Tag Archives: Mets

Phils Poised for Second Half?

15 Jul

The Phillies are ready to make their run for another championship. They currently have the best record in baseball and are 3 1/2 games up in the National League East. I wish I could say that they are healthy, but they are getting there. So what if any thing stands in there way? I thought that we could take a look at these things and then I would give you my predictions.

The Bullpen – This seems to be where a lot of the questions lie, so I figured I’d talk about this first.

It looks like Ryan Madson is ready for his return. Ryan has made some appearances with the Clearwater Threshers and has had success and feels good. Madson was a huge part of the Phillies first half and is pretty vital to their continued successes.

Brad Lidge appears to be progressing. He hasn’t had a lot of work, and his outings so far really havn’t been all that spectacular. On Thursday night Lidge made a rehab appearance with the Reading Phillies in Trenton and gave up two runs in 2/3 of an inning. Lidge allowed one hit, one walk, hit two batters and threw three wild pitches during the seventh inning before being taken out of the game. However, his outing on Monday was a perfect outing. Lidge was unhappy with his control, but said that his arm strength is getting better and that he thinks he’s feeling well enough that he could return to the Phillies pen during the Phillies next home stand which is next Friday when the San Diego Padres come to Philadelphia.

Jose Contreras is expected to return to the bullpen at some point this season, but it is unknown at this point when exactly that will be. Currently Contreras is not partaking in any baseball activities.

The rest of the pen seems to be healthy and you just have to hope that the Young Guns can continue to find success. It cannot be overstated how big Antonio Bastardo and Michael Stutes have been for the Phillies.

The Rotation – Charlie Manuel at the request of pitching coach Rich Dubee has shuffled the cards in the Phillies rotation to give Roy Halladay and Cliff Lee a little extra rest after the All-Star game which both of them participated in. The Phillies have activated Vance Worley, and will start him against R.A. Dickey and the Mets tonight in New York. Cole Hamels will go Saturday against the Jon Niese, and it hasn’t been said yet formally, but I’m hearing that Kyle Kendrick might start, and face Mike Pelfrey on Sunday. So Halladay and Lee have been pushed back.

Joe Blanton is still sidelined with an elbow injury and no timetable has been discussed for him to this point. If Blanton returns, don’t be surprised if it’s in a different capacity like the bullpen if Worley continues to progress as he has. Kyle Kendrick might just get a shot to stay in the rotation for a while, but there are a lot of “If’s” there.

The Phillies are also staying mum when it comes to Roy Oswalt. If Oswalt returns and can pitch well it would be a huge boost to the Phillies. I’m not high on Oswalt right now and if things don’t progress for him then I wouldn’t be surprised if he asks for his walking papers after the season ends. It’s pretty well documented that Oswalt has had strong feelings of an early retirement, but a deep run in the playoffs may just give him the itch to give it one last shot. Right now there is no timetable for Oswalt’s return either. I’m thinking that the end of August would be a fair guess.

The Lineup – Shane Victorino should be activated as soon as he is eligible. One could argue that Shane was the Phillies first half MVP, and his healthy return will be vital to the Phillies second half run.

Protection for Ryan Howard is another big issue for me. Ryan has had a pretty decent season despite little protection from the revolving door that is the 5-hole spot. I’m still pretty convinced that adding another bat to the lineup, in the form of a right-hander. I have some feeling that that spot may get filled through a trade, but for now Raul Ibanez and Shane Victorino will need to find a way to offer Howard some help. Ibanez had a great series against the Braves, and let’s hope that that continues. Our corner outfielders have not have the seasons we expected.

Placido Polanco is a HUGE question mark for me. I think that Polanco can play through his injury but it’s not going to be pretty. Polly is dealing with a bulging disc in his back, and hasn’t been productive in over a month. It’s likely that he’s going to have to get a cortisone shot to help him manage his pain. Polanco has been a very productive hitter in his career, but as for as this season is concerned it’s going to be a daily question for him.

Ben Francisco and Domonic Brown have both had fairly disappointing seasons. Though they both come pretty cheap, the Phillies are going to have to try and procure some help in the outfield because I’m not fully convinced that John Mayberry Jr. is the answer. If they do make any sort of move it’s going to have to come in the form of a trade. The Phillies have next to no money to work with so Ruben Amaro Jr. is going to need to be creative.

With Jimmy Rollins and Ryan Madson’s expiring contracts the Phillies are going to want to use some of the money that is coming off the books in 2012 (Ibanez, and Lidge being the two biggies) to try to resign these two. The Phillies are also going to look into negotiating a long term deal with Cole Hamels. These things will make it hard for them to work something out this season.

Let’s not forget that Chase Utley is still playing with an injured knee. Proper rest is necessary for Utley because he really needs to step up his game and have a great second half.

Predictions - I don’t think that the Braves are going to go away quietly, but I do think that the Phillies have what it takes to fend them off until the end of September because they have plenty of question marks, too. My best guess is that the winner of the National League is going to come from the N.L. East, and that the two teams that will compete for a spot in the World Series are the Phillies, and the Braves.

Have a great Friday.

Phillies Weekly Report

12 Jul

Here’s a look at my column I write for PhilaPhans.com.

I’m posting it here so you can check it out, but if you want to read this in the future, I have a new addition every Monday morning on PhilaPhans. Consider popping over to PhilaPhans and even becoming a member.  I’m usually hanging around in the Game Day Thread during Phillies games.  Come join in!

The Phillies Weekly Report

By The Phanatic Addict

It was another 4-2 week for the Phillies. Two more series wins. One against theMarlins, and one against the hotAtlanta Braves. The series win over the Braves sure felt good with them right on the Phillies tail, and the 14-1 pounding we handed them made it that much better. .666 Baseball is nothing to be sorry about.

I do worry a little about the Phillies second half schedule. They played plenty of teams with losing records in the first half, and a lot of their second half games are on the road. The Phillies are 34-15 (.693) at home, but just 23-19 (.547) away from Citizens Bank Park. The Phillies have recently been known as a second half club, but it would be nice not to have to

The Offense – The Phillies offense showed up for five out of their six games this week. I can’t explain what happened on Saturday, but we do have to give a little bit of credit to Tommy Hanson, who pitched well. Cliff Lee managed to hit a homer off him, why didn’t anyone else? A head scratcher indeed.

As much as I see everyone complaining about how bad this offense is, the Phillies scored 39 runs this week. Yes, 28 of them came in two games but we scored these runs off of some pretty good pitchers.

The biggest blow to the team was losing Shane Victorino after it appeared tat he would be coming back pretty quick. Shane should return as soon as he is eligible when the Phillies face the Cubs next week.

Starting Pitching – Heading into the All-Star break things are looking really good. Sure, We’d like to have Oswalt up and pitching well, but the guys that are here are pitching like studs. The Phillies have three of their starters heading to the All-Star game in Arizona. It is the first time in the last 25 years that a team has had three pitchers with more then 9 wins, and ERA’s below 3.00 at the break.

I’m sure that Cole Hamels enjoyed the 28 runs of support that he got this week. It’s probably more then he got in 2010.

The Pen – I’m excited to see that Ryan Madson is closer to making his return. Antonio Bastardo has been just brilliant in his turn as the closer for the Phillies, but the possibility that Madson could be back next weekend is really big for the bullpen.

Brad Lidge has had some rehab appearances this week in his road back, and all have been rather positive. I’ll take a healthy Lidge over Andrew Carpenter any day.

Two straight scoreless appearances for Juan Perez have earned him the right to hang around a little longer in my book. He’s made the Braves hitters look just silly on Friday night, and you can never have enough lefties in your pen.

The Bench – This bench seems to become more important to the success of the Phillies every single game. With Shane Victorino, and Placido Polanco on the shelf the bench players have stepped onto the field and have almost flawlessly filled in.

Michael Martinez turned in seven hits in his last five games. Not to mention four runs, four RBI and a couple of really great catches. John Mayberry Jr. has also been really great in his last few starts. Six hits, Seven RBI, and three runs score. His three doubles on Sunday are proof that he may just have the tools to be considered for a starting job, if not at least as a platoon player in 2012.

Managers- I’d say that my only surprise of the week from the managers would be their decision to pull Kyle Kendrick out of a game that he was winning after just five innings. They turned the ball over to the bullpen and the game was over. The Phillies committed three errors in this game which cost them, and Kyle was the scapegoat.

After a 14 run game, you want to get right back out on the field and keep playing, but let’s be real. This team needs some rest. With the injured players we have sitting, and Chase Utley’s knee problems I think that a four day rest is just fine and dandy.

Again, the Phillies ended this week with two more series victories, and you can’t ask for too much more then that.

On a personal note, I’ve kept this a little shorter then usual, but with a wild work week, and a new addition to our family, I’m pretty spent. Congratulations to my sister and her husband on the birth of their new daughter. Welcome to the family Erin.

If you have time stop by my blog The Phanatic Addict, and I’ll see you in the forums.

Vance Ineffective in Loss

30 May

Days like today are gonna happen.

Charlie Manual decided that with Vance Worley on the mound he was going to rest some of the regulars after what has been a long May. Sunday marked their 17th straight game without a day off, so it made sense to let a few guys sit.

Ryan Howard has not missed a game yet this season, so he sat. Chase Utley and Carlos Ruiz also sat since they are both still on the mend.

I just have to wonder that if Roy Halladay, or one of the other Aces was on the mound would we be resting players?

Still it makes sense. The Phillies seem to be figuring things out, and scoring again so taking a breather sounds like a good idea.

The resting did not benefit Vance Worley who was anything but sharp on the mound. Worley only lasted three innings, surrendering eight runs on 12 hits. He’s been bouncing around between the majors and the minors which has to be tough. I’m not ready to bail on Vance just yet, but today it appeared as if he didn’t want to be out there. Jimmy Rollins’ error in the first didn’t help him, and he was noticabley upset afterwards. Raul Ibanez should have made that catch on the liner from Jose Reyes as well.

I’m also less then thrilled with Jimmy’s lack of hustle toward the end of the game, most notably his being thrown out at second trying to stretch a single into a double in the eighth. If he were running a little harder out of the box he might not have been thrown out by ten feet.

Vance just seemed to deflate quickly, and he just didn’t have his stuff working.

Give some credit to Jonathan Niese who pitched well for the Mets. Niese has been matched up against Roy Halladay in his last two starts against the Phillies, and pitched well, but Halladay as he usually does, got the best of him.

Kyle Kendrick, J.C. Romero, and Danys Baez all stepped up and ate some innings for the Phillies. I’m getting pretty tired of Romero, but in a blowout I’m fine with throwing him out there.

The Phillies showed their resilience on Friday and Saturday, but Sunday was just too much even though they came back with a few runs in the end.

On to D.C. Halladay vs. Livan Hernandez on Monday.

Phils Get To K-Rod

28 May

It’s hard to believe that in 16 innings the Phillies have never scored a run off of Mets closer Frankie Rodriguez.

Until last night that is…

Charlie Manual pulled all the right strings in the ninth inning when the Phillies jumped in front of the Mets by three.  Going into the ninth with the game knotted up at 3-3, Charlie Manual substitued Ross Gload for John Mayberry who singled to right.  Michael Martinez who ran for Gload advanced to third when Domonic Brown singled to right while Carlos Ruiz scored. Jimmy Rollins popped up to short right, but Martinez, who has speed on his side, scored when he beat out Carlos Beltran’s throw.  Brown then scored off another single from Placido Polanco.

It’s worth noting that in two innings Domonic Brown had two hits, scored two runs, and stole a base.

Ryan Madson came on in the bottom of the ninth and notched his 10th save of 2011.

This wasn’t the cleanest game the Phillies have ever played.  Three big errors, most notabley the miscommunicated collision between Jimmy Rollins and Chase Utley almost cost them the win, but as many of my Facebook followers said, a win is a win.

Cole Hamels will face off against Mike Pelfrey.  Hamels has never won at Citi Field, and for that matter, never won at Shea Stadium either. The Phillies have gotten to Pelfrey in the past.  Most recently on April 6th when the Phils tagged him for seven runs, and then on April 29th when he coughed up four more.  Let’s hope that trend continues, and Hamels can finally grab a win in Queens.

 

Thanks Cliff

27 May

Just wanted to quickly mention how important Cliff Lee‘s start was yesterday to the Phillies.

His line wasn’t the greatest (10 hits, 4 Earned Runs, 1 Walk, 8 Strikeouts) but what was huge, was that he was able to go so deep into the game. Cliff threw eight innings on a really hot afternoon and kept the all of the pitchers who threw in the 19 inning marathon from the night before out of the game. Jose Contreras pitched the ninth after being activated earlier in the day.  This was a huge lift for the bullpen that was very active in the series with the Reds.

Cliff still hasn’t seemed to have locked in on his release point just yet, but he has pitched well enough to win in all but two outings.

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Are Things Coming Together?

27 May

20110527-033619.jpg

So are things really coming together for the Phillies? It may be so…

Think of it like this. The Phillies just went 10-10 in the last three weeks, but they played some tough teams, and with some pretty poor offense. So you have to think that it was a pretty successful stint.

Now they are looking at a stretch of series against all clubs that are playing some pretty sad baseball.

• The Mets (22-26)

• The Nationals (21-28) currently in the middle of a five game losing streak.

• The Pirates (22-26) currently in the middle of a three game losing streak.

• The Dodgers (22-29)

• The Cubs (22-26)

The return of Chase Utley have sparked the Phillies, and the addition of Domonic Brown in the lineup has produced some excitement as well.

Not to mention that after a terrible slump, Raul Ibanez is on an absolute tear, bringing his average up another 26 points in the last ten games.

The Phillies also got back the services of Jose Contreras. Jose was extremely valuable to the Phillies in April, and will hopefully pick up right where he left off.

Shane Victorinio also appears to be on the mend. Shane is scheduled to play at Single A Lakewood this weekend, and with the Reading Phillies next week. Shane was seen doing sprints at Citizens Bank Park this week, and did not look like a guy with an injury.

There are still some concerns…

J.C. Romero does not appear to be effective anymore. I’m getting the sense that his days are numbered. There are only so many roster spots available, and even though J.C. Is making over $1MM this season, the Phillies need a guy that can actually strike someone out. I think that guy is David Herndon. Honestly I was surprised that he was sent back down by the Phillies with the activation of Contreras. Herndon appears like he has figured things out, but the Phillies liked the progress he made in Triple A and would like him to continue to work on things. They hung on to him all last year for a reason.

Offensively the Phillies appear to be pulling out of the funk, but I’d like to see more. The starters are pitching great, but there needs to be a little more support for them so that they don’t rack up so many innings.

It does appear that the Phillies we remember might just be on their way back.

An Upgrade – Be Back Monday Night

6 May

simpson.jpgThis blog is going to be out of commission for the weekend as we are upgrading to some new software.  Kind of a lame time to do it during the season, but these changes will make this blog a lot better for you and myself, so it’s gonna be worth it.  I should be back up and going on Monday night.  Thanks!

PA- 

Don’t Blame It All On Kyle

2 May

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I’m sure that plenty of you are
disappointed that you stayed up for the whole game last night, and part of me
is too. It would be easy to throw the blame on Kyle Kendrick since he was the
one that gave up the game winning run.  Kyle would probably tell you that
he didn’t the stuff last night, but he didn’t lose this game for the Phillies
all by himself.

The Phillies sure did have their chances, the Phils were 1-8 with runners in
scoring position, and as a team left 11 on base. After the conclusion of the 11th
inning the Phillies appeared to all be trying to end the game with one swing.
The Phillies are making contact, but the hits just aren’t finding the grass as easily
as they used to. 

“Try to forget about it, go home and get some sleep,” Howard said
“We hit some balls hard. We hit them right at people. Those things happen
sometimes.”


They did do some things right, however.  Michael Stutes, Antonio Bastardo,
Ryan Madson, and Danys Baez all had scoreless appearances in the game.

Cliff Lee pitched well enough to win the game.  Cliff allowed eight
hits, one run, two walks and struck out five in seven innings.  Because
threw 34 pitches in the first inning he wasn’t able to go much deeper.

Give credit to Mets right hander Chris Young who handled the Phillies with
relative ease for seven innings.  Young retired 10 consecutive batters at
one point, and allowed just two hits in seven scoreless innings.

 

Side Notes - 

 

Bin Ladin - It
was pretty awesome to see the fans reaction as news spread through the park that
the most wanted man in the world had been killed by United Stated Special
Forces.

Raul - Ibanez had some big chances to break out of his slump last night,
but missed out in each opportunity.  Before he was replaced by John
Mayberry Jr. Ibanez rolled over on a pitch with the bases loaded to end the
inning.  He is now hitless in his last 34 appearances.

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Doc Prevails Over Mets

1 May

april30.jpg

Roy Halladay and the Phillies took down the Mets by the slimmest
of margins Saturday afternoon.  The
Phillies edged Jonathan Neise and the Mets 2-1 to secure them series
victory. 

The Mets got a really good start from Neise, who went 6.1
innings, but what charged with the two runs and the loss. Neise was chased
early in his previous start at Citizens Bank Park, when the Phillies pounded
the Mets 11-0 in early April. Niese drew Halladay in that start as well. 

Roy started the game with 18 straight strikes, which
according to STATS Inc. is the most by a pitcher to start a game since Sid
Fernandez threw 18 straight on Aug. 16, 1991. 
It was really impressive to watch Roy in his first three innings.  Just to see how effective he really is, and
seeing all the pitches he can throw for strikes, and their movement and
location.

John Mayberry Jr. and Placido Polanco gave the Phillies
just enough offense with a homerun, and a sac-fly to pull ahead of the Mets in
the 7th.  Mayberry got the
start over the struggling Raul Ibanez, and made the most of it going 2-4 with
the game tying homer.  Ibanez is not
seeing the ball well, and with a lefty on the mound, Mayberry seemed to be the
right choice.  John has batted .345 in 17
games and 29 at-bats.  Charlie has not
said anything about a platoon in left field, but if Ibanez and Mayberry
continue their current trends, he probably won’t have much choice.

It would be nice to see the Phillies back Halladay up
with a little run support.  In his last
four innings the Phils have only drummed up eight runs.  A one run lead is good enough when you’re Roy
Halladay, but let’s not do it every time.

The Phillies rounded out April with a franchise best 18-8
record.

Side
Notes –

Lidge
-
Brad
started the long road to recovery yesterday with his first bit of baseball activities.  The Phillies doctors have permitted him to
play catch.  Where this may not seem like
a huge step, when you’re recovering from a rotator cuff injury like this,
throwing is a pretty big thing.

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A Big Night Against The Mets

30 Apr

april29.jpg

Let’s not go anointing Vance Worley as the second coming of Cy Young, but he sure was good
enough last night to beat the New York Mets. Vance was erratic at times, but
made big pitches when he had to, and was pretty effective. Worely went six
innings allowing just two hits, and four walks. 
He struck out five, and didn’t allow a run.  On 102 pitches, Vance threw 56 strikes, which
isn’t exactly the greatest ratio, but as stated before, he didn’t allow a run,
and that’s what matters.

Vance has allowed just two earned runs over three starts
in 16 innings as a starter in the majors. Worley had great mound presence through
the night while working him out of a few jams.

It was a pretty big night at the plate for Ryan Howard, who went 2-4 with six
RBI.  All six RBI came off the long
ball.  Howard smashed a 2-run shot in the
bottom of the 4th, and then a grand slam in the bottom of the 6th.  It was Howard’s 10th grand slam of
his career, and the 259th of his career. 

Howard is now tied with Del Ennis for second place on the
Phillies all-time home run list.  The all-time
leader is no surprise to anyone, Michael Jack Schmidt at 548.  Anything is possible, but I’m not sure that
Ryno is ever going to get to that mark. 
If it leads to a title and a few more rings, then I sure hope he does.  

There were a few other records set last night as
well.  Howard’s 27 RBI in April is a club
record, and Placido Polanco smacked
his 39th hit in the month of April which is also a club record.  Previously the record was 38 hits, by non
other then Chase Utley who did it in 2008. 

The Phillies have feasted on Mets starter Mike Pelfrey
who is just 1-3 with a 9.38 ERA at Citizens Bank Park.  You can say the same for Saturday’s starter
Jonathan Niese who will start against Roy
Halladay
on Saturday.  Niese was
bounced from his last start at CBP pretty early in a 11-0 loss in early April
in which he also had the unfortunate draw of facing Halladay. 

The Phillies have now won 17 games in April which ties
the franchise record.  Today being the 30th
of April, and the last day of the month, gives them a chance beat that mark by
one.

Side
Notes –

Herndon
-
David
Herndon has not looked good in his last few appearances.
  The Rule-5 pick of the Phillies in 2010 has given up 7 earned runs in his last four appearances.  As it goes right now, don’t expect Herndon to come into a game when it’s on the line.  Not until he figures things out.   

Injury
notes –
It looks as though a few Phillies on the injury front are
making some strides.  Most notably Jose
Contreras will start throwing later this week, and Brad Lidge will begin a
throwing program as well.  Lidge still
has a long road ahead of him, but this is a big step. 

Oswalt
-
RAJ
seems to think that Oswalt will miss his next start, and said on Friday that
the Phillies would consider flipping around the rotation with the off day on
Monday. 

Brown
-
Domonic
Brown has hit a couple of homers in his first few starts in Clearwater, and
last night got two more hits. He is getting healthier, and the Phillies will
have a decision to make with Domonic in the coming weeks. He’s hitting pretty
well, so Charlie will surely be asking about for him soon. Likely though he’s
going to head to Triple-A because he has seen pretty limited playing time.  Brown only had about a week’s worth of
at-bats in Spring Training before suffering his injury.

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