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2015 Philadelphia Phillies season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Major League Baseball team season
2015 Philadelphia Phillies
Phillies primary logo
LeagueNational League
DivisionEast
BallparkCitizens Bank Park
CityPhiladelphia, Pennsylvania
Record63–99 (.389)
Divisional place5th
OwnersBill Giles
David Montgomery
General managersRubén Amaro, Jr.(dismissed September 10)
Scott Proefrock(interim)
ManagersPete Mackanin (interim, beginning June 26)[1][2]
Ryne Sandberg (resigned June 26)[1]
TelevisionComcast SportsNet Philadelphia
Comcast Network Philadelphia
NBC Philadelphia
(Tom McCarthy,Ben Davis,Matt Stairs,Mike Schmidt,Gregg Murphy)
RadioPhillies Radio Network
WPHT 1210 AM &WIP 94.1 FM(English)
(Scott Franzke,Larry Andersen,Jim Jackson)
WTTM(Spanish)
(Danny Martinez, Bill Kulik, Rickie Ricardo)
StatsESPN.com
Baseball Reference
← 2014Seasons2016 →

The2015Philadelphia Phillies season was the 133rd season in thehistory of the franchise, and its twelfth season atCitizens Bank Park. The team finished the season with a record of 63–99 (.389), the worst record in the majors, and missed the playoffs for a fourth consecutive season.

Offseason

[edit]

Players becomingfree agents:

Trades and signings:

Broadcasting changes

[edit]

After only one season,Jamie Moyer departed the Phillies' broadcast booth.Comcast SportsNet hiredBen Davis, previously a pre-game and post-game analyst, to replace Moyer as a game analyst, working withMatt Stairs (another analyst),Tom McCarthy (play-by-play),Gregg Murphy (field reporter), andMike Schmidt (analyst for weekend home games).[5][6]

Season standings

[edit]

National League East

[edit]
NL East
TeamWLPct.GBHomeRoad
New York Mets9072.55649‍–‍3241‍–‍40
Washington Nationals8379.512746‍–‍3537‍–‍44
Miami Marlins7191.4381941‍–‍4030‍–‍51
Atlanta Braves6795.4142342‍–‍3925‍–‍56
Philadelphia Phillies6399.3892737‍–‍4426‍–‍55


National League Wild Card

[edit]
Division leaders
TeamWLPct.
St. Louis Cardinals10062.617
Los Angeles Dodgers9270.568
New York Mets9072.556
Wild Card teams
(Top 2 teams qualify for postseason)
TeamWLPct.GB
Pittsburgh Pirates9864.605+1
Chicago Cubs9765.599
San Francisco Giants8478.51913
Washington Nationals8379.51214
Arizona Diamondbacks7983.48818
San Diego Padres7488.45723
Miami Marlins7191.43826
Milwaukee Brewers6894.42029
Colorado Rockies6894.42029
Atlanta Braves6795.41430
Cincinnati Reds6498.39533
Philadelphia Phillies6399.38934


Record vs. opponents

[edit]
2015 National League record
Source:MLB Standings Grid – 2015
TeamAZATLCHCCINCOLLADMIAMILNYMPHIPITSDSFSTLWSHAL
Arizona3–32–46–113–66–135–25–22–52–41–59–1011–80–73–411–9
Atlanta3–31–63–41–63–310–95–28–1111–82–42–53–44–25–146–14
Chicago4–26–113–64–23–43–314–57–02–511–83–35–28–114–310–10
Cincinnati1–64–36–132–41–63–49–100–74–211–82–42–57–125–17–13
Colorado6–136–12–44–28–112–55–10–75–21–67–1211–83–43–35–15
Los Angeles13–63–34–36–111–84–24–33–45–21–514–58–112–54–210–10
Miami2–59–103–34–35–22–44–28–119–101–62–55–21–59–107–13
Milwaukee2–52–55–1410–91–53–42–43–37–010–95–21–56–133–48–12
New York5–211–80–77–07–04–311–83–314–50–62–43–33–411–89–11
Philadelphia4–28–115–22–42–52–510–90–75–142–55–11–52–57–128–12
Pittsburgh5–14–28–118–116–15–16–19–106–05–25–26–19–103–413–7
San Diego10–95–23–34–212–75–145–22–54–21–52–58–114–32–57–13
San Francisco8–114–32–55–28–1111–82–55–13–35–11–611–82–44–313–7
St. Louis7–02–411–812–74–35–25–113–64–35–210–93–44–24–211–9
Washington4–314–53–41–53–32–410–94–38–1112–74–35–23–42–48–12


Game log

[edit]
Legend
 Phillies win
 Phillies loss
 Postponement
BoldPhillies team member
2015 Game Log[7]
Overall Record: 63–99
April (8–15)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
1April 6Red Sox0–8Clay Buchholz (1–0)Cole Hamels (0–1)45,5490–1
2April 8Red Sox4–2Aaron Harang (1–0)Rick Porcello (0–1)Jonathan Papelbon (1)26,4651–1
3April 9Red Sox2–6Justin Masterson (1–0)David Buchanan (0–1)23,4181–2
4April 10Nationals4–1Luis García (1–0)Gio González (0–1)Jonathan Papelbon (2)19,0472–2
5April 11Nationals3–2(10)Dustin McGowan (1–0)Tanner Roark (0–1)23,7403–2
6April 12Nationals3–4(10)Aaron Barrett (1–0)Jake Diekman (0–1)Drew Storen (2)30,0943–3
7April 13@Mets0–2Jacob deGrom (1–1)Aaron Harang (1–1)Jeurys Familia (2)43,9473–4
8April 14@Mets5–6Matt Harvey (2–0)David Buchanan (0–2)Jeurys Familia (3)38,8493–5
9April 15@Mets1–6Jon Niese (1–0)Jerome Williams (0–1)21,0523–6
10April 16@Nationals2–5Doug Fister (1–0)Cole Hamels (0–2)Drew Storen (3)24,7683–7
11April 17@Nationals2–7Max Scherzer (1–1)Sean O'Sullivan (0–1)31,6083–8
12April 18@Nationals5–3Aaron Harang (2–1)Jordan Zimmermann (1–2)Jonathan Papelbon (3)35,3304–8
13April 19@Nationals1–4Stephen Strasburg (1–1)David Buchanan (0–3)Drew Storen (4)36,6314–9
14April 21Marlins7–3Jerome Williams (1–1)Dan Haren (1–1)21,9935–9
15April 22Marlins1–6Jarred Cosart (1–1)Luis García (1–1)23,4175–10
16April 23Marlins1–9David Phelps (1–0)Dustin McGowan (1–1)17,0975–11
17April 24Braves1–0Ken Giles (1–0)Jim Johnson (1–2)21,1646–11
18April 25Braves2–5Shelby Miller (3–0)David Buchanan (0–4)Jason Grilli (7)24,7486–12
19April 26Braves5–4Jerome Williams (2–1)Trevor Cahill (0–3)Jonathan Papelbon (4)28,7027–12
20April 27@Cardinals4–1Cole Hamels (1–2)John Lackey (1–1)Jonathan Papelbon (5)40,0528–12
21April 28@Cardinals5–11Michael Wacha (4–0)Severino González (0–1)40,1438–13
22April 29@Cardinals2–5Carlos Martínez (3–0)Aaron Harang (2–2)Trevor Rosenthal (8)40,3998–14
23April 30@Cardinals3–9Carlos Villanueva (2–1)David Buchanan (0–5)40,7158–15
May (11–18)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
24May 1@Marlins3–4Steve Cishek (1–1)Ken Giles (1–1)18,5118–16
25May 2@Marlins0–7Dan Haren (3–1)Cole Hamels (1–3)33,3488–17
26May 3@Marlins6–2Severino González (1–1)Jarred Cosart (1–2)20,4619–17
27May 4@Braves5–2Aaron Harang (3–2)Alex Wood (1–2)17,29310–17
28May 5@Braves0–9Shelby Miller (4–1)Chad Billingsley (0–1)14,45110–18
29May 6@Braves5–7Mike Foltynewicz (2–0)Jerome Williams (2–2)Jason Grilli (9)17,77210–19
30May 8Mets3–1Cole Hamels (2–3)Matt Harvey (5–1)Jonathan Papelbon (6)32,73411–19
31May 9Mets2–3Jon Niese (3–2)Aaron Harang (3–3)Jeurys Familia (12)29,37311–20
32May 10Mets4–7Bartolo Colón (6–1)Chad Billingsley (0–2)Jeurys Familia (13)27,93511–21
33May 11Pirates3–4Gerrit Cole (5–1)Jerome Williams (2–3)Mark Melancon (8)21,35811–22
34May 12Pirates2–7A. J. Burnett (2–1)Sean O'Sullivan (0–2)20,39311–23
35May 13Pirates3–2Cole Hamels (3–3)Francisco Liriano (1–3)Jonathan Papelbon (7)29,57612–23
36May 14Pirates4–2Aaron Harang (4–3)Vance Worley (2–3)Jonathan Papelbon (8)29,20513–23
37May 15Diamondbacks4–3Elvis Araújo (1–0)Óliver Pérez (1–1)Luis García (1)21,38314–23
38May 16Diamondbacks7–5Jerome Williams (3–3)Archie Bradley (2–1)Jonathan Papelbon (9)33,64915–23
39May 17Diamondbacks6–0Sean O'Sullivan (1–2)Josh Collmenter (3–5)22,12316–23
40May 18@Rockies4–3Cole Hamels (4–3)Jordan Lyles (2–4)Jonathan Papelbon (10)24,06117–23
41May 19@Rockies5–6Scott Oberg (2–1)Justin De Fratus (0–1)John Axford (5)21,24917–24
42May 20@Rockies4–2Severino González (2–1)Eddie Butler (2–5)Jonathan Papelbon (11)21,71418–24
43May 21@Rockies3–7Christian Bergman (2–0)Jerome Williams (3–4)25,41818–25
44May 22@Nationals1–2Max Scherzer (5–3)Sean O'Sullivan (1–3)Drew Storen (13)35,89318–26
45May 23@Nationals8–1Cole Hamels (5–3)Stephen Strasburg (3–6)41,72219–26
46May 24@Nationals1–4Gio González (4–2)Aaron Harang (4–4)Drew Storen (14)41,04419–27
47May 25@Mets3–6Bartolo Colón (7–3)Elvis Araújo (1–1)Jeurys Familia (14)30,94619–28
48May 26@Mets4–5(10)Jeurys Familia (1–0)Jeanmar Gómez (0–1)21,06419–29
49May 27@Mets0–7Noah Syndergaard (2–2)Sean O'Sullivan (1–4)24,40619–30
50May 29Rockies1–4Chad Bettis (2–0)Cole Hamels (5–4)22,22719–31
51May 30Rockies2–5Eddie Butler (3–5)Aaron Harang (4–5)John Axford (9)23,51019–32
52May 31Rockies1–4Chris Rusin (1–0)Jerome Williams (3–5)Scott Oberg (1)22,16619–33
June (8–19)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
53June 2Reds5–4Jonathan Papelbon (1–0)Tony Cingrani (0–2)20,20920–33
54June 3Reds5–4(11)Luis García (2–1)Ryan Mattheus (0–1)21,25321–33
55June 4Reds4–6Anthony DeSclafani (4–4)Aaron Harang (4–6)Aroldis Chapman (10)21,05721–34
56June 5Giants4–5Tim Lincecum (6–3)Luis García (2–2)Santiago Casilla (16)20,63821–35
57June 6Giants5–7Madison Bumgarner (7–2)Severino González (2–2)Santiago Casilla (15)29,10221–36
58June 7Giants6–4Ken Giles (2–1)Ryan Vogelsong (4–4)Jonathan Papelbon (12)24,79922–36
59June 8@Reds4–6Mike Leake (3–4)Cole Hamels (5–5)Aroldis Chapman (11)30,90022–37
60June 9@Reds2–11Anthony DeSclafani (5–4)Aaron Harang (4–7)27,99322–38
61June 10@Reds2–5Jon Moscot (1–1)Jerome Williams (3–6)Aroldis Chapman (12)32,99422–39
62June 12@Pirates0–1(13)Antonio Bastardo (1–1)Dustin McGowan (1–2)33,74922–40
63June 13@Pirates3–4Gerrit Cole (10–2)Sean O'Sullivan (1–5)Mark Melancon (20)37,51622–41
64June 14@Pirates0–1(11)Antonio Bastardo (2–1)Jonathan Papelbon (1–1)34,51822–42
65June 15@Orioles0–4Wei-Yin Chen (3–4)Aaron Harang (4–8)23,73022–43
66June 16@Orioles3–19Chris Tillman (5–7)Jerome Williams (3–7)26,96422–44
67June 17Orioles4–6Ubaldo Jiménez (5–3)Kevin Correia (0–1)Zach Britton (18)26,16222–45
68June 18Orioles2–1Jake Diekman (1–1)Bud Norris (2–5)Jonathan Papelbon (13)26,22023–45
69June 19Cardinals4–12Tyler Lyons (2–0)Phillippe Aumont (0–1)21,16923–46
70June 20Cardinals1–10John Lackey (6–4)Aaron Harang (4–9)24,25623–47
71June 21Cardinals9–2Adam Morgan (1–0)Michael Wacha (9–3)30,42324–47
72June 22@Yankees11–8Jake Diekman (2–1)Michael Pineda (8–4)36,88325–47
73June 23@Yankees11–6Ken Giles (3–1)Dellin Betances (4–1)36,19826–47
74June 24@Yankees2–10Iván Nova (1–0)Cole Hamels (5–6)45,87726–48
75June 26Nationals2–5Max Scherzer (9–5)Aaron Harang (4–10)Drew Storen (22)22,29226–49
June 27NationalsPostponed (rain)[note 1]Rescheduled for June 28 as part of a doubleheader[8]
76June 28(1)Nationals2–3Stephen Strasburg (5–5)Kevin Correia (0–2)Drew Storen (23)see 2nd game26–50
77June 28(2)Nationals8–5Severino González (3–2)Tanner Roark (3–3)Jonathan Papelbon (14)27,12627–50
78June 29Brewers4–7Jimmy Nelson (5–8)Sean O'Sullivan (1–6)Francisco Rodríguez (16)18,42327–51
79June 30Brewers3–4Neal Cotts (1–0)Ken Giles (3–2)Francisco Rodríguez (17)20,56427–52
July (13–12)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
80July 1Brewers5–9Kyle Lohse (5–9)Aaron Harang (4–11)27,06927–53
81July 2Brewers7–8(11)Michael Blazek (5–2)Luis García (2–3)Francisco Rodríguez (18)30,48527–54
82July 3@Braves1–2Julio Teherán (6–4)Adam Morgan (1–1)Jim Johnson (5)33,09027–55
83July 4@Braves5–9Alex Wood (6–5)Kevin Correia (0–3)34,40127–56
84July 5@Braves4–0(10)Luis García (3–3)Nick Masset (2–2)18,76328–56
85July 6@Dodgers7–10J. P. Howell (4–1)Jeanmar Gómez (0–2)Kenley Jansen (14)45,18028–57
86July 7@Dodgers7–2Chad Billingsley (1–2)Brett Anderson (5–5)46,61429–57
87July 8@Dodgers0–5Clayton Kershaw (6–6)Adam Morgan (1–2)45,13529–58
88July 9@Dodgers0–6Zack Greinke (8–2)Severino González (3–3)41,29029–59
89July 10@Giants2–15Madison Bumgarner (9–5)Cole Hamels (5–7)41,89529–60
90July 11@Giants5–8Josh Osich (1–0)Luis García (3–4)Santiago Casilla (22)41,98029–61
91July 12@Giants2–4Chris Heston (9–5)Chad Billingsley (1–3)Santiago Casilla (23)42,38729–62
July 142015 Major League Baseball All-Star Game atGreat American Ball Park inCincinnati
92July 17Marlins6–3Ken Giles (4–2)Bryan Morris (3–2)23,07430–62
93July 18Marlins3–1Chad Billingsley (2–3)Tom Koehler (7–6)Jonathan Papelbon (15)23,65531–62
94July 19Marlins8–7Héctor Neris (1–0)A. J. Ramos (0–2)21,73932–62
95July 20Rays5–3David Buchanan (1–5)Matt Moore (1–1)Jonathan Papelbon (16)20,14833–62
96July 21Rays0–1Nathan Karns (5–5)Aaron Nola (0–1)Brad Boxberger (24)28,70333–63
97July 22Rays5–4(10)Jonathan Papelbon (2–1)Brad Boxberger (4–6)22,25234–63
98July 24@Cubs5–3(10)Ken Giles (5–2)James Russell (0–2)Jonathan Papelbon (17)41,23035–63
99July 25@Cubs5–0Cole Hamels (6–7)Jake Arrieta (11–6)41,68336–63
100July 26@Cubs11–5Aaron Nola (1–1)Jason Hammel (5–5)41,12337–63
101July 28@Blue Jays3–2Adam Morgan (2–2)Félix Doubront (1–1)Ken Giles (1)30,51638–63
102July 29@Blue Jays2–8R. A. Dickey (5–10)Jerome Williams (3–8)27,06038–64
103July 30Braves4–1Aaron Harang (5–11)Shelby Miller (5–8)Ken Giles (2)21,70639–64
104July 31Braves9–3David Buchanan (2–5)Williams Pérez (4–1)29,29040–64
August (12–16)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
105August 1Braves12–2Aaron Nola (2–1)Matt Wisler (5–2)25,52341–64
106August 2Braves2–6Julio Teherán (7–6)Adam Morgan (2–3)24,36141–65
107August 4Dodgers6–2Jeanmar Gómez (1–2)Alex Wood (7–7)Ken Giles (3)28,73342–65
108August 5Dodgers3–4Brett Anderson (6–6)Aaron Harang (5–12)Kenley Jansen (20)26,19742–66
109August 6Dodgers8–10Zack Greinke (11–2)David Buchanan (2–6)Kenley Jansen (21)27,83942–67
110August 7@Padres4–3(12)Héctor Neris (2–0)Kevin Quackenbush (1–2)Ken Giles (4)31,33443–67
111August 8@Padres4–2Adam Morgan (3–3)Tyson Ross (8–9)Ken Giles (5)44,56744–67
112August 9@Padres5–3Jerome Williams (4–8)Andrew Cashner (4–12)Ken Giles (6)24,15645–67
113August 10@Diamondbacks3–13Rubby De La Rosa (10–5)Aaron Harang (5–13)16,49545–68
114August 11@Diamondbacks1–13Jeremy Hellickson (8–8)David Buchanan (2–7)19,83645–69
115August 12@Diamondbacks7–6Aaron Nola (3–1)Chase Anderson (5–5)Ken Giles (7)18,04746–69
116August 14@Brewers1–3Wily Peralta (3–7)Adam Morgan (3–4)Francisco Rodríguez (27)34,73546–70
117August 15@Brewers2–4Will Smith (6–2)Justin De Fratus (0–2)Francisco Rodríguez (28)39,20446–71
118August 16@Brewers1–6Taylor Jungmann (7–4)Aaron Harang (5–14)Francisco Rodríguez (29)33,92046–72
119August 18Blue Jays5–8Liam Hendriks (4–0)Jeanmar Gómez (1–3)Roberto Osuna (14)26,54746–73
120August 19Blue Jays7–4Adam Morgan (4–4)Mark Buehrle (13–6)Ken Giles (8)26,24647–73
121August 20@Marlins7–9Brad Hand (3–3)Jerome Williams (4–9)A. J. Ramos (21)19,68947–74
122August 21@Marlins7–1Jerad Eickhoff (1–0)Kendry Flores (1–2)19,39148–74
123August 22@Marlins4–2Elvis Araújo (2–1)A. J. Ramos (1–4)Ken Giles (9)22,11349–74
124August 23@Marlins2–0Aaron Nola (4–1)Adam Conley (1–1)Ken Giles (10)22,69350–74
125August 24Mets7–16Sean Gilmartin (3–1)Héctor Neris (2–1)23,74450–75
126August 25Mets5–6Noah Syndergaard (8–6)Jerome Williams (4–10)Jeurys Familia (34)23,54450–76
127August 26Mets4–9Bartolo Colón (11–11)Jerad Eickhoff (1–1)Tyler Clippard (19)22,18450–77
128August 27Mets5–9Carlos Torres (5–5)Héctor Neris (2–2)22,52650–78
129August 28Padres7–1Aaron Nola (5–1)Ian Kennedy (8–12)Jerome Williams (1)25,14551–78
130August 29Padres4–3Adam Morgan (5–4)Colin Rea (2–2)Ken Giles (11)22,09052–78
131August 30Padres4–9James Shields (10–6)Alec Asher (0–1)22,62452–79
132August 31@Mets1–3Bartolo Colón (12–11)Jerad Eickhoff (1–2)Jeurys Familia (36)34,23352–80
September (9–17)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
133September 1@Mets14–8Jeanmar Gómez (2–3)Jon Niese (8–10)30,10453–80
134September 2@Mets4–9Matt Harvey (12–7)Aaron Nola (5–2)32,46453–81
135September 4@Red Sox5–7Joe Kelly (9–6)Adam Morgan (5–5)Robbie Ross, Jr. (1)33,67453–82
136September 5@Red Sox2–9Wade Miley (11–10)Alec Asher (0–2)36,53453–83
137September 6@Red Sox2–6Eduardo Rodríguez (9–5)Jerad Eickhoff (1–3)34,70853–84
138September 7Braves2–7Williams Pérez (5–6)Aaron Harang (5–15)15,12553–85
139September 8Braves5–0Aaron Nola (6–2)Ryan Weber (0–1)Ken Giles (12)15,61054–85
140September 9Braves1–8Julio Teherán (10–7)David Buchanan (2–8)15,24154–86
September 10CubsPostponed (rain)Rescheduled for September 11 as part of a doubleheader[9]
141September 11(1)Cubs1–5Jake Arrieta (19–6)Adam Morgan (5–6)see 2nd game54–87
142September 11(2)Cubs3–7Kyle Hendricks (7–6)Alec Asher (0–3)Héctor Rondón (28)22,53854–88
143September 12Cubs7–5Ken Giles (6–2)Héctor Rondón (5–4)20,81355–88
144September 13Cubs7–4Dalier Hinojosa (1–0)Clayton Richard (3–2)Ken Giles (13)23,45056–88
145September 14Nationals7–8(11)Jonathan Papelbon (4–2)Luis García (3–5)Doug Fister (1)15,40256–89
146September 15Nationals0–4Stephen Strasburg (9–7)David Buchanan (2–9)15,32556–90
147September 16Nationals2–12Gio González (11–7)Alec Asher (0–4)15,75356–91
148September 18@Braves1–2Williams Pérez (6–6)Adam Morgan (5–7)Arodys Vizcaíno (5)22,52556–92
149September 19@Braves1–2Edwin Jackson (3–3)Jerome Williams (4–11)Arodys Vizcaíno (6)24,85556–93
150September 20@Braves1–2Peter Moylan (1–0)Luis García (3–6)23,72356–94
151September 22@Marlins6–2Aaron Harang (6–15)Tom Koehler (10–14)16,74257–94
152September 23@Marlins3–4(11)Brian Ellington (2–1)Jerome Williams (4–12)15,66257–95
153September 24@Marlins0–1Bryan Morris (5–3)Alec Asher (0–5)A. J. Ramos (29)17,08357–96
154September 25@Nationals8–2Jerad Eickhoff (2–3)Jordan Zimmermann (13–9)31,01958–96
155September 26@Nationals1–2(12)Matt Thornton (2–1)Colton Murray (0–1)32,08658–97
156September 27@Nationals12–5Dalier Hinojosa (2–0)Jonathan Papelbon (4–3)28,66159–97
157September 29Mets4–3Adam Loewen (1–0)Bartolo Colón (14–13)Ken Giles (14)15,22760–97
158September 30Mets7–5Ken Roberts (1–1)Bobby Parnell (2–4)Ken Giles (15)15,20161–97
October (2–2)
#DateOpponentScoreWinLossSaveAttendanceRecord
159October 1Mets3–0Jerad Eickhoff (3–3)Sean Gilmartin (3–2)Luis García (2)13,23862–97
October 2MarlinsPostponed (rain)Rescheduled for October 3 as part of a doubleheader[10]
160October 3(1)Marlins6–7Chris Narveson (3–1)Ken Giles (6–3)A. J. Ramos (31)see 2nd game62–98
161October 3(2)Marlins2–5Justin Nicolino (5–4)Alec Asher (0–6)A. J. Ramos (32)16,24062–99
162October 4Marlins7–2Luis García (4–6)André Rienzo (0–1)21,73463–99

Roster

[edit]

All players who made an appearance for the Phillies during 2015 are included.[11]

2015 Philadelphia Phillies
Roster
PitchersCatchers

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Season notes

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Spring training

[edit]

The Phillies enteredspring training with rather low expectations for the upcoming season; in fact,Baseball Prospectus projected the Phillies would go 69–93, which would be the worst record in baseball.[12] Even Phillies' front office personnel conceded that the Phillies were unlikely to be particularly competitive, although eventually, acting team presidentPat Gillick suggested the team could hover around .500, depending on whether the team stays healthy, and whether it trades some of its better players such asCole Hamels,Cliff Lee, orJonathan Papelbon.[13] Nevertheless, managerRyne Sandberg expressed optimism at the team's chances, noting they might "surprise some people" in what he called a "transition" season rather than a "rebuilding" one.[14] Among those transitions was atshortstop, whereFreddy Galvis was expected to replace all-time Phillies' hits leaderJimmy Rollins.[15] Also, the Phillies sought to piece together an outfield.Domonic Brown moved from left field to right field in the offseason, andBen Revere was the presumptive starter in center field, which left several players vying for playing time as reserves and situational players.[16] However, at one point Revere spent time in left field whileOdubel Herrera played center field; Sandberg commented that Revere's arm may be a better fit in left, and that he was using spring training to experiment.[17]

"Darin Ruf could be a surprise guy for me. Cody Asche and Sizemore might be guys who can chip in. Who knows how many home runs they can hit? If we're just thinking about solid contact and more contact and cutting down strikeouts from the type of team we had last year, I think that will go a long way with us. Driving balls into the gaps and some of those doubles turning into home runs."

Phillies' managerRyne Sandberg discussing Phillies lack ofpower hitters[18]

During spring training, the Phillies did not hit many home runs, which prompted Sandberg to note that throughout the season, the Phillies would playsmall ball to manufacture runs, especially viabunting andhit and run.[18] As part of that strategy, Sandberg announced that both Revere and Herrera would make the opening day roster, with Revere playing left field and Herrera playing center.[19]

Another key storyline for the Phillies was completing theirstarting rotation. Hamels, Lee,Aaron Harang, andJerome Williams comprised the presumed first four in the rotation, but there was significant competition for the fifth starter spot.[20] Among the leading candidates wasDavid Buchanan, who looked to improve after a rookie campaign during which he posted a 6–8 record with a 3.75earned run average (ERA), and struggled with surrenderinghome runs.[21] Other candidates includedCuban importMiguel Alfredo Gonzalez, who had failed to live up to expectations after the Phillies signed him as an international free agent due to injuries, among other factors, andChad Billingsley, who was still recovering from two right elbow surgeries.[20] Late in spring training, after it became clear that Lee was going to miss significant time, the Phillies announced that Hamels, Harang, Williams, and Buchanan were their first four starters, and that there were both internal and external candidates to be the fifth starter. Hamels wouldstart on opening day.[22] On the last day of spring training, the Phillies signed relief pitcherDustin McGowan who, despite a track record as a reliever, could potentially start if the Phillies needed him to while they awaited the return of Billingsley from thedisabled list.[23][24]

Ultimately, 12 pitchers, two catchers, seven infielders, and four outfielders comprised the Phillies opening day roster.[24]

  • Starting pitchers: David Buchanan, Aaron Harang, Cole Hamels, Jerome Williams
  • Relief pitchers: Justin De Fratus, Luis Garcia, Ken Giles, Jeanmar Gómez, Dustin McGowan, Jonathan Papelbon, Jake Diekman, Cesar Jimenez
  • Catchers: Carlos Ruiz, Cameron Rupp
  • Infielders: Cody Asche, Andrés Blanco, Freddy Galvis, Cesar Hernandez, Ryan Howard, Darin Ruf, Chase Utley
  • Outfielders: Jeff Francoeur, Odubel Herrera, Ben Revere, Grady Sizemore

April

[edit]

After a "drubbing" on opening day in which the Phillies surrendered five home runs to lose 8–0 – their worst opening dayshutout in team history – they rebounded to beat theBoston Red Sox in the series' second game behind a strong start fromAaron Harang that "closely emulated [the opening day starts] of the pitcher who made five consecutive opening-day starts for the Reds" before a loss in therubber match during whichDavid Buchanan pitched only three innings, allowing six runs, and snapping a streak of 16 starts in which Buchanan allowed three or fewer earned runs.[25][26][27] Against the NL East favoriteWashington Nationals, the Phillies won two of three, including a 10-inning bout in whichDarin Ruf hit a home run, andCody Asche had three hits.[28][29]

The Phillies' third series of the year was against theNew York Mets; both squads entered the series with a 3–3 record.[30] Despite one game in whichChase Utley homered twice and another in whichOdubel Herrera notched threeextra-base hits, the Metsswept the Phillies.[31][32][33] The team continued a road trip in Washington, and opened a four-game set with the Nationals by losing two, extending their losing streak to six games before beating the Nationals 5–3 thanks to strong offensive efforts from Herrera andFreddy Galvis, and aquality start from Harang.[34] Unable to build momentum, the Phillies lost the series finale to drop their record to 4–9 on the season.[35]

The Phillies entered their next series with the Marlins averaging only 2.46 runs per game, among the worst in the major leagues. However, they did win the first game of the series 7–3 thanks to home runs from Galvis andRyan Howard, and a two-RBI triple fromBen Revere.[35] The woeful offense manifested itself during the remainder of the series, as the squad mustered only two total runs, losing both games.[36][37] The homestand continued with a series against theAtlanta Braves. After winning the first game 1–0 thanks to a strong start from Harang and a late-inning error byFreddie Freeman and losing the second game 5–2 with Buchanan's fourth loss of the season, the Phillies took the rubber match when Howard hit his second home run of the series (third of the season).[38][39]

The team's final series of the month was a four-game set inSt. Louis to face theCardinals. Notwithstanding heating trade rumors including a potential deal to the Cardinals, Hamels picked up his first win of the season, leading the Phillies to a 4–1 victory.[40] The next evening,Panamanian rookieSeverino González made his major league debut, but was unsuccessful, relinquishing seven runs in 223 innings as the Phillies lost 11–5.[41] The Phillies also lost the final two games, and finished the month of April with an 8–15 record, their worst April record since2002.[42]

The team's .223 batting average was also the worst in the National League; they also ranked last or tied for last in the NL in runs, runs per game, and home runs. The bullpen was markedly better than the starting rotation; the former ranked fourth in the NL in ERA, while the latter ranked 13th.[43] As of the end of the month, Chase Utley had a .114 batting average, the worst in the major leagues.[44] Meanwhile, Harang posted a rotation-leading 2.51 ERA in 3213 innings pitched during the month, and was even mentioned as a potential candidate to be traded to a contending team.[45][46]

May

[edit]

The Phillies began the month by reshuffling their pitching staff, optioning David Buchanan (0–5, 8.76 ERA in April) to Triple-ALehigh Valley, recallingElvis Araújo (who conspicuously had similar struggles in the minor leagues), and preparing to addChad Billingsley to the starting rotation.[47]

Statistics

[edit]

Through October 4, 2015

Batting

[edit]

Note: G = Games played; AB = At bats; R = Runs scored; H = Hits; 2B = Doubles; 3B = Triples; HR = Home runs; RBI = Runs batted in; BB = Base on balls; SO = Strikeouts; AVG = Batting average; SB = Stolen bases

PlayerGABRH2B3BHRRBIBBSOAVGSB
Aaron Altherr, OF3913725331145221641.2416
Elvis Araújo, P40100000001.0000
Cody Asche, LF12942541104223123926111.2451
Alec Asher, P7602100003.3330
Phillippe Aumont, P1000000010.0000
Chad Billingsley, P71321001105.0770
Andrés Blanco, 3B10623332682237252144.2921
Brian Bogusevic, RF22589153025321.2592
Domonic Brown, RF631891943615251436.2283
David Buchanan, P152024100128.2000
Kevin Correia, P5601000001.1670
Jordan Danks, LF4400000002.0000
Chase d'Arnaud, IF111723010017.1760
Justin De Fratus, P61301000001.3330
Jerad Eickhoff, P81412000207.1430
Maikel Franco, 3B80304458522114502652.2801
Jeff Francoeur, RF119326348416113451377.2580
Freddy Galvis, SS1515596314714575030103.26310
Severino González, P71021000114.1000
Cole Hamels, P2039261000015.1540
Aaron Harang, P2948481000118.1670
César Hernández, 2B127405571102041354086.27219
Odubel Herrera, CF1474956414730384128129.29716
Ryan Howard, 1B12946753107291237727138.2290
Erik Kratz, UT122235200213.2270
Adam Loewen, P20301000000.3330
Dustin McGowan, P14300000003.0000
Adam Morgan, P1526221001012.0770
Héctor Neris, P32100000001.0000
Aaron Nola, P1323020001116.0870
Sean O'Sullivan, P1320221000110.1000
Ben Revere, OF96366491091361261936.29824
Darin Ruf, 1B106268306312012392169.2351
Carlos Ruiz, C8628423601312222843.2111
Cameron Rupp, C812702463919282471.2330
Grady Sizemore, RF39984245006623.2450
Darnell Sweeney, CF3785915413111327.1760
Chase Utley, 2B7324923541215302235.2173
Jerome Williams, P3331021001114.0650
Team Totals16255296261374272371305863871274.24988

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; HR = Home runs allowed; BB = Walks allowed; K = Strikeouts

PlayerWLERAGGSSVIPHRERHRBBK
Elvis Araújo213.38400034.229161311934
Alec Asher069.3177029.042303081016
Phillippe Aumont0113.501104.0566273
Chad Billingsley235.8477037.05326245815
David Buchanan296.991515074.21095858122944
Kevin Correia036.5655023.13723174814
Justin De Fratus025.51610080.092524993268
Jake Diekman215.15410036.240232132449
Jerad Eickhoff332.6588051.040151551349
Jeff Francoeur009.001002.0122131
Luis García463.51720266.272272643763
Ken Giles631.806901570.059211422587
Jeanmar Gómez233.01650074.282272541750
Severino González337.9277030.24427275728
Cole Hamels673.6420200128.211353521239137
Aaron Harang6154.8629290172.118999932651108
Dalier Hinojosa200.78180023.015221821
César Jiménez000.003003.1100004
Adam Loewen106.98200019.120151531722
Dustin McGowan126.94141023.129211872021
Adam Morgan574.481515084.1884342141749
Colton Murray015.878007.21155229
Héctor Neris223.79320040.138171781041
Aaron Nola623.591313077.2743131111968
Nefi Ogando009.004004.0754022
Sean O'Sullivan166.081313071.0944948162035
Jonathan Papelbon211.593701739.231973840
Ken Roberts1010.386004.1955011
Seth Rosin0022.501002.0755110
Jerome Williams4125.8033211121.01618378223474
Team Totals63994.69162162351436.115928097491914881153

Farm system

[edit]
See also:Minor League Baseball
LevelTeamLeagueManager
AAALehigh Valley IronPigsInternational LeagueDave Brundage
AAReading Fightin PhilsEastern LeagueDusty Wathan
A-AdvancedClearwater ThreshersFlorida State LeagueGreg Legg
ALakewood BlueClawsSouth Atlantic LeagueShawn Williams
A-Short SeasonWilliamsport CrosscuttersNew York–Penn LeaguePat Borders
RookieGCL PhilliesGulf Coast LeagueRoly de Armas
RookieVSL PhilliesVenezuelan Summer League
RookieDSL PhilliesDominican Summer LeagueManny Amador

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^The game on June 27, 2015, began but was called after 112 innings with the score tied 0–0.

External links

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abZolecki, Todd (June 26, 2015)."Sandberg steps down as Phillies manager: Mackanin named to position on interim basis".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on June 28, 2015. RetrievedJune 26, 2015.
  2. ^Suss, Nick (June 30, 2015)."Mackanin will manage Phils for rest of season: Interim skipper's priority in line with Amaro's to develop young players".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on July 3, 2015. RetrievedJune 30, 2015.
  3. ^"Phillies sign right-hander Williams to one-year deal".phillies.mlb.com. Major League Baseball. Archived fromthe original on October 24, 2014. RetrievedNovember 8, 2014.
  4. ^"Phils re-sign Sizemore to boost outfield depth".phillies.mlb.com. Major League Baseball. Archived fromthe original on October 25, 2014. RetrievedNovember 8, 2014.
  5. ^Blumenthal, Jeff (February 19, 2015)."Comcast SportsNet chooses Ben Davis as new Phillies announcer".Philadelphia Business Journal. RetrievedMarch 6, 2015.
  6. ^Lombardo, Matt (March 25, 2015)."Mike Schmidt to double the number of Phillies games he will call in 2015".NJ.com. NJ Advance Media. RetrievedApril 4, 2015.
  7. ^"2015 Philadelphia Phillies Schedule and Results".baseball-reference.com. sports-reference.com.
  8. ^Suss, Nick (June 27, 2015)."Phils rained out, set for twin bill vs. Nats".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on June 29, 2015. RetrievedJune 28, 2015.
  9. ^Zolecki, Todd (September 10, 2015)."Phils, Cubs opener postponed; DH set for today: Morgan, Arrieta to face off in Game 1; Asher, Hendricks set for Game 2".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on September 13, 2015. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2015.
  10. ^Zolecki, Todd (October 2, 2015)."Marlins-Phillies postponed; twin bill Saturday".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on October 4, 2015. RetrievedOctober 3, 2015.
  11. ^"2015 Philadelphia Phillies Team Roster, Payroll, Games Played".Baseball-Reference.com. RetrievedOctober 5, 2015.
  12. ^Kaplan, Jake (January 29, 2015)."#OnDeck: PECOTA projects Phillies as MLB's worst team".The Philadelphia Inquirer. RetrievedMarch 1, 2015.
  13. ^Hagen, Paul (March 5, 2015)."Gillick: Healthy, stable Phillies can reach .500".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on March 8, 2015. RetrievedMarch 7, 2015.
  14. ^Lombardo, Matt (February 18, 2015)."Phillies spring training 2015: Ryne Sandberg doesn't view this as a rebuilding season".NJ.com. NJ Advance Media. RetrievedMarch 1, 2015.
  15. ^"Phillies hope for improved approach at plate from Galvis".USA Today.Associated Press. February 22, 2015. RetrievedMarch 1, 2015.
  16. ^Gross, Stephen (March 1, 2015)."Phillies leaving left field and back up catcher open competitions as spring games begin".The Morning Call.Allentown, Pennsylvania. RetrievedMarch 1, 2015.
  17. ^Berry, Adam (March 21, 2015)."Revere sees time in left field for Phils".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on March 24, 2015. RetrievedMarch 22, 2015.
  18. ^abHagen, Paul (March 6, 2015)."Sandberg: Small ball to be important for Phillies".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on March 8, 2015. RetrievedMarch 7, 2015.
  19. ^Salisbury, Jim (March 29, 2015)."Phillies 4, Tigers 4: Revere to play LF, Herrera CF".CSNPhilly.com. Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia. RetrievedMarch 30, 2015.
  20. ^abZolecki, Todd (March 3, 2015)."Buchanan has no issue with flying below radar".phillies.com: News. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on March 6, 2015. RetrievedMarch 7, 2015.
  21. ^Montemurro, Meghan (January 23, 2015)."Buchanan to make pitch to be in starting rotation".The News Journal. Wilmington, Delaware. RetrievedMarch 7, 2015.
  22. ^Salisbury, Jim (March 29, 2015)."It's official: Cole Hamels to start opening day for Phillies".CSNPhilly.com. Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia. RetrievedMarch 30, 2015.
  23. ^Baer, Bill (April 4, 2015)."Phillies sign Dustin McGowan".HardballTalk. NBC Sports. RetrievedApril 5, 2015.
  24. ^abAssociated Press (April 5, 2015)."Jeff Francoeur, Andres Blanco make Philadelphia Phillies Opening Day Roster".ESPN. ESPN Internet Ventures. RetrievedApril 5, 2015.
  25. ^Lombardo, Matt (April 6, 2015)."Phillies' opening day 8-0 loss is a fitting start to a predictably lousy season".NJ.com. NJ Advance Media. RetrievedApril 12, 2015.
  26. ^Kaplan, Jake (April 9, 2015)."Harang beats Bosox as Phillies' bullpen hangs on".The Philadelphia Inquirer. RetrievedApril 12, 2015.
  27. ^Maadi, Rob (April 9, 2015)."Buchanan struggles, Phillies lose to Red Sox".The Washington Post.Associated Press. Archived fromthe original on April 12, 2015. RetrievedApril 12, 2015.
  28. ^Calcaterra, Craig (April 3, 2015)."2015 Previews: The National League East in a nutshell".HardballTalk. NBC Sports. RetrievedApril 19, 2015.
  29. ^Bracy, Aaron (April 12, 2015)."Nationals defeat Phillies 4-3 in 10 innings".ABC News. Associated Press. RetrievedApril 19, 2015.
  30. ^Rubin, Adam (April 13, 2015)."Series preview: New York Mets vs. Philadelphia Phillies".Mets Blog – ESPNNewYork.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. RetrievedApril 19, 2015.
  31. ^Lawrence, Ryan (April 15, 2015)."Utley homers twice, but Phillies fall to Mets".The Philadelphia Daily News. RetrievedApril 19, 2015.
  32. ^Trezza, Joe; Zolecki, Todd (April 15, 2015)."Herrera's big night not enough as Phillies fall to Mets".phillies.com. MLB Advanced Media. Archived fromthe original on April 18, 2015. RetrievedApril 19, 2015.
  33. ^Rohan, Tim (April 15, 2015)."Mets complete 3-game sweep of Phillies".The New York Times. RetrievedApril 19, 2015.
  34. ^"Phillies end skid by halting Nationals' streak".The New York Times. Associated Press. April 18, 2015. RetrievedApril 19, 2015.
  35. ^abBartl, Jeff (April 20, 2015)."Marlins-Phillies Preview".Yahoo! Sports. NBC Sports Network. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  36. ^Gross, Stephen (April 22, 2015)."Miscues allow Marlins to top Phillies".The Morning Call. Allentown, Pennsylvania. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  37. ^Davis, Craig (April 23, 2015)."Miami Marlins end tumultuous trip with 9-1 laugher in Philly".The Sun Sentinel.Orlando, Florida. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  38. ^"Freeman error allows winning run, Phillies beat Braves 1-0".New York Times. Associated Press. April 24, 2015. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  39. ^Finger, John (April 26, 2015)."With Howard making contact, Philies take series from Braves".CSNPhilly.com. Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  40. ^Salisbury, Jim (April 28, 2015)."Cole Hamels lives in the moment, beats Cardinals".CSNPhilly.com. Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  41. ^Montemurro, Meghan (April 29, 2015)."Gonzalez shelled in MLB debut in Phillies' loss".The News Journal. Wilmington, Delaware. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  42. ^"Phillies by the numbers: Phillies finish April with loss to Cards".ESPN Stats and Information. ESPN Internet Ventures. May 1, 2015. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  43. ^Butler, Scott (May 1, 2015)."Phillies monthly review: April 2015".PhilsBaseball.com. Phils Baseball. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.[permanent dead link]
  44. ^Salisbury, Jim (May 1, 2015)."Chase Utley: April 'could have gone a lot better'".CSNPhilly.com. Comcast SportsNet Philadelphia. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  45. ^Wise, Brandon (April 29, 2015)."Phillies pitcher Aaron Harang tagged for five runs in losing effort".Fantasy News – CBSSports.com. CBS Interactive. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  46. ^Miklasz, Bernie (April 27, 2015)."Mulling Cards options to replace Waino".St. Louis Post-Dispatch. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  47. ^Kaplan, Jake (May 2, 2015)."Phillies option David Buchanan to Triple-A".The Philadelphia Inquirer. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
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