Tom Seaver surrendered the only one of his career to Larry Bowa.  

THE BEGINNING:
The Phillies are currently 18-14 this season putting them on pace to beat most preseason predictions. The Phillies finished the spring exceeding most expectations compiling a record of 15-11-3 (18-11-3 if you include the exhibition games against Reading and the University of Tampa). All time, the Phillies are 35-54-0 on this day. I expect the Phillies to finish in the bottom half of the division but not last in the NL East by finishing the season with a 77-85 record. Let the rebuild begin!

Friday, April 1, 2016

The Future Takes A Beating

EXHIBITION GAME RECAP: Phillies Pound Prospects 19-4


The Phillies looked like a Major League baseball team last night… at least when playing against their top prospects. While there wasn’t much to note about the pitching performances across the board, the offense definitely put on a show in Reading with the major leaguers hitting 8 homeruns while the prospects notching a respectable 3 bombs (including a long ball from top prospect JP Crawford). In all the MLB players had 21 hits including 9 extra base hits. It should definitely be an interesting season for both teams.

PHILS PHACTS:
  • The Phillies are 15-10-3 this spring with one game left against a Major League opponent. And while manager Pete Mackanin recognizes that Spring Training results don't count for much, he thinks having a winning record was important for a team that lost 99 games in 2015. "For the Philadelphia Phillies, I think it was very important," he said. "Spring Training, it doesn't always matter. But for us it's important to carry that positive attitude into the regular season."
  • The Phillies wore caps on Thursday with patches commemorating the 50th anniversary of Reading being affiliated with the franchise.

NEXT GAME:
The Phillies return to Citizens Bank Park for the first time this season to play an exhibition game against the Baltimore Orioles. This will be the last major league matchup before the regular season begins on Monday night and the final chance for many to make the roster.

PHILS PHACTS:


What Does The Future Hold? – One of the most popular questions for Phillies executives this spring is how quickly they can rebuild. They will find out this year, and they will be happy with what they see. "What we're going to find out this year more than anything is what kind of track we're on," Phillies president Andy MacPhail said earlier this spring. "Are we on a fast track? Are we on a medium track? Are we on a slow track?" Here is a bold prediction for the Phillies: They will finish the season on the fast track, putting themselves on the cusp of the postseason, much like the Cubs and Astros in 2014 prior to those clubs making the playoffs last season. Maikel Franco will play like one of the best third basemen in baseball, becoming a trendy pick for the 2017 National League MVP Award. Odubel Herrera will hit better than .300, making the former Rule 5 Draft pick the envy of every team in need of a No. 2 hitter. Aaron Nola, Jerad Eickhoff and Vince Velasquez might not be Matt Harvey, Jacob deGrom and Noah Syndergaard, but they will prove capable of challenge the throne. But the Phils know they need more than the young players on their Opening Day roster to get back. They need their prospects to play well, too. They will. The Phillies have seven of the top 100 prospects in baseball, according to MLBPipeline.com, which is more than any other team: shortstop J.P. Crawford (fifth), right-hander Jake Thompson (55th), outfielder Nick Williams (64th), right-hander Mark Appel (70th), outfielder Cornelius Randolph (84th), catcher Jorge Alfaro (96th) and outfielder Roman Quinn (99th). A skeptical fan will point to any top 100 list and recall that Domonic Brown was once the top prospect in baseball. OK, so what? Cole Hamels, Ryan Howard, Chase Utley, Jimmy Rollins, Pat Burrell and Scott Rolen appeared on Baseball America's top 100 lists, too. Much like the Phils' prospects of the late 1990s and early 2000s, most of their current top prospects will hit. Thompson and Williams will be the first two in the big leagues. Crawford and Quinn will be there before the end of the season. "There's a lot of talent in this organization," Phillies general manager Matt Klentak said. "Not all of it is polished and going to impact the team on Opening Day this year, but there's a lot of good players in the big leagues and in the upper levels of our system and some exciting players in the lower levels. I'm encouraged that so much that I have heard about prior to my arrival and then this offseason really does appear to be true."


Is Part Of The Future In The Past? – On a weekend when the Phillies are showcasing the best and the brightest of their farm system, Tommy Joseph is a blast from the past. You remember Joseph. The guy who was acquired, with considerable fanfare, from the Giants as part of the Hunter Pence trade at the non-waiver Trade Deadline in 2012. The guy who was expected to be the catcher of the future. The guy who then suffered a series of concussions, was taken off the big league roster and largely dropped out of sight. Joseph entered Thursday night's exhibition game at first base in the top of the sixth and walked in his only at-bat of the Phillies' 19-4 win over the Futures Team at FirstEnergy Stadium. But the fact that Joseph was included on the Futures roster says a lot. And player development director Joe Jordan said even more before the game when asked about his most pleasant surprise of the spring. "If you could have seen Tommy Joseph the last two weeks of Spring Training, it's the first time we've really been able to see him healthy," Jordan said. "He's just been really good offensively. He had some vision deficits due to the concussion stuff he went through that was addressed last fall and over the winter. Offensively, he looks like the guy we traded for three years ago. So he's been a big surprise." Joseph has averaged just 40 games played each of the past three seasons. He said the biggest key to his renewed success is simply that he's been healthy. "I think that's definitely got a lot to do with it," Joseph said. "Last year, I came into camp pretty heavy, too, so I tried to take care of myself a little better this winter. Lost a few pounds, put myself in a better position. And just came in with a positive mindset." Joseph said the transition to first base has gone well, although he still misses catching. But all the concussions -- Joseph thinks there were five, but he can't recall exactly -- and the wrist surgery dictated a change of positions. And that could turn out to be for the best. Two of the Phillies' better prospects, Andrew Knapp and Jorge Alfaro, are now catchers. Meanwhile, Ryan Howard's contract is set to expire at the end of the season and there is no heir apparent waiting in line. "Really, just being able to play every day is the opportunity I'm looking for," Joseph said. "Obviously we've got [Darin Ruf] and he's a pretty good ballplayer, too. He's done a lot of damage over the past few years. So I wouldn't say the job is completely up for grabs. And Howie's still here and he's a great player, too. So until that comes around…" Joseph, 24, may have turned a corner. But he knows he's not all the way back yet. "I've still got a lot left to prove," he said. "I haven't played that much over the last few years. I've got to get out on the field and get back to playing every day. And I'm excited about that this year."
Did You See That? - Ben Revere and the Phillies entered the annals of baseball history when they were involved in the first use of expanded replay. Almost as unbelievable was the productivity that the Phillies got from Rico Brogna following his debut with the team in 1997. 

THE BEGINNING:
The Phillies have an impressive record this spring… 15-10-3 (17-10-3 if you include the exhibition games against Reading and the University of Tampa). With the Phillies having finished the 2015 season with a spectacularly awful record of 63-99 it will be interesting to see what kind of team new President Andy MacPhail and GM Matt Klentak put on the field. At the same time I am definitely looking forward to the games against Boston with former GM Ruben Amaro on the field. Given the departures, lingering contracts, a history of injuries, bipolar performances, and unproven talent, it should, at the very least, be an interesting season for the Phillies. Who knows, maybe they can avoid 100 losses... hopefully by more than one game!

Thursday, March 17, 2016

No Game But A Promising Future

EXHIBITION GAME RECAP: No Game Yesterday
The Phillies actually earned the day off!

NEXT GAME:
The Phillies have a day off Wednesday, but they return to action Thursday afternoon against the Rays at Bright House Field. Vince Velasquez will make the start with Jerad Eickhoff scheduled to follow him. Velasquez is battling Brett Oberholtzer and Adam Morgan for the No. 5 job in the rotation. Eickhoff sees his first Grapefruit League action after being sidelined this spring with a broken right thumb. He is expected to make the rotation. Thursday's game will start at 1:05 p.m. ET on MLB.TV.

PHILS PHACTS:


Potential Power Bat Of The Future – This is where legends grow -- in the half shadows, on the margins, at the edge of peripheral vision. Or in the case of 17-year-old Jhailyn Ortiz, the Phillies' No. 26 prospect, on a back field at the Carpenter Complex in a camp game seen by only a handful of spectators. That's where Ortiz hit a home run last weekend -- not just any homer, but the kind that makes even seasoned baseball people blink and give their heads a "Did I see what I just saw?" shake, a "Field of Dreams" home run that disappeared deep into the woods behind the left-field fence at Robin Roberts Field. "All that I can say is that I've never seen a kid that age hit a ball that hard and that far," said Phillies Dominican Summer League coordinator Manny Amador. International scouting director Sal Agostinelli estimated that the ball traveled 475 feet. That Ortiz, listed at 6-foot-3 and 215 pounds, has extraordinary power is no secret. That, after all, is why the Phillies gave him a $4 million signing bonus right after the international signing period opened last July 2. It's why they'd had their eye on him for years. Even the story of how the Phils first became aware of Ortiz has mythic overtones. Agostinelli was in the Dominican Republic several years ago when somebody passed on a scrap of gossip. There was a 12-year-old in the little town of Constanza, he was told, who had supposedly beaten grown men in a softball home run derby. "Believe it or not," the scouting director said. Agostinelli was understandably skeptical, but as a good scout does, he mentally filed the information away. One thing led to another, and five years later, Ortiz reports to the complex each morning to continue his baseball education. "It's been a good experience," Ortiz said Wednesday, with outfielder Jose Pujols acting as his translator. "I've learned a lot of new things, and [I'm] having fun because I've met a lot of people I didn't know before. There are a lot of new things, but I'm learning the customs here." Adjusting to a new culture can be difficult for young Latin players, but Ortiz said that hasn't been an issue. Phillies officials who have gotten to know him describe him as humble and fun-loving, the product of a stable family environment. Ortiz's father, Felix, is a tailor who also played baseball, though he never signed with a Major League team. About the time that Agostinelli was hearing about the youngster who could crush a softball, Ortiz met a "buscone" -- independent bird dog scout -- named Baltazar Mesa. They soon began working together. When Ortiz was old enough to sign, that would turn out to give the Phils an edge. By then, many teams were interested. Carlos Salas, who scouts the Dominican Republic, had been diligent about developing a relationship with Ortiz and his family. It also didn't hurt that Mesa's brother, Jose, played for the Phillies and still holds the club record for most saves in a season (45 in 2002). "A lot of how you sign a big player like this is trust," Agostinelli said, "and I think that Jose just let his brother know that we were a very good organization. Obviously, Jose played here and knew what the Philadelphia Phillies were all about. That helped us quite a bit." Ortiz had a simple yet eloquent answer when asked why he had chosen the Phils. "They are more than a team," he said. "They're like a family to me." That is literally true. Even before Jhailyn, the Phillies signed his brother, Geury. The right-hander was 4-4 with a 2.59 ERA in 2015, led the Dominican Summer League in complete games and tied for first in shutouts. He didn't allow more than three earned runs in any of his 13 starts. Jhailyn hasn't played in an official game yet. He probably won't for a while. After signing last summer, Ortiz spent two months with Amador in the Dominican, playing in the "Tricky League," an unofficial league a step under the DSL. He then participated in the instructional league in Clearwater. Ortiz is likely to remain in extended spring camp after the team's Minor League rosters are formed in April. These are baseball equivalents of the dark side of the moon, another breeding ground for legends. He probably won't play in games where statistics are formally kept until the Rookie-level Gulf Coast League begins play in late June. So here's a necessary disclaimer: Ortiz is not going to show up at Citizens Bank Park any time soon, not only because he's the same age as high school juniors, but also because his immense talent is ever so raw. He still swings and misses a lot. Ortiz hasn't had much experience with breaking balls and offspeed stuff. It will take time. "He's a young kid with a lot of tools," Amador said. "He's still unpolished, needs a lot of work. One thing we keep talking about, if he comes close to putting all his tools together, he's going to be an amazing ballplayer. But he's far away. He needs a lot of work. He's going to be OK, but he has a long way to go before anything happens, a long way before we get there." Agostinelli was as wowed by the home run as anybody, but what really excited him was what happened next. The pitcher started working Ortiz away, and the young slugger began making an adjustment. In his next at-bat, he went with the pitch and roped an opposite-field line drive to right. Ortiz's first Class A game of the spring on Tuesday showed both how far he has to come and how much he has to offer. Against the Blue Jays in Dunedin, Fla., he struck out three times and misplayed a fly ball that allowed three runs to score, putting his team down by one. Ortiz led off the next inning by ripping a double to dead center, eventually scoring the tying run. Just one more chapter in the growing legend of Jhailyn Ortiz.

Today In Phils History - You can thank the Phillies for St. Patrick's Day as it was on this day in 1899 during a spring training game that the team donned green and white uniforms which is possibly the earliest citing of special holiday attire on a ball field. The green didn't bode well for tug McGraw in 1979 as he gave up the tying homerun against the Cubs but, foretunately, still emerged with the win. And in something completely different, 3 years ago the Phillies' Jimmy Rollins (at least an animated version of the shortstop) made an appearance in an episode of Fox's "The Cleveland Show."

THE BEGINNING:
The Phillies have begun the spring with an 11-4-2 record (12-4-2 if you include the exhibition game against the University of Tampa). With the Phillies having finished the 2015 season with a spectacularly awful record of 63-99 it will be interesting to see what kind of team new President Andy MacPhail and GM Matt Klentak put on the field. At the same time I am definitely looking forward to the games against Boston with former GM Ruben Amaro on the field. Given the departures, lingering contracts, a history of injuries, bipolar performances, and unproven talent, it should, at the very least, be an interesting season for the Phillies. Who knows, maybe they can avoid 100 losses... hopefully by more than one game!

Monday, February 22, 2016

Phillies Looking To Fill A Multitude Of Roles

PHILS PHACTS:


Who Will Get The Call In The 9th? – The Phillies opened last season with Jonathan Papelbon, Ken Giles and Jake Diekman in the back end of the bullpen. Fast forward one year. Nobody can say with any certainty who the team's closer will be Opening Day, much less hit the trifecta and name the seventh-, eighth- and ninth-inning guys. "We've talked to half a dozen potential closers for us," Phillies manager Pete Mackanin said Sunday afternoon at Bright House Field. "Without naming names, one guy said he would probably be more comfortable as the seventh- or eighth-inning guy. So that tells you right there that might eliminate him." There figures to be six legitimate candidates to pitch the ninth inning for the Phillies this season. There is right-hander David Hernandez, who signed a one-year, $3.9 million contract in December. There is right-hander Luis Garcia, perhaps the only returnee with closer's stuff. There also are four non-roster invitees with extensive experience closing or pitching in the back end of the bullpen: right-handers Andrew Bailey, Edward Mujica and Ernesto Frieri and left-hander James Russell. "Some guys want to be in that high-leverage situation," Mackanin said. "They thrive on it. You've seen enough closers. They're kind of an odd duck. They're all a little funny those guys. They have to have a certain type of attitude that gets them through those last three outs." Mackanin said plenty of factors will go into the decision to name the Phillies' next closer, but Hernandez has an edge to pitch the eighth or ninth because he is the only pitcher on a guaranteed contract. "It helps," Mackanin said. "It certainly helps. Once again, we're going to evaluate everybody and see how they play here. Not specifically Hernandez, but if somebody doesn't play well, we're going to try to keep the guy who's better. But it certainly helps. It would give him an edge, I would say. "I certainly won't base everything on how well a guy pitches here. Because we've seen guys have great springs. I always hit great in the spring. I always hit four or five home runs and tore it up and I was a .226 lifetime hitter. So I'm smart enough not to go by that." But there seems little question the back end of the bullpen is the team's biggest question with the Grapefruit League opener just nine days away. "We traded Diekman, Giles and Papelbon. There went the seventh, eighth and ninth," Phillies president Andy MacPhail said. "We did that to strengthen every other area, but the good news is it's an area that's very erratic and you can find guys out of nowhere to perform at a high level."


Looking For A Leader – Pete Mackanin has talked a little bit about the importance of leadership in the Phillies' clubhouse this season. Do they have any vocal leaders in there? "If you have a young team, it would be nice if we had that guy," Mackanin said. "We don't know if there's anybody in-house that can be that guy." The front office said it values the importance of a good leader, too. "There is no greater influence on players than their peers," Phillies president Andy MacPhail said. "I think the coaching staff and manager can be immensely helpful, but the guys that often have the most impact on players are their teammates. Kirby Puckett made everybody around him better just by Kirby being Kirby." Mackanin cited Darren Daulton and Jimmy Rollins as former leaders in the Phillies' clubhouse. Jeff Francoeur served that role remarkably well last season, guiding a young team through a 99-loss season. Francoeur said he wanted to return to Philadelphia, but he got squeezed out once the Phillies signed Peter Bourjos and selected Rule 5 Draft pick Tyler Goeddel in December. Francoeur remains unsigned. "Having good players is more important than having that [leader], but in the long run, especially when you get down to the nitty gritty, it's nice to have that guy like Dutch [Daulton] who can rally the troops," Mackanin said. Freddy's the guy: There is plenty of interest in top prospect J.P. Crawford, who is in big league camp for the first time. But Phillies fans should not hold their breath and expect Crawford to challenge Freddy Galvis to be the Opening Day shortstop. Galvis has the job locked up and Crawford will open the season in the Minor Leagues, either at Double-A or Triple-A. "I feel like he deserves that chance," Mackanin said about Galvis. "I'm real high on J.P. Crawford. I haven't seen him a lot, but I know he's highly touted. I want to concentrate on our big league guys. If Freddy Galvis is hitting .280 and everybody is playing like we hope they can, then it gives us more time for the Crawfords and the [Nick] Williamses and so on and so forth, so we won't have to rush them." Of course, if Galvis struggles, Crawford could push the issue with solid play in the Minors. Crawford is the No. 5 overall prospect in baseball, according to MLBPipeline.com. Extra bases: Right-hander Jerad Eickhoff remains day to day with a non-displaced fracture on his right thumb, which he injured bunting last week. Eickhoff said he believes he has plenty of time to get ready for the beginning of the season; Right-hander David Buchanan took a line drive off his right triceps during a live batting-practice session. Buchanan seemed to think he should be OK.


Are The Phillies On A Good Path? – The Phillies are not expected to challenge for a National League East title anytime soon, but it does not mean team president Andy MacPhail doesn't expect to see some improvement in 2016. He does. MacPhail mentions the Phillies' 34-37 record following the All-Star break last season (with Maikel Franco missing 46 of those games) as evidence they are on a good path. The Phillies entered the break 29-62, easily the worst mark in baseball, but the arrival of young talents such as Aaron Nola, Jerad Eickhoff and Aaron Altherr, and the continued development of others like Franco and Odubel Herrera put a more competitive team on the field. "In my view, there are a lot of positive things going forward," MacPhail said. MacPhail is entering his first full season as team president. He returned to the game after a 3 1/2-year hiatus to focus on his personal life, where he traveled the world (China, Vietnam, Thailand, Turkey, Greece, Ecuador, Honduras, Brazil, etc.) and did the things everybody does in the summer when they don't work in baseball. "I never grilled when I was a GM," he said. "I had a beautiful grill. It was still clean. You can grill all summer in your shorts. It was a lot of fun. I had 3 1/2 years to get that out of my system." But now MacPhail is back at work, entrusted to lead the Phillies' rebuild. The Phils followed arguably their greatest run in franchise history (one World Series title, two National League pennants and five consecutive NL East titles from 2007-11) with a .500 finish in 2012 and three consecutive losing seasons, including the worst record in baseball in '15. "You can't get better unless you take a good hard look at where you are," MacPhail said. "We're going to make some mistakes. But we're going to keep our eye on the prize and we're not going to deviate. The teams that get themselves in trouble are the ones that try something for two years, it doesn't work, let's try something totally different. Name a team that embarked on a legitimate, honest attempt at a rebuild that didn't in the end profit from it? Kansas City. Pittsburgh. Tampa Bay. Baltimore. You name it. As long as they stay with it, they are going to be rewarded in the end." But that doesn't mean the Phillies don't want to win this year. They do. They just don't believe being in the market for high-priced free agents makes sense for them right now. "This year we spent $15 million on [Charlie] Morton and [Jeremy] Hellickson," MacPhail said. "That's $15 million to stabilize the rotation. If we wanted to lose 120 games, we wouldn't have spent that $15 million. But we want Nola and Eickhoff and whoever else comes along to be able to play in an environment where it's not all on their shoulders." MacPhail hired Matt Klentak to be his general manager, and by all accounts MacPhail has let Klentak run his show. They talk, obviously, but Klentak is not calling MacPhail every time he wants to claim a player on waivers or sign somebody. Together they already have made some changes to the front office, most notably building an analytics department. "But it goes so far beyond that," MacPhail said. "It annoys me when people think you've just got to go in one world or the other. Old school scouting or it's analytics. Show me the team that just doesn't have any more scouts, that has no scouting department. They don't exist. They all have scouts. Even whatever team you want to say is the most analytically inclined, they've got 20 or 30 scouts on the payroll. Why do you think that is?" The Phillies hired amateur scout Luis Raffan, who will handle South Florida and Puerto Rico. They hired a strength and conditioning coach for Class A Williamsport, and they are talking about possibly hiring another for the Minor Leagues. The Phillies made Ray Burris their pitching rehab coordinator in Clearwater. They added high definition cameras at Citizens Bank Park to improve their video coaching. The Phillies added TrackMan, the radar system that tracks pitched and batted baseballs, and CoachMePlus, which is a data management system that provides predictive performance analytics to help monitor players' health status. "Our payroll is down because we don't have [Cole] Hamels. We don't have [Jonathan] Papelbon. We don't have Ben Revere," MacPhail said. "We don't have a lot of guys we used to have. So we tried to take some of that money and reinvest it." If that combination of scouting and analytics continues to uncover good young talent for the Phillies, they could turn their fortunes quicker than maybe anybody expected. (MacPhail and Klentak have been careful not to predict when they expect to be contending for titles again, because they don't know how their top prospects will pan out.) "A market like Philadelphia, we're going to have more revenue at our disposal than we would say, in a small market where you're really scraping nickels together," MacPhail said. "Hopefully you don't stay down as long in a negative cycle."

Today In Phils History - With expectations high heading into the 1965 season Jim Bunning and Bo Belinski appear on the cover of Sports Illustrated. The following year, the Phillies parted ways with Dick Stuart. 4 years ago the Paul Owens bronze bust was revealed outside of the Phillies training facility in Clearwater. However, the most notable item of the day is the birthday of former Phillies player and Hall of Fame manager Harry "Sparky" Anderson who was born on this day in 1934.  

THE BEGINNING:
With the Phillies having finished the 2015 season with a spectacularly awful record of 63-99 it will be interesting to see what kind of team new President Andy MacPhail and GM Matt Klentak put on the field. At the same time I am definitely looking forward to the games against Boston with former GM Ruben Amaro on the field. Given the departures, lingering contracts, a history of injuries, bipolar performances, and unproven talent, it should, at the very least, be an interesting season for the Phillies. Who knows, maybe they can avoid 100 losses... hopefully by more than one game!

Thursday, February 18, 2016

And The Disappointing Updates Have Begun…

PHILS PHACTS:


Roster Updates – Do not expect to see Matt Harrison in Phillies camp this spring. Do not expect to see him pitch at all in 2016. "The truth is we're not expecting him to be here anytime soon, if at all this year," general manager Matt Klentak said on Wednesday morning at Bright House Field. "If things go well, we'd be happy to get him back, but the reality is we're kind of in a wait-and-see mode, and we'll just have to play it out. But we're not expecting him here in Clearwater." The news should not surprise anyone who has followed Harrison's health history. He had spinal fusion surgery on June 3, 2014. It was his fourth back surgery in two years and the most radical of the bunch. Harrison's back problems have limited him to 44 innings the past three seasons. Harrison, who saw a back specialist earlier this week, is owed about $28 million on his contract, which expires following the 2017 season. But insurance is expected to pick up much of that. Harrison joined the Phillies in July as part of the Cole Hamels trade with Texas. The Phillies were aware of Harrison's health issues, but they acquired him to offset some of Hamels' salary. Funky Cold Medina: Right-hander Yoervis Medina is not expected to be in camp for another 10-14 days because of visa issues. The Phillies acquired Medina, who is a non-roster invitee, from the Pirates earlier this month for left-hander Jesse Biddle. Medina, 27, is 10-9 with a 3.08 ERA in 146 appearances in his career with the Mariners and Cubs. Turnover: The Phillies will have 65 players in camp, not including Harrison. Only 18 opened camp last spring with the club.


Can He Make The Rotation? – The future for the Phillies is everywhere this spring. Vincent Velasquez is one part of the puzzle, but he is a big one. Velasquez stood in front of his locker in the corner of the clubhouse on Wednesday morning at Bright House Field, where he answered questions from a pack of reporters. They wanted insight from the key piece in the December trade that sent Ken Giles to Houston. "I see all these [camera] lights turned on and I was like, 'Whoa,'" Velasquez said about the sudden attention. "I'm honored. It's really something to take in." The scene stood out to regular visitors to the Phillies' clubhouse. Chase Utley occupied Velasquez's corner locker for the previous 12 years. But Utley is a memory, part of the past, after being traded to the Dodgers in August. The Phillies hope Velasquez is a part of the future. He is a heavy favorite to win the fifth and final job in the rotation. Aaron Nola, Jeremy Hellickson, Jerad Eickhoff and Charlie Morton are considered locks for the first four spots. "There are a lot of guys with talent in this room," Velasquez said. "Everyone is fighting for a spot." But Velasquez is the favorite because of his talent. The Phillies love his arm, which is why they made Velasquez the focal point of the trade that sent Giles and Minor League infielder Jonathan Arauz to the Astros for right-handers Mark Appel, Thomas Eshelman, Harold Arauz and Velasquez, along with left-hander Brett Oberholtzer. The original four-player return for Giles included Houston outfield prospect Derek Fisher, but Appel and Arauz were late additions after sources said the Phillies had concerns about Velasquez's physical. Velasquez underwent Tommy John surgery on Sept. 22, 2010. "I'm healthy as an ox," Velasquez said. No issues with his shoulder? "I've never had any problems with my shoulder," Velasquez said. "Any type of soreness I've had was in the biceps or triceps. Nothing in the shoulder." The Phillies hope Velasquez, 23, stays healthy and continues to progress from his rookie season in Houston. Velasquez went 1-1 with a 4.37 ERA in 19 appearances (seven starts) last season. He has the talent to be a No. 3 starter, although some think he could be a dominant late-inning reliever. But forget about the bullpen right now. The Phillies want Velasquez to start and he wants to start, too. "Definitely, that's where I want to be," he said. Velasquez joked that he is looking forward to hitting in the National League. He seems to have the athletic ability to do it. He caught and played first base in high school. Velasquez learned to throw left-handed, which came in handy during his junior year when he pitched and played center field as a left-hander because he had bone spurs in his right elbow. "I'd look at my reflection and kind of imitate myself," Velasquez said. "When I threw with my left hand it looked trashy, so I eventually made it look normal." So keep an eye on Velasquez during batting practice. If he is in the outfield shagging fly balls, he could be shagging as a lefty. "I don't want to use my right arm. I want it to recuperate, so I'll just throw left-handed," he said. Velasquez played a different sport every day with his father and brothers, while growing up in California. Baseball, football, basketball, golf, tennis, soccer, whatever. "My dad wanted to really motivate us. He wanted us to make something of ourselves," he said. They did. His older brothers, Leonard Jr. and Christopher, fought in Iraq with the Marine Corps. Vincent has the chance to be a key cog in the Phillies' rebuilding efforts. "I don't have a guaranteed spot," Velasquez said. "None of us do. It's going to be a process. It's a little journey I'm looking forward to experiencing and we'll see how it plays out."


The Future Is Now! – Phillies fans get their first look at the future beginning on Thursday. Aaron Nola, Jerad Eickhoff, Vincent Velasquez, Mark Appel, Jake Thompson, Jorge Alfaro and other pitchers and catchers will hold their first official workout at Carpenter Complex in Clearwater, Fla. It will be unlike any Spring Training in recent memory as the Phillies rebuild with a camp full of young players and prospects. Are the Phils expected to be postseason contenders? No. Should they be interesting to watch anyway? Yes. Here is why: The Phillies already have a few young players in the big leagues that look like they could be part of the future core (Nola, Eickhoff, Maikel Franco and Odubel Herrera). They also have one of the best farm systems in baseball with seven players in MLBPipeline's Top 100 Prospects list, more than any other team in baseball. How many of those players will live up to the hype? How many will be part of the core of the future? Nobody knows, but finding out should make this year interesting to watch, both at the Major and Minor League levels. In the sixth part of a seven-part series previewing Phillies Spring Training, MLB.com asks three big questions that must be answered in camp: 1. Where does Ryan Howard fit? Jimmy Rollins, Chase Utley and Cole Hamels are gone, but Howard remains. It is likely that Howard figured he would be elsewhere by now, but the Phillies have had no luck trying to trade him, despite offering to pay most of his salary ($25 million this season, plus a $10 million buyout on a 2017 club option). Howard is expected to be in uniform when the club holds its first full-squad workout on Tuesday, but does he want to be here? And how much will he play? Howard has been one of the most standup players in the Phillies' clubhouse for years. He also has been one of the friendliest and most gregarious. He didn't show that side nearly as often last season. There could be any number of reasons for that, but the young players in the clubhouse could use a leader like Howard. In regards to playing time, manager Pete Mackanin has not minced words. He said it will be tough to play Howard over Darin Ruf against left-handed pitching considering their results last season. Will Howard be OK with that? It will be interesting to see how everything plays out as Howard's time with the Phillies nears its conclusion. 2. Will this team hit? Philadelphia scored the fourth-fewest runs in baseball last season, and it did not add anybody to the lineup other than outfielder Peter Bourjos, who hit .200 with a .623 OPS in 225 plate appearances last season with St. Louis. Runs are expected to be a struggle again, but the organization hopes there will be at least some improvement with the continued development of Franco, Herrera, Aaron Altherr and others. But if players struggle, there will be plenty of players in Triple-A looking to take their jobs, including shortstop J.P. Crawford, outfielder Nick Williams and more. 3. Who will show the kids the way? General manager Matt Klentak said building a positive culture is part of his plan to resurrect the Phillies, who have not had a winning season since 2011. They lost plenty of leadership in the past 14 months with Rollins, Utley, Hamels, Jonathan Papelbon, Marlon Byrd, Ben Revere and other veterans being traded. Do the current Phils have enough leadership to show the youngsters in camp the way to not only make the big leagues, but succeed once they're there? The only veterans on the 40-man roster with considerable service time are Howard, Carlos Ruiz, Bourjos, Andres Blanco, Jeremy Hellickson, Charlie Morton and David Hernandez. The Phillies could miss Jeff Francoeur, who learned from the best in Bobby Cox, Chipper Jones, John Smoltz, Tim Hudson and others. Francoeur almost single-handedly kept the clubhouse upbeat in 2015 during the organization's worst season since 1969. Players responded to him and he showed players like Franco, Herrera and others how to conduct themselves through the grind of the season.

Today In Phils History - Happy birthday to a couple of short lived pitchers with the Phillies in Kyle Abbott (1968) and Tyler Green (1970).  

THE BEGINNING:
With the Phillies having finished the 2015 season with a spectacularly awful record of 63-99 it will be interesting to see what kind of team new President Andy MacPhail and GM Matt Klentak put on the field. At the same time I am definitely looking forward to the games against Boston with former GM Ruben Amaro on the field. Given the departures, lingering contracts, a history of injuries, bipolar performances, and unproven talent, it should, at the very least, be an interesting season for the Phillies. Who knows, maybe they can avoid 100 losses... hopefully by more than one game!

Friday, September 11, 2015

No Game Played But The Phillies Still Win

GAME RECAP: Phillies Game Postponed Due To Rain


The Phillies and Cubs will play a single-admission doubleheader Friday at Citizens Bank Park. Rain postponed Thursday night's series opener between the two teams. The doubleheader will begin at 5:05 p.m. ET. Phillies left-hander Adam Morgan (5-5, 4.42 ERA) will face Cubs right-hander Jake Arrieta (18-6, 2.03 ERA) in Game 1. Phillies right-hander Alec Asher (0-2, 10.61 ERA) gets the start opposite Cubs right-hander Kyle Hendricks (6-6, 4.08 ERA) in Game 2. Fans holding tickets to Thursday's game may exchange them for tickets to any remaining Phillies home game this season, including Friday's doubleheader. The tickets may also be exchanged for any 2016 home game, when single game tickets go on sale in February. Exchanges should occur by May 31, 2016.

OTHER NOTES FROM THE DAY:
  • Andy MacPhail announced Thursday that Ruben Amaro Jr. would not return next season as general manager. MacPhail has begun a search for Amaro's replacement. Scott Proefrock will serve as interim GM until MacPhail announces a hire.
  • This will be Hendricks' first career start against Philadelphia, the only National League team he has not faced. Hendricks has a 3.56 ERA in 13 home starts this season, but a 4.56 ERA in 14 road starts.
  • Arrieta is 12-1 with a 0.99 ERA (12 earned runs in 109 innings) and 108 strikeouts in his last 15 starts. His only loss came against the Phillies on July 25, when former Phillies pitcher Cole Hamels threw a no-hitter at Wrigley Field. Arrieta also has a 17-inning scoreless streak.
NEXT GAME (x2):


The Cubs will continue their postseason pursuit with a doubleheader Friday against the Phillies at Citizens Bank Park. Rain postponed Thursday night's series opener between the two teams. The single-admission doubleheader will begin at 5:05 p.m. ET. Phillies left-hander Adam Morgan (5-5, 4.42 ERA) will face Cubs right-hander Jake Arrieta (18-6, 2.03) in Game 1. Phillies right-hander Alec Asher (0-2, 10.61) will face Cubs right-hander Kyle Hendricks (6-6, 4.08) in Game 2. Fans holding tickets to Thursday's game may exchange them for tickets to any remaining Phillies home game this season, including Friday's doubleheader. The tickets may also be exchanged for any 2016 home game, when single game tickets go on sale in February. Exchanges should occur by May 31, 2016.

PHILS PHACTS:


Finally! – Andy MacPhail said Thursday afternoon that he expected the decision to be easier. But in the end, MacPhail still made the decision he believed he would make in June, when the Phillies announced MacPhail would replace Pat Gillick as team president after the 2015 season. MacPhail told Ruben Amaro Jr. on Thursday morning that he would not return as general manager, initiating a GM search for an organization in the early stages of a lengthy rebuilding process. Amaro left Citizens Bank Park a short time later. Assistant general manager Scott Proefrock will be interim general manager until Amaro's replacement is hired. "I didn't think this one was going to be as hard as it turned out to be," MacPhail said. "I've read everything I could read. I've listened to try to help me understand as much as I could about the past, and I've learned as much as I think I could over a two-month period about an organization and those changes that have impacted the game over the last few years, all with the intent of finding a way to return the Phillies to consistent contenders, a place they enjoyed in the not-too-distant past. Unfortunately to accomplish that goal, the conclusion that I reached was that we needed a fresh perspective in the baseball operations department, a fresh approach." MacPhail said he made up his mind to remove Amaro two or three days ago. After informing Amaro and then meeting with the baseball operations staff, MacPhail and Phillies owner John Middleton answered questions about the decision during a news conference. "You look at any business, the decisions made are made not exclusively by one person in isolation, but from everybody else in the organization," said Middleton, who revealed the conversation about Amaro's fate began in December or January, when ownership interviewed MacPhail for the job. "But that doesn't mean in well-run and successful companies there isn't accountability. So even though people are making decisions in groups, there is still a person who is primarily responsible for that decision and has to be held accountable. So I think we recognize that we had a problem, and we're trying as fast as we can to get out of that problem and get back to winning." MacPhail said it would be ideal but ambitious to hire a GM before the team's organizational meetings at the end of next month. He said he had not contacted any potential candidates, although he certainly has been thinking of them. MacPhail should have no shortage of interest. The Phils are a team willing to spend money, and MLBPipeline.com ranked their farm system as the seventh best in baseball, which means talent is percolating to the big leagues. Amaro played a role in resurrecting the once-barren farm system with a slew of trades in the past nine months, deals Amaro finally got permission to make once Gillick issued the order to rebuild in August 2014. But before that, the Phillies fell from a franchise-record 102 victories in 2011 to a team on pace for the worst record in baseball, despite one of the highest payrolls. Amaro could not escape that. Fans' sentiment turned against him as the team continued to lose. He also made comments regarding the fan base and iconic players like Chase Utley and Ryan Howard, which Middleton said ownership noticed. "We were certainly aware of the fans' feelings," Middleton said. So who is the ideal candidate to replace Amaro? "He needs to hire himself," Middleton said of MacPhail. "And I say that because, 30 years ago, a very young Andy MacPhail was general manager, a newly minted general manager [with the Twins]. This guy was sitting in an office in Minneapolis and he was playing with mathematical, statistical, analytical tools. And he was using them to try to figure out how he could make better evaluations, therefore, better personnel decisions." "I intend to look at a wide spectrum of candidates," MacPhail added. "I would think it would be a mistake if we pigeonhole ourselves into saying, 'We're going to go for young analytics,' or 'We're going to go for an experienced baseball guy.' I see that out there with other clubs. Why would you restrict your ability to talk to whoever you want? I think you have a responsibility. Like I said two months ago, let's look at everything. And it's the same philosophy here. Let's look at a wide spectrum of candidates. You might be surprised." But once a new GM is hired, how will it work? The Phillies hired MacPhail to mostly work with the baseball operations staff. He will make the final decisions on major matters, although ownership always has the final say when it comes to payroll, etc. "I'm not here because of any marketing acumen," MacPhail said. MacPhail insisted the next GM would not be his subordinate. "I've been in this role before," MacPhail said. "I've had GMs under me before. If you talk to them, I think they feel like they had a fair amount of autonomy." Regardless, change is coming to an organization many think has been slow to adapt to change. "When Tiger Woods decided to change his golf swing in the prime of his career and people were going, 'Are you crazy? You're the best golfer in the world,'" Middleton said. "He said, 'Well, I need to be better.'  Their questioning was about the risk associated with somebody at that level going out and trying to do something different. So it's hard sometimes to convince people when they are highly successful as the Phillies have been that maybe the world is changing and maybe you need to look at it a little differently and do some things differently, and that's a hard thing to do."


Additional Analysis – If it had just been a matter of not renewing the contract of the general manager, that would have been difficult enough. It's never easy to let somebody go who has been part of the organization for years. The Phillies' decision to part ways with Ruben Amaro Jr. was particularly fraught, however. Amaro was more than a guy who kept a high-profile seat warm for seven years. He was more than the steward of a team that won three division titles on his watch. He wasn't perfect. He made some moves that backfired, which made him just like every other general manager who ever lived. Otherwise, incoming club president Andy MacPhail wouldn't already be making calls, putting together a list of potential replacements. To an unusual degree, though, he was part of the fabric of the team. He was born in Philadelphia. His father, Ruben Sr., played and coached for the Phillies. He grew up and attended prep school in the area. He also played for the Phillies. He was a bat boy for the 1980 Phillies team that became the first in franchise history to win the World Series. He was the assistant general manager for the 2008 club that became the second to take home the big, shiny trophy. John Middleton, spokesman for the ownership group, acknowledged all that. "Moments like this are also occasions for reflection and gratitude," he said. "Ruben has a long history with the Phillies. He started as a bat boy in 1980, continued as a player. He was here for our glory years. As an assistant general manager [under Ed Wade and Pat Gillick] for 10 years, he helped and contributed significantly to rebuilding the organization from the depths of the late '90s that led to the World Series championship in 2008. "I'd like to thank Ruben personally for his years of service to the organization ... and for the scores of memories that all of us will cherish forever." As a general manager, Amaro will be remembered for being bold and unafraid. He signed free agents like Raul Ibanez, Pedro Martinez, Jonathan Papelbon and A.J. Burnett and traded for big names such as Roy Halladay, Roy Oswalt, Hunter Pence and Michael Young. He traded for, traded away and re-signed Cliff Lee. He assembled the Four Aces rotation in 2011. He did all that with the full encouragement of the organization that was trying to win as many championships as possible with a once-in-a-lifetime nucleus that included Chase Utley, Jimmy Rollins and Ryan Howard. And if it had worked, if the Phillies had won one or two more World Series, who knows? Maybe the inevitable decline that followed because of the draft choices that were lost as compensation for free agents signed and the prospects traded away for established stars wouldn't have been viewed as harshly. But after losing the World Series to the Yankees in 2009, Amaro's first year on the job, the Phillies never got that close again. They were eliminated by the Giants in the NLCS in 2010 and by the Cardinals in the NLDS in 2011, despite winning a franchise-record 102 games. Now they have baseball's worst record. Once the franchise decided to rebuild, Amaro did an impressive job of restocking the farm system. MacPhail, who came on board in July, was impressed by what he was able to get back for Hamels, Utley, Jonathan Papelbon and Ben Revere. "Ruben Amaro ran that Trade Deadline. Ruben Amaro didn't do anything that Ruben Amaro didn't want to do," MacPhail said. "I think, in fairness, it would be difficult to make the case that Ruben Amaro did not do good work when I was here. I think he really did." None of that changed the ultimate decision in the end. But that, and Amaro's long history with the organization, did make that choice more difficult than it normally would have been.


So, Who Stays? – Andy MacPhail told Ruben Amaro Jr. on Thursday that he would not return next season as general manager. Perhaps the first question on the minds of people in the Phillies' front office and coaching staff: What does this mean for them? As MacPhail illustrated, a new team president often wants his own general manager. And a new general manager often wants his own people working underneath him. But MacPhail said that is not the case here. He expects the baseball operations staff to return, at least through next season. And it sounds like Phillies interim manager Pete Mackanin has a good chance of returning, too. "I went to some effort to assure them that in the event there is a new hire and when that happens we're not going to allow a bunch of changes just so they can bring in people that they're familiar with," said MacPhail, who met with the baseball operations staff before Thursday's news conference at Citizens Bank Park. "That's not going to happen. These people have earned the right to stay here. They've distinguished themselves in my mind. It was the first thing Ruben asked about. I think they should feel their immediate future going into the '16 season is secure." Of course, the next general manager seems likely to use next season to evaluate his staff. After that, who knows? MacPhail indicated Mackanin has a good chance to return. Because of the time it will take to hire Amaro's replacement, he might want his new GM to begin working immediately on player personnel, instead of beginning an exhaustive managerial search. "I would encourage everybody not to make any assumptions about what's happening today to have any domino impact on the manager," MacPhail said. "I think that's something that's still under review. I know the tradition is that the GM picks his manager. I'll just go full disclosure here, if that happens, and it takes you a while to find a GM and then he gets consumed the first month or two with a manager and coaching staff, look how much of the offseason we've lost. That's a high price to pay. So we have to keep that in mind as well." "The big way to measure those things are energy, effort enthusiasm," MacPhail said about Mackanin's job performance. "The manager doesn't necessarily have any impact on the talent. The organization provides it to him. The best thing he can hope to do is increase the level of energy, effort and enthusiasm. And certainly we had a month-long streak where this team had the best record of anyone coming out of the break, so he certainly has demonstrated that he was capable of doing it." Said Mackanin: "I feel hopeful. … I think he's going to make the decision based on a number of different things. I think, like he said, everybody is still being evaluated. And certainly whoever comes in as the new GM should have some say on who he wants to manage the team. That being the case, I just have to see whatever happens. I can't do anything about it."


And The Search Begins – Andy MacPhail was hired by the Phillies in June. He'll formally take over as team president at the end of the regular season. So it was natural for him to be asked Thursday afternoon about his profile for the team's next general manager in the wake of the announcement that the contract of Ruben Amaro Jr. will not be extended. Before MacPhail could speak, John Middleton reacted like a defensive back jumping a route and intercepted the query. "Let me tell you what I think and what I've told Andy he needs to do. He needs to hire himself," said the man who has emerged as the voice of the ownership group. He was kidding. Sort of. He went on to note that MacPhail was in his 30s when he got his first chance as a general manager with the Twins. "And he was playing with mathematical, statistical, analytical tools. And he was using them to try to figure out how he could make better evaluations, therefore, better personnel decisions," an animated Middleton said. "How did a young guy who never had the job before do that? The answer is, because he was constantly pushing himself to get better. ... What is crucial is that the person who is going to fill this job absolutely has to have a passion for winning, be really competitive. Has to be able to think outside the box. Has to be able to push himself and this organization to make it better and has to be able to embrace change. Because you cannot sustain success unless you're adaptable and flexible and able to deal with problems five years from now. "Because the problems five years from now are going to be different than the problems today. If you hire somebody today and they're a one-trick pony and all they can do is fix today's problems, they're not going to be successful five years from now. So what we have to do as an organization is find someone who can drive that culture, who can drive that change." When it was his turn, MacPhail smiled. "I'll give a more traditional answer," he said. Which was, basically, that he doesn't intend really to have a profile. "I intend to look at a wide spectrum of candidates," he said. "I would think it would be a mistake if we pigeonhole ourselves into saying, 'We're going to go for young analytics,' or, 'We're going to go for an experienced baseball guy.' Why would you restrict your ability to talk to whoever you want? I think you have a responsibility to look at everything. You might be surprised. You'll learn a lot of things." The only common denominator, he added, was that the general manager should have a different "horizon" than the manager. The guy in the dugout should focus on what's happening right now. The GM has to consider both long- and short-term objectives. For anyone trying to read tea leaves and figure out who might be on the short list, that didn't provide many clues. But here's a look at some logical candidates and why they could fit in. Baseball people will almost always at least consider people they've worked with before. So the names of 35-year-old Angels assistant general manager Matt Klentak and Yankees special assistant Jim Hendry naturally surfaced quickly. MacPhail hired Klentak in 2008 when he was president of the Orioles. And Hendry, 60, was his general manager with the Cubs. Executives from successful organizations are usually seen as attractive candidates. So one intriguing possibility could be John Barr, vice president and assistant general manager scouting and international operations of the Giants. San Francisco has won the World Series three of the last five seasons and is a far more analytics-savvy organization than it generally gets credit for. He's 57, but Pat Gillick was three years older when he put the finishing touches on the 2008 World Series championship team. Plus, he's a local native who still lives in New Jersey. Another who falls into that category: J.J. Picollo, 44, Royals vice president and assistant GM of player personnel. There are several former general managers with good reputations who could be available, including Ben Cherington, who stepped down from the Red Sox after Dave Dombrowski was hired; Jerry Dipoto, who resigned from the Angels; and Twins special assistant Wayne Krivsky. There are young assistants who are considered up-and-comers. Braves assistant GM and director of professional scouting John Coppolella; Yankees assistant GM Billy Eppler; and Angels director of professional scouting Hal Morris would be examples. There are outside-the-box candidates. Like, say, Dan Duquette. There have been reports that his relationship with Orioles owner Peter Angelos soured when he was under consideration to become the Blue Jays president, a position that has since been filed by Mark Shapiro. Duquette is whip smart and has won wherever he's been. Major League Baseball is strongly urging teams to consider minority candidates. So De Jon Watson (D-backs senior vice-president of baseball operations), Billy Owens (Athletics player personnel director), Deron Johnson (Twins scouting director), Tyrone Brooks (Pirates director of player personnel), Ricky Bennett (Pirates pro scout), Dana Brown (Blue Jays special assistant) and Kim Ng (MLB senior vice president for baseball operations) could get looks. The Phillies aren't expected to interview internal candidates, although Middleton did say that MacPhail knows interim GM Scott Proefrock well enough from their days together in Baltimore that a formal interview probably wouldn't be necessary. So, since MacPhail isn't going to clone himself, he has a lot of names to consider. That process started, he said, as soon as he stepped off the podium on Thursday.


Something To Work With – So, just like that, the Phillies are in the market for a new general manager. And they're not alone. The Red Sox, Angels, Mariners and Brewers are also actively looking to fill that important position. Depending on how things shake out elsewhere, other clubs could be added to the list before the infield dust finally settles. In other words, it's not a given that the Phillies will simply be able to tap their first choice to replace Ruben Amaro Jr. on the shoulder and that will be that. There's the possibility that a highly regarded candidate could have more than one option. And if that were to happen? "There was a really interesting quote by, I think, an American League executive," said John Middleton, who has emerged as the spokesman of the Phils' ownership group. "[He] said, 'You look at that franchise, you look at the farm system with the prospects they pulled in at the Trade Deadline, you look at the Spring Training facility, you look at the fan base, you look at the Major League stadium, you look at the money behind the team. No wonder Andy MacPhail came out of retirement. What an opportunity.' And I think I'd take that little blurb, cut it out and just hand it to somebody and say, 'This is why you should be here instead of somewhere else.'" All valid points. There's no perfect situation, but a closer look at the Phillies shows a lot more potential than might be expected from the team with the worst record in baseball. What's tough for Amaro, of course, is that the strength of the farm system has largely been built by the trades he's made since December, when he began dismantling the nucleus that helped the organization win five straight division titles, two National League pennants and a World Series from 2007-11. By trading Jimmy Rollins, Cole Hamels and Chase Utley (plus Jonathan Papelbon, Marlon Byrd, Antonio Bastardo, Ben Revere and Jake Diekman), Amaro hauled in 15 players. Twelve are ranked by MLBPipeline.com as among the team's Top 30 prospects. And if those guys help the Phils to their next run of excellence, it's the next general manager who will bask in the applause and be soaked in the champagne. That's nothing new in baseball, by the way. When the Phillies won it all in 2008, general manager Pat Gillick took pains to point out all the good work that his predecessor, Ed Wade, had done to make the title possible. It happened again to Wade, now a Phils scout, after he was hired by the Astros. Much of what Houston has accomplished on its road back to contention has its roots in deals he made before being dismissed. The man responsible for identifying the person who could inherit all of this is MacPhail, who has been observing since being hired in July and will formally take over as club president from the retiring Gillick at the end of the season. He is also bullish on what lies ahead. "I think there are reasons to be enthusiastic about the position-player future of this franchise, based on what's on the field now," MacPhail said, referring to players like third baseman Maikel Franco, second baseman Cesar Hernandez and outfielders like Odubel Herrera, Aaron Altherr and Darnell Sweeney. "Admittedly, it's flashes, but what's on the field and what's in the high levels [is strong] -- even given the attrition that is going to happen as they migrate up toward the big leagues." MacPhail also acknowledged, and took pains to refute, the perception that he'll retain most of the power and that whomever he hires will be little more than a glorified assistant. "I can understand why that is," MacPhail said. "Ownership has made it clear, [as when he was hired], that they certainly want me involved in baseball operations. And, let's face it, I'm not here because of any marketing acumen. "But at the same time, I've been in this role before. I've had GMs under me before. If you talk to them, I think they feel like they had a fair amount of autonomy, which I think is important to them to be able to do their job. They can't be in short pants running back to the president every time they have to make a decision. I have to create a culture where they have some autonomy. They should keep me apprised, but that is a balance I'm going to have to strike." Even if the Phillies didn't appear to be well positioned to make a fairly quick turnaround, MacPhail wouldn't have any problem finding someone to fill the opening. There are, after all, only 30 of them. They pay well, with nice perks. But the truth is that there are several factors that make the Phils an attractive destination, which will make it that much easier to recruit the person they finally decide they really want.

THE BEGINNING:
The Phillies have returned to their lackluster ways and regained their grip on last place in the NL East with a record of 54-86. Given the departures, aging stars, injuries, and bipolar performances this season, this could still end up being the worst team in franchise history… at least that is something to hope for this year! All time, the Phillies are 52-57-0 on this day.