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WASHINGTON – Rob Thomson will spend Monday in Philadelphia, cooped up, he says, in his Citizens Bank Park office, preparing his Phillies team for their date in the postseason. Yet in reality, the manager has the day off.
Especially considering what two of his potential playoff opponents will be up to come the afternoon.
For the first time in this frenetic three-year run on Broad Street, the Phillies are National League East champions. They’ve earned the right to put up their feet, stay hot with a Wednesday intrasquad game, and let their two potential opponents battle their way through the best-of-three wild-card series shootout.
The Phillies will never know if winning the East might have saved enough gas in the tank for them to overcome the Houston Astros in a 2022 World Series they lost in six games. Or held the line in the 2023 National League Championship Series, when they blew leads of 2-0 and 3-2 to lose a seven-game gut-puncher to the upstart Arizona Diamondbacks.
No, this time they’ll gladly “worry” about whether the club will get rusty over a five-day layoff, rest their bones and hand the ball to Cy Young Award hopeful Zack Wheeler one week from now in Game 1 of the NL Division Series.
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Meanwhile, the wild-card hopeful Arizona Diamondbacks are playing for their lives this weekend against the San Diego Padres. The New York Mets and Atlanta Braves are trying to hang onto playoff position with series against the playoff-bound Brewers and Royals – and then they must congregate in Atlanta to make up a pair of games on Monday, should they impact the playoff field (they likely will).
Sure, the Phillies seemingly found their footing in two-game wild-card sweeps of St. Louis in ’22 and the Miami Marlins a year ago. Yet putting their best foot forward – and ending the Braves’ six-year reign atop the division – was a point of emphasis.
Now, 94 wins later, the Phillies can enjoy the quiet their labor earned.
“As soon as I got here, the first thing I kept hearing was, ‘We gotta keep playing good because we’re going to win the division,’” says closer Carlos Estévez, acquired at the trade deadline as the final piece of a deep bullpen.
“It’s not, ‘We want to,’ it’s, ‘We’re going to win the division.’ That’s one thing that shows truly, really, a lot of confidence within the group.”
Philadelphia enters the NL playoffs as the No. 2 seed behind the Los Angeles Dodgers and can ensure World Series homefield advantage with a win in their season finale Sunday against the Washington Nationals. Yet that’s relative minutiae.
The Phillies are poised for a run, and quietly seem to know it.
It starts with Wheeler, who finished his season in spectacular fashion Saturday.
He struck out 11 Nationals against just two walks, the lone blemish a two-run homer yielded to rookie James Wood. Wheeler went out for the seventh inning, struck out Juan Yepez, and then Thomson went and got him after 97 pitches.
The far more significant number: 200 innings pitched, right on the nose, a mark few pitchers reach these days, particularly in the dominant fashion Wheeler did.
He finished the season with a 2.57 ERA and 224 strikeouts. Saturday’s outing was his 25th start of at least six innings and fewer than two runs given up.
“I just told him it’s been a hell of a year,” says Thomson of their conversation at the mound.
“That’s Cy Young-worthy, to me.”
Wheeler topped 200 innings once before in his career – 2021, when he pitched 213 ⅓ innings but finished second to Corbin Burnes – despite pitching 46 ⅓ more innings than the Milwaukee ace.
Sale will likely win the NL pitching triple crown – he has one more strikeout than Wheeler and a 2.38 ERA.
Yet he also has pitched 22 ⅓ fewer innings, pending a potential assignment Sunday or Monday. Sensing a pattern?
“I did the best I could,” says Wheeler. “Chris had a really good year, also, and he’s deserving of it for sure. It’s pretty cool to see him come back from missing the last four years or whatever it was.
“Good for him and glad to see him be back to being Chris Sale.”
Yet this might have been the best version of Zack Wheeler. He worked with pitching coach Caleb Cotham on enhancing his split-finger pitcher as a weapon against left-handers, and the result was a career-best in batting average against (.193) and WHIP (0.96).
His next start will come Saturday night, Game 1 of the NLDS at Citizens Bank Park.
And that’s the Phillies’ other ace in the hole.
They are 54-26 at their home ballpark this season, the best mark in the majors, and in the past two postseasons has featured the most raucous, roaring atmosphere among all playoff venues.
Estévez got his first taste of that Monday, when he pitched the ninth inning of the Phillies’ NL East clincher.
“That felt amazing. The energy, the atmosphere was just insane,” he says. “I really liked that. I felt amazing out there.”
The Bank, as it’s colloquially known, can certainly serve as an antidote to the five-day layoff the top two seeds endure. To be certain, far too much has probably been made about the effects of “rust,” thanks in large part to the Phillies’ multiple series victories as a wild card the past two years, and Arizona’s World Series run last year.
This expanded playoff sample is just two years old, and a team with a bye (the ’22 Astros) captured one World Series, while a wild card (the ’23 Texas Rangers) snagged another.
“I think it’s just an excuse if you want it to be, or a good time to rest, if you want to be,” says shortstop Trea Turner, who slugged his 21st home run Saturday. “I feel like the adrenaline of the postseason kind of locks you in and makes up for that five days off.
“You’re not going to feel sluggish or like you haven’t played in a long time. I think the adrenaline makes up for that.”
So do Wheeler and Aaron Nola, the other half of Philly’s nearly peerless 1-2 pitching punch. These Phillies might enter the playoffs with the most conventional-looking team: Four defined starters, a bullpen with four All-Stars, and a veteran, star-studded lineup featuring four players with 21 to 38 homers.
The lone fly in the ointment right now is No. 3 starter Ranger Suárez, who keyed both Philly postseason runs with clutch pitching performances in Game 1 NLDS starts against Atlanta. He has struggled in seven starts since returning from the injured list following a back problem, pitching to a 5.74 ERA. The Phillies have lost his last three outings.
But given the health issues the Dodgers’ rotation faces, Sale’s iffy status in Atlanta and the crucible their NL opponents must survive before the playoffs even begin, the Phillies will take it.
“It’s about competing in that moment,” says Turner. “And I think we’re ready for it.”
Not for a few days, anyway. They might dispassionately watch the Braves-Mets jamboree on Monday, or not. Rest the limbs, or tune up on high-tech pitching machines or in bullpen sessions.
Either way, they are primed – and, in a first for this generation of Phillies, holding the upper hand.
“The team goal is one goal,” says Wheeler. “And that’s to win the World Series – no matter how it’s done.”
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