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.
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."
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
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 22⁄3 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 321⁄3 innings pitched during the month, and was even mentioned as a potential candidate to be traded to a contending team.[45][46]
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]
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
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