Showing posts with label Preview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Preview. Show all posts

Thursday, April 2, 2009

Philadelphia Phillies 2009 Preview

By Michael Rushton

For just the second time in franchise history, the Philadelphia Phillies will enter a season as defending World Series Champions.

It had been a long drought for the City of Brotherly Love. Twenty-five years and 100 seasons between titles, the Phillies gave their city its first championship since the Philadelphia 76ers in 1983. It was also just the Phils second title since forming in 1883 and first since 1980.

Not that it came easy.

After overcoming a seven-game deficit with 17 games to play in 2007 to win its first National League East title since 1993, Philadelphia was swiftly bounced out of the playoffs in the first round.

Last season saw much of the same. Philadelphia again trailed the New York Mets heading down the stretch, finding itself 3 1/2 games back on September 10. Doubters will say the Mets collapsed for a second straight season, but optimists counter with the fact that the Phillies won 13 of their final 16 regular-season games to secure their second straight NL East title.

Philly didn't slow down in the postseason either. Behind a strong rotation, consistent hitting and one of the top bullpens in baseball, the Phils went 11-3 in the postseason and captured the title with a Game 5 victory over the surprising Tampa Bay Rays.

The good news for Phillies fans is the club returns basically the same squad that won it all just one season after becoming the first franchise to reach 10,000 losses.

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Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Philadelphia Phillies 2009 Preview

By Michael Rushton

For just the second time in franchise history, the Philadelphia Phillies will enter a season as defending World Series Champions.

It had been a long drought for the City of Brotherly Love. Twenty-five years and 100 seasons between titles, the Phillies gave their city its first championship since the Philadelphia 76ers in 1983. It was also just the Phils second title since forming in 1883 and first since 1980.

Not that it came easy.

After overcoming a seven-game deficit with 17 games to play in 2007 to win its first National League East title since 1993, Philadelphia was swiftly bounced out of the playoffs in the first round.

Last season saw much of the same. Philadelphia again trailed the New York Mets heading down the stretch, finding itself 3 1/2 games back on September 10. Doubters will say the Mets collapsed for a second straight season, but optimists counter with the fact that the Phillies won 13 of their final 16 regular-season games to secure their second straight NL East title.

Philly didn't slow down in the postseason either. Behind a strong rotation, consistent hitting and one of the top bullpens in baseball, the Phils went 11-3 in the postseason and captured the title with a Game 5 victory over the surprising Tampa Bay Rays.

The good news for Phillies fans is the club returns basically the same squad that won it all just one season after becoming the first franchise to reach 10,000 losses.

Seven of the eight position players who saw significant playing time return for 2009, including Ryan Howard, Chase Utley and Jimmy Rollins, and some will argue that swapping in Raul Ibanez for 2008 everyday left fielder Pat Burrell (now in Tampa Bay) will make the lineup more consistent.

On the rubber, the rotation will be again anchored by ace left-hander and 2008 World Series MVP Cole Hamels, with closer Brad Lidge ready to lock things down in the ninth inning after a perfect season a year ago.

With some much young, returning talent, long-suffering Philadelphia fans might not have to wait long for another championship.

Below we take a capsule look at the 2009 edition of the Philadelphia Phillies, with a personnel evaluation and prognosis included therein:

2008 FINISH (92-70) - First Place (NL East)

KEY OFFSEASON ADDITIONS: LF Raul Ibanez, SP Chan Ho Park, RP Gary Majewski, INF Marcus Giles, OF John Mayberry, INF Miguel Cairo, RP Jack Taschner

KEY OFFSEASON SUBTRACTIONS: LF Pat Burrell, OF So Taguchi, RP Tom Gordon, SP Adam Eaton, RP Les Walrond

PROJECTED LINEUP: Jimmy Rollins (SS), Shane Victorino (CF), Chase Utley (2B), Ryan Howard (1B), Raul Ibanez (LF), Jayson Werth (RF), Pedro Feliz (3B), Carlos Ruiz (C)

PROJECTED ROTATION: Cole Hamels (LHP), Brett Myers (RHP), Jamie Moyer (LHP), Joe Blanton (RHP), Chan Ho Park (RHP)/J.A. Happ (LHP)

PROJECTED CLOSER: Brad Lidge (RHP)

MANAGER: Charlie Manuel

INFIELD

Few infields can compete with the talent loaded between the bases for the Phillies.

First baseman Ryan Howard brings as much power as he does frustration, but as far as getting runs across the plate nobody does it better than the 29-year- old former NL MVP.

Howard got off to another slow start in 2008, as he was hitting just .163 on May 7 and didn't break .200 until May 22. However, he hit .276 after the All- Star break and still went on to finish with major-league leading totals in homers (48) and runs batted in (146) while finishing second in MVP voting.

There are some other negatives working with Howard too. He fanned 199 times for a second straight season and his walks dipped to 81 after posting 100-plus free passes over the previous two seasons. Howard also committed 19 errors last year, but that didn't stop the Phils from avoiding arbitration with their slugger by signing him to a three-year deal worth $54 million.

Philadelphia's double-play combination is also deadly. Second baseman Chase Utley played most of last season with a right hip injury that required offseason surgery, but still ended with a .292 average and a career-high 33 homers while driving in 100-plus runs for a fourth straight season.

Utley hit .352 in April last season and had 19 homers and 49 RBI by the end of May before his hip injury slowed down his power surge. He had surgery on November 24 and was thought to be lost until at least May, but the All-Star might now return by Opening Day.

One year removed from his 2007 MVP honor, shortstop Jimmy Rollins was slowed early last year but an ankle injury and hit .277 with just 11 homers and 59 RBI in 137 games after posting .296/30/94 in '07. However, the back-to-back Gold Glove Award winner did steal a career-high 47 bases last year.

Third baseman Pedro Feliz was a power disappointment in his first season with the Phils, going deep just 14 times in 133 games after posting four consecutive seasons of 20-plus homers. However, those numbers could go up after November 20 back surgery.

Catcher Carlos Ruiz (.219, 4 HR, 31 RBI) isn't going to wow people at the plate, but he handles the pitching staff well. However, teams can run on Ruiz.

OUTFIELD

A fixture in left field with the Phillies since 2000, Burrell left as a free agent to join the Rays after the club brought in Ibanez from Seattle. Ibanez hit .293 with 23 homers in 162 games with the Mariners last season and his 110 RBI marked his third straight season of driving in more than 100 runs.

The 37-year-old Ibanez is even an upgrade at defense for the Phillies, as Burrell was often substituted for late in games, shortening the club's bench.

However, there are few balls that center fielder Shane Victorino can't track down. Coming off his first-career Gold Glove Award, the Hawaiian had a .994 field percentage in center field and his speed allowed him to score a career- high 102 runs last season. Victorino also posted a career-high 14 homers and 58 RBI in '08, while his .293 average was the best he has hit in his three full seasons in the majors.

Jayson Werth should see most of the time in right field after appearing in a personal-best 134 games last season in what was supposed to be a platoon situation with left-hander Geoff Jenkins. Werth, a right-handed hitter, hit a career-high 24 homers with 67 RBI to go along with a .273 and appears to have fully recovered from wrist ailments that almost ended his career.

STARTING ROTATION

A healthy 2008 allowed Hamels to turn in his expected breakout season. The 25- year-old lefty went 14-10 last year, but was often the victim of poor run support as evident with his 3.09 earned run average. The lefty made 33 starts and threw 227 1/3 innings a season ago and fanned 196 batters while holding hitters to a .227 average.

Hamels then shined in the postseason, going 4-0 with a 1.80 ERA in five playoff starts, fanning 30 and walking nine over 35 innings. He didn't allow more than two runs in any of his playoff outings and won NLCS MVP honors as well.

However, injury concerns have begun to surface already in 2009. Hamels returned to Philadelphia in mid-March to have his left elbow looked at and though he got a clean bill of health, he might not be able to make his slated Opening Day start.

Philadelphia hopes that the Brett Myers of the second half is the one that follows Hamels and not the early-season 2008 form of the right-hander. Myers, returning to the rotation last year after serving as the closer for the latter part of '07, was just 3-9 with a 5.84 ERA through his first 17 starts before he and the club worked out an agreement for him to go to the minors to work out of his funk.

Putting his ego in check, the 28-year-old returned with a vengeance in late July and went 7-4 with a 3.06 ERA and one shutout in 13 second-half starts.

As valued for his experience as much as his left arm, the Phillies brought back 46-year-old Jamie Moyer to the rotation. The ageless vet went 16-7 with a 3.71 ERA in 33 starts last year. Right-hander Joe Blanton will pitch behind Moyer after going 4-0 with a 4.20 ERA in 13 starts with the Phillies following his acquisition from Oakland prior to last season's trade deadline.

Right-hander Chan Ho Park and left-hander J.A. Happ are battling for the fifth spot in the rotation.

BULLPEN

Though the Phillies boast one of the better lineups in the National League, the strength of the 2008 squad was its bullpen, keyed by closer Brad Lidge. An afterthought in Houston, Lidge was traded to the Phillies prior to the 2008 season and was a perfect 41-for-41 in save chances during the regular season with a 1.95 ERA before locking down all seven of his postseason save attempts as well.

Philadelphia will be missing one key piece of last year's bullpen, as lefty J.C. Romero will miss the first 50 games of the season for testing positive for a banned substance after going 4-4 with a 2.75 ERA in 81 games a season ago. That will put more pressure on right-hander Ryan Madson (4-2, 3.05 ERA), who emerged as a key setup man late last season. Scott Eyre, meanwhile, becomes the primary left-handed man out of the pen while Romero is out. Eyre went 3-0 with a 1.88 ERA in 19 games with the Phillies after coming over last season from the Chicago Cubs.

The Phillies managed to acquire a second left-handed pitcher in late March, getting Jack Taschner from the Giants in exchange for catcher Ronny Paulino.

Chad Durbin (5-4, 2.87 ERA) pitched in 71 games of relief last year for the Phils and returns this year, as does Clay Condrey. Park could serve as the multi-inning man if he does not make the rotation.

BENCH

Like their lineup, the Phillies bench is left-handed hitting heavy. Led by Greg Dobbs, who was tops in the majors with 22 pinch-hits last season, the bench also features Matt Stairs and Jenkins as power-hitting options from the left side, while Eric Bruntlett fills the utility infield role. However, the righty does not feature much power, similar to backup catcher Chris Coste, who held off Paulino for the position.

The Phillies are still in search of some right-handed power, but may open the season with Miguel Cairo as one of the righty options.

OUTLOOK

Repeating in baseball is tough to do anyway, but the Phillies march to another title will go through what is shaping up to be a very tough NL East. The Mets bullpen is reloaded, the Braves are hungry after missing out on the postseason the last few years and the Marlins are always dangerous despite a low payroll. Add in a Nationals club that opened its wallet a bit and Philadelphia has its hands full.

However, the Phils are not short on talent themselves and it is tough to argue against a club that basically brings back the same team that won it all a year ago. A quick start is key for Philadelphia, which can't count on a third straight collapse by the Mets. The Phils, though, will enter this season with the swagger of a champion, something that the City of Brotherly Love hasn't had in a long time.

Source: seattlepi.com

Monday, March 9, 2009

The Philadelphia Phillies' 2009 Slightly Premature Preview

By Andrew Nuschler

There's a reason why I left the Philadelphia Phillies as the last National League preview. The most obvious is that I think they have the inside track at representing the Senior Circuit in the World Series, despite the enormous target on their collective forehead.

Saving the (potentially) best for last gives you a light at the end of the San Diego Padre/Houston Astro tunnels.

But the primary reason is that the Phils are definitely my second favorite sports team. For the past several years, they've made the postseason tolerable after 162 games of bitter disappointment from my beloved San Francisco Giants.

It used to be that I'd follow the Orange and Black, primarily and secondarily. Then, I'd focus on cursing the Los Angeles Dodgers. Those days are history, although my animosity for LA has not abated in the least.

That particular rivalry does not allow for anything but intensification—either glacial or exponential or somewhere in between.

I'm just not an inherently negative person, and Chase Utley has given me enough of a reason to bump my hatred for the Bums back a notch in terms of priority.

Utley is an awesome baseball player. He gives you insane and complete numbers on offense, tremendously underrated defense, and does it all with an old school attitude.

That right there is my idea of a perfect ballplayer. Throw in his propensity to come up LARGE in the clutch (offensively and defensively), and what you have is a lot of baseball people's idea of a perfect pro.

Cole Hamels is incredible and this team doesn't win a World Series without him. It's simply impossible. The Phils probably don't even beat the Dodgers, which incidentally makes me a big fan of Cole as well.

Ryan Howard gets too much love because everyone loves home runs and unwisely ignores his strikeouts. Plus, his defense defies description...in a bad way.

And Jimmy Rollins can't be ignored, because any shortstop who wins Most Valuable Player honors demands mention.

But if I could loot one guy from Philadelphia's roster, I'm taking Utley. Of course, real Philly fans don't have to face that particular quandary because they get to enjoy all those guys and more.

Here's the full roster of talent:



Projected starting lineup

Catcher—Carlos Ruiz

First base—Ryan Howard

Second base—Chase Utley

Third base—Pedro Feliz

Shortstop—Jimmy Rollins

Left field—Raul Ibanez

Center field—Shane Victorino

Right field—Jayson Werth



I'm no huge fan of Ibanez, but I do think he's an upgrade over Pat Burrell just because I hate whiffs. Contrary to a stat-head school of thought, strikeouts are brutal on most player's psyche, and those ramifications go well beyond the particular culprit.

I can't believe how weak Feliz was last year, considering the smaller park/stronger lineup, but I expect him to have a better showing.

Other than that, things look pretty set, although the acquisition of Ronny Paulino could push out playoff hero Ruiz sooner or later. The Phils also have decent depth with Matt Stairs, Geoff Jenkins, Greg Dobbs, and Marcus Giles in camp.



Starting rotation

Ace—Cole Hamels (L)

Second spot—Brett Myers (R)

Third spot—Joe Blanton (R)

Fourth spot—Jamie Moyer (L)

Fifth spot—Kyle Kendrick (R)



I don't see how, but this rotation seems to be underrated. Hamels is the guy that everyone knows about and rightly so. But Myers was not the same hurler, after he came back up from the minors, and my guess is the World Series ring/solid postseason performance will ensure more of the good Myers in 2009.

Blanton probably will never see the heights he saw in Oakland, but he won't need to as a third starter in front of that offense.

Moyer and Kendrick won't wow you with their dookie, but they seem to get the job done often enough.

If someone goes down, Philly has a problem because Chan Ho Park seems next in line. And nobody wants to see that.



Bullpen

Closer—Brad Lidge (R)

Set-up—Ryan Madson (R)

Set-up—Scott Eyre (L)

Set-up—Chad Durbin (R)

Set-up—Clay Condrey (R)



There just aren't too many serious weaknesses to the overall picture.

On offense, I've already drooled sufficiently over the main protagonists so just take a look at their 2008 numbers:

NAME R 2B HR RBI BA OBP OPS
Chase Utley 113 41 33 104 0.292 0.380 0.915
Jimmy Rollins 76 38 11 59 0.277 0.349 0.786
Ryan Howard 105 26 48 146 0.251 0.339 0.881

Not included in the above is that Howard managed to fan 199 times, Rollins had 47 stolen bases, Utley had 14 swipes, and Rollins only saw action in 137 games (although he still managed over 550 at-bats).

As for the anxious Philly fans (and the hopeful New York Met fans), Utley's gonna be 100 percent by Opening Day. I can almost guarantee you that (knock on wood).

Assuming Rollins has no nagging injuries (and nobody suffers any before April), the Phillies should have one of the best cores in baseball at full strength.

Ibanez moves to a much smaller park and a much stronger lineup. That should mean, at least, a repeat of his 2008 tally—a .293 average with 43 doubles, 23 bombs, 85 runs scored, 110 runs batted in, a .358 on-base percentage, and an .837 OPS. It could even produce a bump in production.

That would give Philly a fourth all-around threat in the batter's box.

Shane Victorino and Jayson Werth form a surprisingly strong pairing in the outfield. Both give you a rifle arm, above-average defense, and ever improving offense.

The Flyin' Hawaiian had a pretty good regular season prior to his postseason coming out party—.293 with 30 doubles, 14 HRs, 102 runs, 58 RBI, 36 swipes, .352 OBP, and .799 OPS.

Werth was quite the revelation himself—.273 with 16 doubles, 24 bombs, 73 runs, 67 RBI, 20 steals, .363 OBP, and .861 OPS.

Matt Stairs and Geoff Jenkins both offer pop, if nothing else, should anyone in the outfield go down.

Carlos Ruiz and Pedro Feliz (besides rhyming) are the obvious pressure points. Even so, Greg Dobbs put up nice numbers in 226 ABs, so he's not an awful plan B to Pedro.

And Ronny Paulino showed promise before losing the job in Pittsburgh to Ryan Doumit, who's one of the bright up-and-comers at catcher. So there's reason to think Paulino (only 28 in April) might be able to supplant Ruiz and actually provide some reliable offense from the position.

The entire pitching staff is just as rock solid as the offense even if it lacks the flash of Utley-Rollins-Howard.

There's no need to rehash the excellence of Cole Hamels. He's a stallion and no recitation of accolades/stats will show that better than his playoff performance. And I already talked about Brett Myers and Joe Blanton (at least the relevant parts).

Kyle Kendrick probably rates out as a No. 3 starter even if he squeezes every drop out of his potential. That's about all that needs to be said about him.

So let's skip to the bullpen rather than confront the eternal mystery that is Jamie Moyer's continued survival—nay—success.

Brad Lidge doesn't figure to be perfect again in 2009, but Howard doesn't figure to struggle for so long and Myers doesn't figure to need another wake-up call at midseason.

The eventual blown save shouldn't be too much of a problem for Lidge. I expect another stellar year powered by a brimming cup of confidence courtesy of that World Series ring.

The loss of J.C. Romero to a performance-enhancing-drug-use ban is gonna sting more than perhaps anyone outside Philly realizes, but that's not horrible news when it's the worst to confront the team this offseason.

And the Phils have a quietly reliable cadre of relievers highlighted by Ryan Madson—3.05 ERA and only six HRs allowed in 82+ innings pitched—and Chad Durbin—2.86 ERA with only five HRS surrendered in 87+ IP. Those numbers are pretty incredible considering Citizens Bank Park often plays like a softball field.

Nobody outta the 'pen other than Lidge is gonna terrify you with stuff, but they all keep runs off the board and the pill in the park. That's pretty much all you need from relievers.

And it neatly personifies the entire team.

There isn't anything overwhelmingly dominant about this club, yet the nucleus in all three areas is formidable, while the role players are excellent in their expected and necessary capacities. Furthermore, the moving parts are more or less proven commodities.

Philly is the prime example of an excellent team being the product of more than its individual talents.

Of course, it doesn't hurt that the individual talents are nice little foundations from which to build.

The Philadelphia Phillies might not have the sex appeal of the New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox, Tampa Bay Rays, New York Mets, or Chicago Cubs, even fresh off a win in the Winter Classic.

But they have something most teams lack—stability.

There hasn't been much change and even less upheaval from last year's squad. And that one did pretty well. It's beyond naive to predict a repeat—the baseball gods are almost never that merciful in consecutive years.

So I won't go that far. I'll just say the Phils have to be the favorites to at least play for MLB's ultimate prize in 2009.

That should spare me the batteries and snowballs.