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2012 Philadelphia Phillies season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Major League Baseball season

Major League Baseball team season
2012 Philadelphia Phillies
LeagueNational League
DivisionEast
BallparkCitizens Bank Park
CityPhiladelphia,Pennsylvania
Record81–81 (.500)
Divisional place3rd
OwnersBill Giles
David Montgomery
General managersRubén Amaro Jr.
ManagersCharlie Manuel
TelevisionComcast SportsNet Philadelphia
Comcast Network Philadelphia
PHL17 (MyNetworkTV)
(Tom McCarthy,Chris Wheeler,Gary Matthews)
RadioPhillies Radio Network
WPHT 1210 AM &WIP 94.1 FM(English)
(Scott Franzke,Larry Andersen,Jim Jackson)
WDAS 1480 AM(Spanish)
(Danny Martinez, Bill Kulik, Rickie Ricardo)
StatsESPN.com
Baseball Reference
← 2011Seasons2013 →

ThePhiladelphia Phillies 2012 season was the 130th season in thehistory of the franchise. The Phillies attempted to win the division title for the sixth year in a row. But with injuries to star playersChase Utley,Ryan Howard,Roy Halladay, andCliff Lee, they were eliminated from playoff contention on September 28, finished in third place of theNational League East with a record of 81–81, and missed the postseason for the first time since2006.

Offseason

[edit]

The offseason for the Phillies began on October 7, following their devastating loss in theNLDS to theSt. Louis Cardinals.Ryan Howard tore his Achilles tendon, that he would miss the first 3 months of the 2012 season. On November 5, the Phillies signed long-time veteran sluggerJim Thome to a 1-year deal, worth $1.25 million.[1] Additionally, after numerous rumors, on November 14 the Phillies signed RHPJonathan Papelbon to a 4-year deal, worth $50 million.[2] The Phillies also added pitcherDontrelle Willis from theCincinnati Reds, on a 1-year deal, worth 1 million dollars, but released him toward the end of spring training.[3]Laynce Nix was signed as a free agent andTy Wigginton was acquired through a trade with theColorado Rockies to shore up the bench. Several other veteran players includingDave Bush,Joel Piñeiro,Scott Elarton,Lou Montanez, andScott Podsednik were signed to minor league deals with invitations to spring training.

Regular season

[edit]

April

[edit]

Opening Day

[edit]

The Phillies opened the season inPittsburgh in a 3-game series with thePirates. The Phillies begin the season without first basemanRyan Howard who tore his Achilles tendon in last year'sNLDS.Opening Day went as the Phillies drew it up,Roy Halladay threw 8 scoreless innings, and offseason acquisitionJonathan Papelbon retired all 3 batters he faced for a 1–0 Phillies victory. These were the starters on Opening Day for the Phillies:

PositionName
Starting PitcherRoy Halladay
CatcherCarlos Ruiz
First BasemanTy Wigginton
Second BasemanFreddy Galvis
Third BasemanPlácido Polanco
ShortstopJimmy Rollins
Left FielderJohn Mayberry Jr.
Center FielderShane Victorino
Right FielderHunter Pence

The Phillies would end up losing the series to Pittsburgh. The Phillies home opener was a disaster, losing to the newly revivedMiami Marlins, 6-2.[4] Halladay would end the three game skid, with another solid performance on the mound, as the Phillies won 7–1.[5] The Phillies would end up winning the series the next day, with a 3–1 victory. The Phillies would then go on to trade two wins and losses for the next 8 games. In mid-April, the Phillies began their first major road trip of the season. They began the trip by taking 1 of 3 from theGiants. It was in the second game of the series, whenCliff Lee threw 10 scoreless innings, and ultimately not only did the Phillies lose the game in 11 innings, but Cliff Lee was placed on the 15-day DL with a left external oblique strain.[6] After splitting a 4-game series withSan Diego, the Phillies finally won a series against theDiamondbacks, taking 2 of 3. The Phillies finally returned home for a four-game series with theCubs, where they would split the series. Roy Halladay andCole Hamels each finished April with 3 wins, and Papelbon was a perfect 8 for 8 on save opportunities.[7] The Phillies finished April with a record of 11–12, their first losing-record month since going 11–15 in June 2009.[8] However, the Phillies have experienced struggle in April before, most notably in2008, when they would eventually win theWorld Series, and in2009, when they would eventually win theNational League pennant.

May

[edit]
Phillies playing against theRed Sox on May 18

The Phillies began May by taking two of three from the division-leadingBraves. The only loss came in an 11-inning game, won by a walk-off home run byChipper Jones.

The Phillies next series against the Washington Nationals began in the offseason. Andrew Feffer, the Nationals chief operating officer, launched a campaign in the offseason for the first home series against the Phillies to "Take Back the Park." In prior years,Nationals Park has been taken over by Phillies fans who could not get tickets for a home game, and the crowd was at times made up of over 80% Phillies fans.[9] The park was publicly referred to by Phillies fans as "Citizens Bank Park South." To avoid this, Feffer allowed only those with Maryland, Virginia, or D.C. addressed credit cards to purchase tickets. Once the series came near, the Nationals released an official "Fans Guide to Natitude Weekend", which explained fans how to approach the series, and gave them guidelines on how to cheer for their home team. Once the series came, it was the Nationals who were in 1st place in the division, and the Phillies who were at the bottom. The first game of the series went into extra innings, with the Nationals taking game 1, 4–3. Charlie Manuel was ejected in the game in the 1st inning, it was his first ejection of the season.[10] The Nationals also took game two of the series by a score of 7–1. However, the Phillies took the third game by a convincing 9–3 victory. In the game, former PhillieJayson Werth broke his wrist, and while leaving the field, was heckled by a couple of Phillies fans. Following the game in an email toThe Washington Post, Werth wrote "I am motivated to get back quickly and see to it personally those people never walk down Broad Street in celebration again."[11] Despite an attempt to be shut out, many Phillies fans still made the trip to Washington, many of them sporting their "Occupy Nationals Park" T-shirts.[12]

Following the series in Washington, the Phillies returned home for a three-game set with theMets. During that stretch, the Phillies had a difficult time advancing runners that were in scoring position, and as a result, they were swept. It must have been a wake-up call because the Phillies would go on to take 2 of 3 from the Padres, and sweep both theHouston Astros and theChicago Cubs. The final victory against the Cubs put the Phillies over the .500 mark for the first time since Opening Day. The Phillies would then open inter league play against theBoston Red Sox, and would win the first game 6–4. They would then lose the next two games, and open up another three game set against the Nationals. The outcome of was the same as earlier in Washington, the Phillies would drop the first two games of the series, and then behindCole Hamels, the Phillies would win the third game to end their losing skid at 4. The Phillies began to pick it up at the end of May; taking 3 of 4 from theSt. Louis Cardinals. However, in the 4th game of the series, after giving up a 1st inning grand slam toYadier Molina,Roy Halladay left the game after 2 innings due to soreness in his shoulder. It would turn out that Halladay would need surgery on his shoulder, and he would miss 6–8 weeks. However, after seeing a second doctor, it was concluded that Halladay may not need surgery, and needed to simply rest for a minimum of three weeks.[13] The Phillies finished May by taking 2 of 3 from the Mets, behind solid pitching performances from Hamels andCliff Lee. Hamels finished May leading the Majors with 8 wins, andJonathan Papelbon continued his dominance as a closer, finishing 2nd in the Majors with 14 saves. The Phillies finished May with a 27–25 record, just 3 games out of the 1st place Nationals in theNL East.

June

[edit]

The Phillies entered June with a record of 27–25 and 3 games behind theWashington Nationals for first place in the East Division. The Phillies started the month by winning the first game to theMiami Marlins, but then lost the next 2. The Phillies struggled in the next series against theLos Angeles Dodgers, losing all 4 games in the series, causing them to slump to a 6-game losing streak and 5.5 games behind the Nationals. The Phillies then won 1 of 3 games against theBaltimore Orioles and 2 of 3 games against theMinnesota Twins. However, they would get swept by theToronto Blue Jays In game 2 of the series, it looked likeCliff Lee was about to finally get his first win of the season, but the Phillies ended up blowing a 5–2 lead in extra innings. Then the Phillies won 2 of 3 games against the strugglingColorado Rockies In the next series against theTampa Bay Rays, game 1 was postponed to a double header on the same day as game 3. In game 2 of the series, however, the Phillies took a 2-run lead heading into the top of the 9th inning. The Rays however ended up tying the game, putting the game tied at 6–6 heading into the bottom of 9th inning. In the inning,Jim Thome hit awalk-off home run, giving the Phillies the win and putting Thome in 1st place in career walk-off homers. The Phillies would lose both games the next day, though. In the next series against thePittsburgh Pirates, the Phillies would win the first 2 games of the series, but then lose the next 2. The Phillies would end the month by getting swept by the Marlins. By the end of July 1, the Phillies were 11 games behind the 1st place Nationals. At the end of the month, The Phillies traded Jim Thome to the Orioles for Class A players Gabriel Lino and Kyle Simon.[14]

July

[edit]

The Phillies were 36–45 and 11 games behind the first place Nationals after their series against the Marlins. The Phillies started the month by taking 1 of 3 from theNew York Mets. The one win, however, came with Cliff Lee finally winning his first game of the season after 13 starts. The streak tied for 5th for the longest winless streak for a pitcher.[15] On July 6, first basemanRyan Howard was activated from the disabled list. The Phillies would end the first half by getting swept by theAtlanta Braves. They ended the first half with a disastrous 37–50 mark, their worst since 1997.[16] The Phillies seemed to have woken up in the second half, as they would take 2 of 3 from the Colorado Rockies and Los Angeles Dodgers. Although they only took 1 of 3 from theSan Francisco Giants, they would make it up by sweeping theMilwaukee Brewers, all from late comebacks. The sweep was their first 3-game sweep of the year. The sweep, however, got taken back by the Braves as they would get swept by them again because they had a hard time with runners in scoring position. The sweep woke up the Phillies, as they would blow out the Washington Nationals in the 1st game of the series on July 31, 8–0. The Phillies would end up taking 2 of 3 from the Nationals. After the series against the Nationals on August 2, the Phillies were 47–58, 15 and a half games behind the first place Nationals, and 13 game behind the second wild card. Although their playoff chances are slim, the Phillies performance after the all-star break looked promising for next season. Throughout the month, knowing that they will likely not make the postseason, the Phillies made trades with some of their players. One of the trades wereHunter Pence getting traded to the Giants forNate Schierholtz,Tommy Joseph, andSeth Rosin. Another trade wasShane Victorino getting trading to the Dodgers for 2 pitchers.[17] PitcherJoe Blanton was also traded to the Dodgers.[18] The Phillies would also resignCole Hamels to a six-year, $144 million extension, the second-largest contract for a pitcher in baseball history.[19]

August

[edit]
Phillies playing the Nationals on August 25

The Phillies were 47–58, 1512 games behind the first-place Nationals, and 10 games behind the second wild card after their series against the Nationals on August 2. The Phillies started the month by taking 2 of 3 from theArizona Diamondbacks. The game 3 victory was huge forRyan Howard, who had struggled since coming off his injury. After getting booed by striking out when the game was tied in the 8th inning with the bases loaded, Ryan Howard came through by hitting an RBI single with the bases loaded in the ninth inning to win the game and the series. The victory also put them out of last place in theNL East for the first time since June 27.[20] The Phillies then took 1 of 3 from the Braves, a team that they got swept by in the past 2 series. In game 1 of the series, the Phillies saw their sellout streak end when the Phillies did not have a sell-out crowd. This ended their streak at 257 games, the third-longest sellout streak in MLB history.[21] The Phillies then took 2 of 3 from theSt. Louis Cardinals and came back from 3 runs down to win game 3 in extra innings. The Phillies then also took 2 of 3 from the Miami Marlins. The Phillies then split the series at 2–2 against the Milwaukee Brewers andCincinnati Reds. After their game 4 win against the Reds, the Phillies moved up to third place in the division for the first time since April 12.[22] The Phillies then pulled off a three-game sweep of the Nationals, marking their second three-game sweep of the season. The Phillies would however take just 1 of 3 from theNew York Mets. To finish the month, the Phillies would pull off a comeback win against the Braves in game 1 on August 31. The Phillies ended up taking 2 of 3 from that series. They could have swept the series, but the Phillies blew a 7–3 lead in the bottom of the 9th inning in game 3. The Phillies finished August by going 17–12, their best month of the season overall so far. However,Carlos Ruiz, who had been the star of the Phillies with his remarkable performance this season,[citation needed] had to sit out for 4–6 weeks because of a fractured knee that took a beating throughout the month. Ruiz was replaced byErik Kratz due to catcherBrian Schneider also suffering an injury.[23] This month also saw a huge improvement byKyle Kendrick. After Charlie Manuel got really disappointed in an awful outing by Kyle in a 12–6 loss when he allowed 6 runs, he has been the hottest Phillies's pitcher since. Right away in his next outing, he shut theMiami Marlins out, allowing no runs. He did the same in his next outing against a normally strongMilwaukee Brewers offense. Although in his next outing Kyle allowed a 2-run home run against theWashington Nationals, Kendrick received his 3rd win in a row when the Phillies won 4–2. Kendrick picked up his fourth win in a row when the Phillies won 3–2 against theNew York Mets.[24]

September/ October

[edit]
Some of the Phillies warming up for aLabor Day game against theCincinnati Reds.

The Phillies were 64–70 and were 8 games behind the secondWild Card teamSt. Louis Cardinals after their series with the Braves on September 2. The Phillies will try to make an impressive late run to make the Wild Card. The Phillies started the month of September by taking 2 of 3 from the Cincinnati Reds. Then, the Phillies caught fire in the wild card standings, by sweeping both theColorado Rockies andMiami Marlins in a 3-game series to climb back up above .500 for the first time since June 3, partly due to strong performances byJimmy Rollins shortly after coming back after getting benched when he did not hustle after a pop-up on August 30.[25] Meanwhile, the teams ahead of them struggled, with thePittsburgh Pirates losing 6 in a row and the Cardinals andLos Angeles Dodgers losing 6 of their last 7 games. As a result, the Phillies were just 3 games behind the Cardinals on September 12.[26] However, just as it seemed like the Phillies were going to make an improbable run to the playoffs, disaster stroke in the next series against theHouston Astros. Mainly due to bad pitching performances, the Phillies lost 3 of 4 to the last-place Astros and were 4 games back after the series. This was also when the Phillies were eliminated from winning the division with a 6–7 loss on September 16.[27] However, the Phillies tried to rebound. They then had their revenge on theNew York Mets for the tough losses they gave the Phils this season by sweeping them. This includes a come-from-behind 3–2 whenRyan Howard hit a 2-run home run when the Phillies were down to their final out and a huge blowout 16–1 win when the Phillies scored 8 runs on the road in the first inning for the first time since 1912. Despite the sweep, the Phillies were unable to pick up any games as the Cardinals started getting hot around this time. Then in the next series against theAtlanta Braves, although they would win the first game to climb back to 3 games behind the Cardinals, they would lose the final 2 games which sunk them to 512 games behind the Cardinals and majorly damaged their playoff hopes. However, in game 2 of the series, Ryan Howard hit his 300th career home run after 1,093 games, becoming the second fastest player to hit the 300th homer.[28] The Phillies were unable to keep their now very slim playoff chances alive by taking just 1 of 3 from theWashington Nationals. However,Darin Ruf, who recently joined the Phillies from the minor leagues, saw that his first hit was also his first home run.[29] Their playoff chances then ended for good when the Phillies loss the first game of the next series against the Marlins on September 28.[30] The Phillies would then finish the year by winning the next 2 games against the Marlins, but would win only 1 of 3 from the Nationals. The Phillies would finish the year 81–81. Although it was impressive to recover from 14 games behind .500 in just half a season, this season was their first non-winning season since2002.[31] The Phillies already fired first base coachSam Perlozzo, bench coachPete Mackanin and hitting coachGreg Gross.

Season standings

[edit]

NL East standings

[edit]
NL East
TeamWLPct.GBHomeRoad
Washington Nationals9864.60550‍–‍3148‍–‍33
Atlanta Braves9468.580448‍–‍3346‍–‍35
Philadelphia Phillies8181.5001740‍–‍4141‍–‍40
New York Mets7488.4572436‍–‍4538‍–‍43
Miami Marlins6993.4262938‍–‍4331‍–‍50


NL Wild Card

[edit]
Division leaders
TeamWLPct.
Washington Nationals9864.605
Cincinnati Reds9765.599
San Francisco Giants9468.580
Wild Card teams
(Top 2 teams qualify for postseason)
TeamWLPct.GB
Atlanta Braves9468.580+6
St. Louis Cardinals8874.543
Los Angeles Dodgers8676.5312
Milwaukee Brewers8379.5125
Philadelphia Phillies8181.5007
Arizona Diamondbacks8181.5007
Pittsburgh Pirates7983.4889
San Diego Padres7686.46912
New York Mets7488.45714
Miami Marlins6993.42619
Colorado Rockies6498.39524
Chicago Cubs61101.37727
Houston Astros55107.34033


Record vs. opponents

[edit]
2012 National League record
Source:MLB Standings Grid – 2012
TeamAZATLCHCCINCOLFLAHOULADMILNYMPHIPITSDSFSTLWSHAL
Arizona2–55–42–59–76–012–65–33–33–42–43–47–119–91–52–49–6
Atlanta5–23–41–56–14–23–314–43–312–612–63–24–33–45–18–108–10
Chicago4–54–34–122–48–52–42–44–134–22–48–83–31–67–101–65–10
Cincinnati5–25–112–45–110–52–43–39–66–23–411–76–24–36–72–57–8
Colorado7–91–64–21–55–28–103–45–15–22–72–48–104–142–54–32–13
Houston0–62–45–85–102–52–42–48–94–23–35–123–51–84–111–76–9
Los Angeles6–123–34–24–210–84–24–21–64–35–26–111–78-106–54–26–9
Miami3–54–144–23–34–34–22–44–44–128–101–45–15–22–59–95–13
Milwaukee3–33–313–46–91–59–86–14–43–22–511–43–42–46–93–56–9
New York4–36–122–42–62–52–43–412–42–310–85–24–34–44–34–148–7
Philadelphia4–26–124–24–37–23–32–510–85–28–103–44–32–45–29-95–10
Pittsburgh4–32–38–87–114–212–51–64–14–112–54–31–53–38–73–210–8
San Diego11–73–43–32–610–85–37–111–54–33–43–45–16–123–32–38–7
San Francisco9–94–36–13–414–48–110–82–54–24–44–23–312–63–31–57–8
St. Louis5–11–510–77–65–211–45–65–29–63–43–47–83–33–33–48–7
Washington4–210–86–15–23–47–12–49–95–314–49-92–33–25-14-310–8

9-9

Game log

[edit]
Legend
 Phillies win
 Phillies loss
 Postponement
BoldPhillies team member
2012 Game Log[32]
April (11–12)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1April 5@Pirates1–0Halladay (1–0)Bédard (0–1)Papelbon (1)39,5851–0
2April 7@Pirates1–2(10)Cruz (1–0)Blanton (0–1)38,8851–1
3April 8@Pirates4–5Hanrahan (1–0)Herndon (0–1)19,8561–2
4April 9Marlins2–6Sánchez (1–0)Hamels (0–1)45,5741–3
5April 11Marlins7–1Halladay (2–0)Johnson (0–2)45,3592–3
6April 12Marlins3–1Blanton (1–1)Buehrle (0–2)Papelbon (2)44,7513–3
7April 13Mets2–5Dickey (2–0)Lee (0–1)45,4293–4
8April 14Mets0–5Niese (2–0)Worley (0–1)45,7503–5
9April 15Mets8–2Hamels (1–1)Ramírez (1–1)45,8294–5
10April 16@Giants5–2Halladay (3–0)Lincecum (0–2)Papelbon (3)41,1365–5
11April 17@Giants2–4Bumgarner (2–1)Blanton (1–2)Casilla (1)41,1015–6
12April 18@Giants0–1(11)Hensley (1–0)Bastardo (0–1)41,8605–7
13April 19@Padres2–0Worley (1–1)Wieland (0–2)Papelbon (4)17,5736–7
14April 20@Padres4–1Hamels (2–1)Vólquez (0–2)Papelbon (5)23,7487–7
15April 21@Padres1–5Luebke (2–1)Halladay (3–1)31,4377–8
16April 22@Padres1–6Bass (1–2)Blanton (1–3)26,7597–9
17April 23@Diamondbacks5–9Miley (2–0)Kendrick (0–1)21,1957–10
18April 24@Diamondbacks8–5Worley (2–1)Collmenter (0–2)Papelbon (6)24,2138–10
19April 25@Diamondbacks7–2Hamels (3–1)Cahill (1–2)25,9349–10
20April 27Cubs1–5Maholm (2–2)Halladay (3–2)Dolis (1)45,2619–11
21April 28Cubs5–2Blanton (2–3)Wells (0–1)Papelbon (7)45,19610–11
22April 29Cubs1–5Garza (2–1)Kendrick (0–2)45,55010–12
23April 30Cubs6–4Qualls (1–0)Maine (0–1)Papelbon (8)45,39711–12
May (16–13)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
24May 1@Braves4–2Bastardo (1–1)Venters (2–1)Papelbon (9)21,64012–12
25May 2@Braves13–15(11)Durbin (1–0)Sanches (0–1)26,50412–13
26May 3@Braves4–0Blanton (3–3)Delgado (2–3)24,01513–13
27May 4@Nationals3–4(11)Perry (1–0)Schwimer (0–1)34,37713–14
28May 5@Nationals1–7Gonzalez (3–1)Worley (2–2)39,49613–15
29May 6@Nationals9–3Hamels (4–1)Zimmermann (1–3)33,05814–15
30May 7Mets2–5Byrdak (1–0)Papelbon (0–1)Francisco (8)44,36514–16
31May 8Mets4–7Acosta (1–2)Qualls (1–1)Rauch (1)43,82114–17
32May 9Mets6–10Byrdak (2–0)Kendrick (0–3)43,84014–18
33May 11Padres7–3Worley (3–2)Richard (1–5)44,05615–18
34May 12Padres1–2Vólquez (2–2)Halladay (3–3)Thayer (3)45,54215–19
35May 13Padres3–2Hamels (5–1)Suppan (2–1)Papelbon (10)45,44216–19
36May 14Astros5–1Blanton (4–3)Harrell (2–3)43,82417–19
37May 15Astros4–3(10)Diekman (1–0)Myers (0–1)43,78118–19
38May 16@Cubs9–2Contreras (1–0)Camp (2–2)38,67819–19
39May 17@Cubs8–7Halladay (4–3)Volstad (0–6)Papelbon (11)37,98620–19
40May 18Red Sox6–4Hamels (6–1)Bard (3–5)Papelbon (12)45,20521–19
41May 19Red Sox5–7Lester (3–3)Blanton (4–4)Aceves (9)45,65621–20
42May 20Red Sox1–5Beckett (4–4)Lee (0–2)45,58621–21
43May 21Nationals1–2Gonzalez (6–1)Kendrick (0–4)Burnett (2)43,78721–22
44May 22Nationals2–5Zimmermann (3–4)Halladay (4–4)Clippard (1)45,56921–23
45May 23Nationals4–1Hamels (7–1)Jackson (1–2)43,92622–23
46May 24@Cardinals10–9Valdés (1–0)Salas (0–3)Papelbon (13)40,13523–23
47May 25@Cardinals5–3(10)Valdés (2–0)Motte (3–2)Papelbon (14)43,37524–23
48May 26@Cardinals4–0Kendrick (1–4)García (3–3)44,47625–23
49May 27@Cardinals3–8Wainwright (4–5)Halladay (4–5)42,65925–24
50May 28@Mets8–4Hamels (8–1)Parnell (1–1)32,12226–24
51May 29@Mets3–6Hefner (1–2)Blanton (4–5)Francisco (14)25,48726–25
52May 30@Mets10–6Bastardo (2–1)Rauch (3–4)30,06427–25
June (9–19)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
53June 1Marlins6–4Kendrick (2–4)Buehrle (5–5)Papelbon (15)44,49728–25
54June 2Marlins4–5Nolasco (6–3)Hamels (8–2)Bell (11)45,50928–26
55June 3Marlins1–5Zambrano (4–3)Blanton (4–6)Bell (12)45,35628–27
56June 4Dodgers3–4Belisario (1–0)Papelbon (0–2)Jansen (7)45,57228–28
57June 5Dodgers1–2Billingsley (3–4)Lee (0–3)Jansen (8)43,98928–29
58June 6Dodgers5–6Capuano (8–2)Kendrick (2–5)Jansen (9)44,21628–30
59June 7Dodgers3–8Harang (5–3)Hamels (8–3)44,09628–31
60June 8@Orioles9–6Blanton (5–6)Arrieta (2–8)Papelbon (16)40,45929–31
61June 9@Orioles4–6(12)Ayala (2–1)Rosenberg (0–1)46,61129–32
62June 10@Orioles4–5(10)O'Day (4–0)Savery (0–1)45,26729–33
63June 12@Twins7–11Blackburn (3–4)Kendrick (2–6)32,62229–34
64June 13@Twins9–8Hamels (9–3)Walters (2–2)Papelbon (17)32,58130–34
65June 14@Twins6–1Blanton (6–6)Diamond (5–2)32,20531–34
66June 15@Blue Jays0–3Villanueva (2–0)Worley (3–3)Janssen (6)28,26631–35
67June 16@Blue Jays5–6(10)Cordero (2–4)Savery (0–2)42,07031–36
68June 17@Blue Jays2–6Cecil (1–0)Kendrick (2–7)45,06031–37
69June 19Rockies7–2Hamels (10–3)Outman (0–3)44,32932–37
70June 20Rockies7–6Papelbon (1–2)Betancourt (1–3)43,72933–37
71June 21Rockies1–4Roenicke (2–0)Worley (3–4)Betancourt (11)43,80533–38
June 22RaysPostponed (rain);Makeup: June 24
72June 23Rays7–6Papelbon (2–2)McGee (2–2)44,87834–38
73June 24(1)Rays2–3Price (10–4)Bastardo (2–2)Rodney (21)44,78534–39
74June 24(2)Rays3–7Gomes (2–2)Lee (0–4)44,08834–40
75June 25Pirates8–3Blanton (7–6)Karstens (0–2)44,72135–40
76June 26Pirates5–4Worley (4–4)Bédard (4–8)Papelbon (18)45,09636–40
77June 27Pirates7–11McDonald (7–3)Valdés (2–1)44,05736–41
78June 28Pirates4–5Burnett (9–2)Kendrick (2–8)Hanrahan (20)44,52136–42
79June 29@Marlins2–6Johnson (5–5)Lee (0–5)28,24636–43
80June 30@Marlins2–3Buehrle (7–8)Hamels (10–4)Bell (16)31,31136–44
July (10–13)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
81July 1@Marlins2–5Nolasco (7–6)Blanton (7–7)Bell (17)31,72736–45
82July 3@Mets1–11Niese (7–3)Worley (4–5)42,51636–46
83July 4@Mets9–2Lee (1–5)Young (2–2)28,68737–46
84July 5@Mets5–6Parnell (2–1)Papelbon (2–3)28,40937–47
85July 6Braves0–5Hudson (7–4)Bastardo (2–3)44,44137–48
86July 7Braves3–6Hanson (10–5)Blanton (7–8)Kimbrel (24)44,79737–49
87July 8Braves3–4Jurrjens (3–2)Valdés (2–2)Kimbrel (25)43,88137–50
July 102012 Major League Baseball All-Star Game inKansas City,Missouri
88July 13@Rockies2–6Friedrich (5–6)Lee (1–6)33,34637–51
89July 14@Rockies8–5Worley (5–5)Guthrie (3–9)Papelbon (19)35,15138–51
90July 15@Rockies5–1Hamels (11–4)Pomeranz (1–4)25,68539–51
91July 16@Dodgers3–2Blanton (8–8)Eovaldi (1–6)Papelbon (20)32,23840–51
92July 17@Dodgers3–2Kendrick (3–8)Belisario (3–1)Papelbon (21)53,49841–51
93July 18@Dodgers3–5(12)Wright (4–2)Diekman (1–1)39,95541–52
94July 20Giants2–7Lincecum (4–10)Worley (5–6)44,20541–53
95July 21Giants5–6(10)Romo (3–1)Papelbon (2–4)Casilla (24)45,98941–54
96July 22Giants4–3(12)Kendrick (4–8)Penny (0–1)44,55142–54
97July 23Brewers7–6Savery (1–2)Rodríguez (2–5)43,71743–54
98July 24Brewers7–6Schwimer (1–1)Loe (4–4)Papelbon (22)43,74544–54
99July 25Brewers7–6(10)Schwimer (2–1)Rodríguez (2–6)44,71545–54
100July 27@Braves1–6Sheets (3–0)Hamels (11–5)42,23945–55
101July 28@Braves1–2Minor (6–7)Blanton (8–9)Kimbrel (30)39,88645–56
102July 29@Braves2–6Hudson (10–4)Halladay (4–6)23,72645–57
103July 31@Nationals8–0Lee (2–6)Strasburg (11–5)30,16746–57
August (17–12)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
104August 1@Nationals3–2Worley (6–6)Jackson (6–7)Papelbon (23)23,77747–57
105August 2@Nationals0–3Detwiler (6–4)Hamels (11–6)Clippard (21)28,82547–58
106August 3Diamondbacks2–4Kennedy (10–8)Kendrick (4–9)Putz (20)43,76647–59
107August 4Diamondbacks3–0Halladay (5–6)Saunders (5–8)Papelbon (24)43,76248–59
108August 5Diamondbacks5–4Papelbon (3–4)Collmenter (3–3)43,74149–59
109August 6Braves1–6Sheets (4–1)Worley (6–7)41,66549–60
110August 7Braves3–0Hamels (12–6)Minor (6–8)42,66050–60
111August 8Braves6–12Durbin (4–1)Bastardo (2–4)41,50150–61
112August 10Cardinals3–1Halladay (6–6)Browning (0–1)Papelbon (25)43,12251–61
113August 11Cardinals1–4Westbrook (12–8)Lee (2–7)Motte (26)44,23351–62
114August 12Cardinals8–7(11)Horst (1–0)Browning (0–2)42,87752–62
115August 13@Marlins4–0Hamels (13–6)Eovaldi (3–8)23,30953–62
116August 14@Marlins1–0Kendrick (5–9)Johnson (7–9)Papelbon (26)23,87954–62
117August 15@Marlins2–9Buehrle (10–11)Halladay (6–7)22,45054–63
118August 16@Brewers4–7Hernández (4–1)Lindblom (2–3)Henderson (3)30,11754–64
119August 17@Brewers2–6Gallardo (12–8)Worley (6–8)39,16354–65
120August 18@Brewers4–3Hamels (14–6)Fiers (6–6)Papelbon (27)43,38655–65
121August 19@Brewers8–0Kendrick (6–9)Wolf (3–10)42,22456–65
122August 20Reds12–5Halladay (7–7)Leake (5–8)44,34157–65
123August 21Reds4–5Broxton (3–3)Papelbon (3–5)Chapman (30)45,09157–66
124August 22Reds2–3Arroyo (10–7)Worley (6–9)Chapman (31)41,79457–67
125August 23Reds4–3(11)Valdés (3–2)Simón (2–2)41,97258–67
126August 24Nationals4–2Kendrick (7–9)Jackson (7–9)Papelbon (28)42,09659–67
127August 25Nationals4–2Halladay (8–7)Gonzalez (16–7)Papelbon (29)44,25660–67
128August 26Nationals4–1Lee (3–7)Zimmermann (9–8)Lindblom (1)44,65361–67
129August 28Mets5–9(10)Parnell (4–3)Rosenberg (0–2)41,22761–68
130August 29Mets2–3Harvey (3–3)Cloyd (0–1)Francisco (22)42,88261–69
131August 30Mets3–2Kendrick (8–9)Niese (10–8)Papelbon (30)43,14162–69
132August 31@Braves8–5(10)Lindblom (3–3)Martínez (5–4)Papelbon (31)31,20363–69
September (17–10)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
133September 1@Braves5–1Lee (4–7)Hudson (13–5)44,74964–69
134September 2@Braves7–8Moylan (1–0)Papelbon (3–6)36,39464–70
135September 3@Reds4–2Cloyd (1–1)Cueto (17–7)Aumont (1)22,48765–70
136September 4@Reds1–2Latos (12–4)Kendrick (8–10)Chapman (35)17,80665–71
137September 5@Reds6–2Halladay (9–7)Leake (7–9)19,26766–71
138September 7Rockies3–2Papelbon (4–6)Harris (1–1)42,02867–71
September 8RockiesPostponed (rain);Makeup: September 9
139September 9(1)Rockies3–2Papelbon (5–6)Belisle (3–6)41,81368–71
140September 9(2)Rockies7–4Rosenberg (1–2)Roenicke (4–2)Papelbon (32)40,39469–71
141September 10Marlins3–1Kendrick (9–10)LeBlanc (2–4)Bastardo (1)41,50570–71
142September 11Marlins9–7Halladay (10–7)Eovaldi (4–12)Papelbon (33)42,02871–71
143September 12Marlins3–1Lee (5–7)Johnson (8–12)Papelbon (34)42,17872–71
144September 13@Astros4–6Wright (1–2)Aumont (0–1)López (5)13,02872–72
145September 14@Astros12–6Hamels (15–6)González (2–1)17,53573–72
146September 15@Astros0–5Keuchel (2–7)Kendrick (9–11)20,41973–73
147September 16@Astros6–7Wright (2–2)Bastardo (2–5)López (6)17,43873–74
148September 17@Mets3–1Lee (6–7)Dickey (18–6)Papelbon (35)20,52774–74
September 18@MetsPostponed (rain);Makeup: September 20
149September 19@Mets3–2Horst (2–0)Edgin (1–2)Papelbon (36)21,74175–74
150September 20@Mets16–1Cloyd (2–1)Hefner (2–7)20,01076–74
151September 21Braves6–2Kendrick (10–11)Hanson (12–9)44,05277–74
152September 22Braves2–8Minor (10–10)Halladay (10–8)45,37777–75
153September 23Braves1–2Hudson (16–6)Lee (6–8)Kimbrel (39)43,96877–76
154September 25Nationals6–3Hamels (16–6)Detwiler (10–7)Papelbon (37)42,30478–76
155September 26Nationals4–8Lannan (4–0)Kendrick (10–12)41,44078–77
156September 27Nationals3–7Gonzalez (21–8)Cloyd (2–2)44,07078–78
157September 28@Marlins1–2Cishek (5–2)Lindblom (3–4)28,20178–79
158September 29@Marlins9–5Halladay (11–8)Nolasco (12–13)30,20279–79
159September 30@Marlins4–1Hamels (17–6)Eovaldi (4–13)Papelbon (38)28,31780–79
October (1–2)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
160October 1@Nationals2–0Kendrick (11–12)Lannan (4–1)Aumont (2)35,38781–79
161October 2@Nationals2–4Duke (1–0)Lindblom (3–5)Storen (4)33,54681–80
162October 3@Nationals1–5Jackson (10–11)Lee (6–9)37,07581–81

Roster

[edit]

All players who made an appearance for the Phillies during 2012 are included.[33]

Indicates players who started on Opening Day in 2012[34]
2012 Philadelphia Phillies
Roster
PitchersCatchers

Infielders

OutfieldersManager

Coaches

Player stats

[edit]

Batting

[edit]

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; SB = Stolen bases; BB = Walks; AVG = Batting average; SLG = Slugging average

PlayerGABRH2B3BHRRBISBBBAVGSLG
Jimmy Rollins15663210215833523683062.250.427
John Mayberry Jr.149441531082401446134.245.395
Hunter Pence101398591081521759437.271.447
Juan Pierre130394591211061253723.307.371
Shane Victorino101387461011759402435.261.401
Carlos Ruiz114372561213201668429.325.540
Ty Wigginton12531540741101143137.235.375
Plácido Polanco903032878150219018.257.327
Chase Utley83301487715211451143.256.429
Ryan Howard7126028571101456025.219.423
Kevin Frandsen55195246610321409.338.451
Freddy Galvis58190144315132407.226363
Domonic Brown561872144112526021.235.396
Erik Kratz50141143590926011.248.504
Michael Martínez451151020302705.174.252
Laynce Nix701141328100316012.246.412
Mike Fontenot47971328201507.289.340
Brian Schneider3489920502705.225.348
Nate Schierholtz3766518401505.273.379
Jim Thome30629152051508.242.516
Héctor Luna28625142021004.226.355
Pete Orr3554617510731.315.444
Darin Ruf12334112131002.333.727
Jason Pridie91013101300.300.700
Steven Lerud31012000000.200.200
Pitcher Totals162316164770115114.149.180
Team Totals1625544684141427128158659116454.255.400

Source:[1]

Pitching

[edit]

Note: W = Wins; L = Losses; ERA = Earned run average; G = Games pitched; GS = Games started; SV = Saves; IP = Innings pitched; H = Hits allowed; R = Runs allowed; ER = Earned runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; SO = Strikeouts

PlayerWLERAGGSSVIPHRERBBSO
Cole Hamels1763.0531310215.1190807352216
Cliff Lee693.1630300211.0207797428207
Kyle Kendrick11123.9037250159.1154766949116
Roy Halladay1184.4925250156.1155787836132
Joe Blanton894.5921200133.1141746818115
Vance Worley694.2023230133.0154696247107
Jonathan Papelbon562.447003870.05622191892
Antonio Bastardo254.33650152.04026252681
Michael Schwimer214.46350034.13018171636
Tyler Cloyd224.9166033.0331818730
Chad Qualls114.60350031.1391816919
Jeremy Horst201.15320031.121841440
Raúl Valdés322.90271031.0181010535
Jake Diekman113.95320027.12517122035
Joe Savery125.40190025.0261715816
B.J. Rosenberg126.12221025.01817171424
Josh Lindblom134.63260123.11915121727
Phillipe Aumont013.68180214.21066914
José Contreras105.27170013.213108315
Justin De Fratus003.38130010.275458
David Herndon014.705007.2104418
Brian Sanches019.956006.1127735
Michael Stutes006.356005.276445
Tyson Brummett000.001000.220002
Team Totals81813.83162162421451.113876806184091385

Source:[2]

Farm system

[edit]
See also:Minor League Baseball
LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAALehigh Valley IronPigsInternational LeagueRyne Sandberg
AAReading PhilliesEastern LeagueDusty Wathan
AClearwater ThreshersFlorida State LeagueChris Truby
ALakewood BlueClawsSouth Atlantic LeagueMickey Morandini
A-Short SeasonWilliamsport CrosscuttersNew York–Penn LeagueAndy Tracy
RookieGCL PhilliesGulf Coast LeagueRoly de Armas

External links

[edit]
  1. ^Phillies sign Thome
  2. ^Phillies sign Jonathan Papelbon
  3. ^Phillies sign Willis
  4. ^"Home Opener". Archived fromthe original on May 27, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2018.
  5. ^"Phillies Crush Marlins". Archived fromthe original on May 27, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2018.
  6. ^Cliff Lee placed on DL
  7. ^"Papelbon Perfect in April". Archived fromthe original on November 26, 2013. RetrievedMay 1, 2012.
  8. ^April Record
  9. ^Tanier, Mike (May 7, 2012)."Uninvited, Phillies Fans Still March In".The New York Times. p. D5.
  10. ^"Phillies lost 1st game of series". Archived fromthe original on May 27, 2012. RetrievedSeptember 13, 2018.
  11. ^Kilgore, Adam (May 7, 2012)."Jayson Werth: I'm motivated by Phillies fans".WashingtonPost.com.
  12. ^Grossman, Hallie (May 7, 2012)."Phillies, Nationals engage in turf battle".ESPN The Magazine. ESPN.com.
  13. ^"Report: Roy Halladay sees 2nd doctor".ESPN.com. May 31, 2012.
  14. ^Jim Thome acquired from Phillies for two prospectsMLB.com
  15. ^"It takes 3 months, but Cliff Lee finally earns first win".msn.foxsports.com. July 4, 2012.
  16. ^"Philadelphia Phillies' epic first-half collapse means season is done".Brad Wilson. July 10, 2012.
  17. ^"Report: Phillies Trade Hunter Pence To Giants".philadelphia.cbslocal.com. July 31, 2012.
  18. ^"Phillies send Blanton to Dodgers in waiver trade".sportsillustrated.cnn.com. August 3, 2012. Archived fromthe original on August 6, 2012.
  19. ^"Hamels signs six-year, $144 million extension".philadelphia.phillies.mlb.com. July 25, 2012. Archived fromthe original on July 28, 2012.
  20. ^"Phillies win on Howard's walk-off single".Paul Hagen/MLB.com. August 5, 2012.
  21. ^"Phils match loss total from 2011 with 60th defeat/Streak of 257 consecutive sellouts at Citizens Bank Park ends".Todd Zolecki/MLB.com. August 6, 2012.
  22. ^"Phils win on Mayberry's walk-off single in 11th".Jake Kaplan/MLB.com. August 24, 2012.
  23. ^"Phillies Notes: With catchers Brian Schneider and Carlos Ruiz hurt, Erik Kratz making most of chance".The Philadelphia Inquirer. August 26, 2012. Archived fromthe original on September 13, 2013.
  24. ^"Red-hot Kendrick earns fourth straight win".fantasysp.com. August 30, 2012.
  25. ^"Rollins rebound leading the way for Phillies".Wayne Cella/http://phillysportsworld.com. September 15, 2012. Archived fromthe original on January 31, 2013. RetrievedOctober 6, 2012.
  26. ^"Soaring Phillies Beat Skidding Marlins, 3-1".miami.cbslocal.com. September 12, 2012.
  27. ^"Phils cap rough weekend in Houston with loss".Glenn Sattell/MLB.com. September 16, 2012.
  28. ^"Phillies' Ryan Howard hits 300th career home run".The Philadelphia Inquirer. September 23, 2012. Archived fromthe original on April 20, 2013.
  29. ^"DARIN RUF'S FIRST MAJOR LEAGUE HIT IS A HOME RUN".Joe Lucia/http://www.bloguin.com. September 25, 2012.
  30. ^"Phillies eliminated from playoff contention with loss".Jim Salisbury/http://www.csnphilly.com. September 28, 2012.
  31. ^"Phillies' streak of winning seasons ends at 9".townhall.com. October 3, 2012.
  32. ^"2012 Philadelphia Phillies Batting, Pitching, & Fielding Statistics". Baseball-Reference.com.
  33. ^"2012 Philadelphia Phillies Team Roster, Payroll, Games Played".Baseball-Reference.com. RetrievedOctober 7, 2011.
  34. ^"Philadelphia Phillies Opening Day Starters".Baseball-Reference.com. RetrievedOctober 3, 2012.
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