Tragic: Phillies announce sudden exit….

Phillies  starting with early  exit…

 

Maybe the concerns about Ranger Suárez heading into Game 4 were overblown. Sure, he didn’t look like the Ranger Suárez that had become a postseason hero over the past few years when he returned from a back injury late in the season.

But, as it had been all year in Philadelphia and as it was all throughout this National League Division Series, the starting pitching was the least of the Phillies’ worries.

Suárez battled through 4 1/3 shutout innings. He didn’t have his best fastball. He loaded the bases twice in two innings. None of that mattered as he gave his team a shot in an eventual 4-1 loss to the Mets on Wednesday night at Citi Field to eliminate the Phillies from the playoffs and send New York to play for the National League pennant.

“I thought our starters did well,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson said, “and I was encouraged by Ranger’s stuff today. He was flirting with disaster the first two innings, and he just kept fighting and changing speeds and keeping people off-balance. That’s who he is. He’s just a poised man and he really knows how to pitch.”Phillies blow 3-run lead, waste Kyle Schwarber's big day in another series  loss – NBC Sports Philadelphia

The Game 4 outcome was emblematic. Philadelphia’s engine, its starting rotation, was the bright spot in a playoff disappointment. Losing a best-of-five series in four games with four solid outings from their starters, the Phillies not only wasted the contributions from their starting pitchers in the postseason; they failed to capitalize on an entire special season from their rotation.

Led by workhorses Zack Wheeler and Aaron Nola, the ever-cool Suárez and breakout left-hander Cristopher Sánchez, Philadelphia’s starters were the backbone of the club’s early surge and run to an NL East championship. They continued to hold up their end as the Phillies crumbled in the playoffs against New York.

The 2024 rotation was arguably the best starting staff the Phillies have had since their memorable 2011 season with “Four Aces” in Roy Halladay, Cliff Lee, Cole Hamels and Roy Oswalt. The team’s starters this year had a 3.81 ERA, the second-lowest mark in the last 14 Phillies seasons. (The 2022 Phillies rotation had a 3.80 ERA in 6 1/3 fewer innings.)

Philadelphia’s 21.8 fWAR among starting pitchers was second-best in the big leagues behind the Atlanta Braves. Its rotation ERA ranked eighth in the majors and third in the National League. Wheeler, Suárez and Sánchez made the NL All-Star team.

Wheeler, perhaps the ace of all aces over the last five years, had a 2.57 ERA in 200 innings and led the National League with 0.955 walks and hits per innings pitched; he will likely be the NL Cy Young runner-up for the second time in his career. Nola had a 3.57 ERA in 199 1/3 innings. Sánchez (3.32 ERA) tossed a staggering 181 2/3 innings in his first full season as a major-league starter, and Suárez (3.46 ERA) threw 150 2/3 while missing time on the injured list.

The rotation was assembled to carry a heavy load, and the top four starters delivered in an incredibly effective way.

“That’s something I believe in,” veteran executive and Phillies president of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski said when asked recently to compare his current team to his Tigers squads of the 2010s with star-studded rotations, “is trying to get good quality starting pitchers that can give you a lot of innings but also be good innings, because you’re not pitching too many hundred innings if you don’t have the ability to do so. It’s something we try to build a club based upon, so there’s some similarities.”

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