logo
Realigned Phillies bullpen finds its footing in 5 days following José Alvarado suspension

Realigned Phillies bullpen finds its footing in 5 days following José Alvarado suspension

New York Times23-05-2025

DENVER — Now the longest-tenured man in the Phillies bullpen, Matt Strahm did not have a speech to make. There wasn't much to utter in the wake of José Alvarado's 80-game suspension that both weakened the bullpen and elevated it to the unit that will face the highest scrutiny as spring becomes summer.
Advertisement
There is so much baseball left; all anyone can be certain of is that the Phillies' bullpen mix will likely not be the same come July or October. But this is who they have right now. It has to work.
'That's kind of always been the mindset of this bullpen since I've been in it,' Strahm said. 'You look back to the '23 bullpen. I mean, we had seven closers down there. So a lot of the conversation was: Quit worrying about when you're throwing, or how you're throwing. And just throw. So, now, it just kind of shifted to: It is what it is. We got what we got. We're good enough to do the job.'
If anything, five days of solid bullpen work since the Alvarado suspension were timely. Things feel a little more settled. No one will read too much into five days because greater tests than the Pittsburgh Pirates and Colorado Rockies will challenge this depleted bullpen. But it was some validation for a group that needs confidence as the quality of their relievers is questioned.
Phillies relievers have a 2.93 ERA with 15 strikeouts and two walks in 15 1/3 innings since they lost Alvarado. They have not surrendered a homer.
The bullpen rose to the task Thursday in a 2-0 win when the Phillies could not bludgeon this historically bad Rockies team. Orion Kerkering recorded the biggest out of the game when he inherited runners on the corners with two outs in the seventh inning of a two-run game. He threw one pitch: a slider in on the hands to Colorado's best hitter, Hunter Goodman. Bryce Harper caught it over the dugout railing.
Excuse me, can I just reach over here real quick, gotta grab something pic.twitter.com/OAC3FZ5leR
— Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) May 22, 2025
Matt Strahm pitched around a single and a steal with the help of a fine running catch in center field by Brandon Marsh to end the eighth. Jordan Romano struck out two in a 10-pitch ninth.
The Phillies used all eight of their relievers during the four-game sweep. Most of the chances were lower-leverage situations, against a team that's now 8-42. There was not much drama at a ballpark known for terrorizing bullpens.
Advertisement
All of the caveats apply, and that is fine. The soft schedule represented a chance for the Phillies to realign their bullpen. Romano, Strahm and Kerkering have not been needed as much. The others have thrown strikes.
'This is what we've got right now,' lefty Tanner Banks said. 'Kind of almost a nudge of, like, 'It's time to go lock it in.' You can either rise to the occasion or fall to the shortcoming. You know?'
This is a dynamic that was best left unsaid out in the bullpen.
'We all expect the next guy up to go out and do their job,' Banks said. 'When we're hitting the ball around the yard, it makes it easier. Every guy out there in the dugout and in the bullpen knows the next guy's got their back. It is unsaid, but it's expected. Excellence is expected, especially, in a city like Philadelphia. You have to want it. You have to work for it. It's not going to come easy, regardless of who you're playing. But it's expected, top to bottom in the clubhouse. Everywhere we go. And, especially, in our home city.'
The whole formula will be easier if the Phillies start from the end. So no development over the past three weeks might be as significant as Romano's return to dominance. He has not allowed a run in nine straight outings. He has faced 30 batters in that time. Only four have reached base. He's struck out 13 of them.
He has ripped through opposing hitters for the past three weeks.
'Romano was fantastic,' Phillies manager Rob Thomson said after the righty's latest scoreless appearance.
'You're not accidentally a two-time All Star as a closer and third all time in a franchise's history in saves,' Strahm said. 'That's not an accident. I mean, yeah. Rough start to the year. That's baseball. His little hiccup in the beginning of the year, we joke about it. You couldn't do it again if you tried.'
No one is pretending the Phillies have everything they need in the bullpen. They will make fortifications come July. They could dip into their rotation surplus at some point to help the bullpen. They will not pull those levers until they must.
For now, inside the clubhouse, the best way to overcome Alvarado's preventable absence is to treat it like something they could not control. Strahm said he reached out to Alvarado. He hasn't heard back. He understands.
Advertisement
'I can only imagine the place he's in right now,' Strahm said. 'Give him his time. Text messages are meant to be responded to when ready. So, I just shot one off.'
No answer will be satisfactory following a suspension for performance-enhancing drugs. That's just how it is.
The Phillies could string together weeks of good relief work and the bullpen would still need to be addressed in July. It would still be a lingering doubt.
A good five days are only five days. But it's better than perpetual panic.
'No doubt,' Banks said. 'The only thing is workloads are going to change a little bit. But it's an opportunity. You might find that there's people out there that are more capable of doing greater things than you may expect.'
(Top photo of Matt Strahm: Justin Edmonds / Getty Images)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Minjee Lee wins third major at KPMG Women's PGA and is now halfway to LPGA Hall of Fame
Minjee Lee wins third major at KPMG Women's PGA and is now halfway to LPGA Hall of Fame

Yahoo

time18 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Minjee Lee wins third major at KPMG Women's PGA and is now halfway to LPGA Hall of Fame

FRISCO, Texas – Clara Lee couldn't watch. After daughter Minjee made three bogeys in the first six holes, the former teaching pro couldn't help but think back to last year's U.S. Women's Open, where Minjee held a three-stroke lead on the back nine at Lancaster Country Club, only to collapse into a share of ninth. Clara tried to stay positive, but when Minjee got on the greens, mom walked away and texted a friend to get the results. 'Just watching her, I'm 10 years older this week,' joked Clara as Minjee hoisted her third major championship trophy at the 2025 KPMG Women's PGA Championship. Advertisement Fields Ranch East course, the new Home of the PGA of America and a staple in the big-event lineup for years to come, provided a merciless test to the best women in the world. Behind her shades, 29-year-old Lee looked chill in the suffocating Texas heat, but as she battled unrelenting winds on a vast, Texas plain, she wanted the world to know that all was not as it appeared. 'I just want to be clear,' said Lee. 'I definitely was nervous starting the day. I wasn't really sure if it was the heat that was making my heart beat more … I looked calm, but I was not as calm as everybody thinks.' Winless since the fall of 2023, Lee's resurgence of late can be traced back to one club: the longer putter. She put it in play at the start of the season at the urging of longtime coach Ritchie Smith. Lee's strokes gained putting rank in 2024 was a dismal 137th. She ranked fifth on tour this season coming into the week, and finished first in the field at PGA Frisco. Minjee Lee reacts on the 18th green after winning the 2025 KPMG Women's PGA Championship. 'Just changing to the broomstick has given me a lot more freedom, I think,' she said. 'I was just – I guess I just had a lot of thoughts, and just I was overthinking probably about just the conventional way of putting. Advertisement 'I think just taking my hands a little more out of it and using the broomstick has really been helping me.' An 8-foot par putt on the 13th, followed by birdies on Nos. 14 and 15 put Lee squarely in command down the stretch. She held a three-stroke lead over Auston Kim (71) and Chanettee Wannasaen (71) coming into the 72nd hole, where a host of players and caddies made their way to the back of the green with bottles of champagne. 'She's the longest friend I've had,' said Lydia Ko, 'so it's really special for me to be here for her win. 'I saw a stat that she didn't three-putt at all. That's crazy because I was doing a lot of that.' Lee becomes only the third Aussie to win three different majors, joining mentor Karrie Webb and Jan Stephenson. With victories at the 2022 U.S. Women's Open and 2021 Evian Championship, Lee is now one of five active players on the LPGA with three legs of the career grand slam, joined by Anna Nordqvist, In Gee Chun, Yani Tseng and Ko. Advertisement While she called the career grand slam her 'ultimate goal,' the LPGA Hall of Fame is what she dreamed of as a kid. 'That's why I wanted to be on the LPGA Tour,' said Lee, 'to, you know, win a bunch of tournaments and try to get into it. 'Seeing Lydia do it, I think I would really like to get there. We'll see how we go after this week.' For the record, Lee now has 14 of the 27 required to qualify. Lee's caddie, Michael Paterson, is new to her team this year and, fittingly, was on the bag for four of Karrie Webb's major wins. Paterson said smart golf got them into the winner's circle at 4-under 284. That, and Lee's ability to move on from the bad in as little as half a hole. Only three players finished the KPMG Women's PGA under par, the fewest number at this championship since 2003. Advertisement American stars Nelly Korda (T-19) and Lexi Thompson (T-12) played in the penultimate group and shot 76. World No. 2 Jeeno Thitikul began the day four strokes behind Lee in solo second but finished in a share of fourth after a closing 75. Paterson praised his boss's attitude in the toughest scoring conditions of the year. 'The way she can just brush off a little bit of adversity and keep her chin up,' said Paterson, 'it's unbelievable.' Minjee Lee poses with the trophy after winning the 2025 KPMG Women's PGA Championship. Lee's brother Min Woo left a message for big sis, telling her he was proud. He tried calling but she was too busy accepting the trophy so he chatted with mom. Though Lee is a resident of the Dallas area, her house was too far away from PGA Frisco to commute, so she stayed with friends in the area. Clara cooked for her every night and made omelets for the morning. She went to Costco to buy all the fruit, slicing up the kiwi and watermelon. Advertisement When Minjee won the U.S. Women's Open at Pine Needles, Clara was on a plane headed to South Korea. This marked the first major championship victory she was able to see in person. 'It was awesome, but I'm exhausted,' she said with a big smile. For Lee, this major hit different. This one, she felt like she deserved. 'I think it's very different, because I feel like I had a lot of doubt the past few years,' she said. 'Not with my long game, but more with my putting. 'I think the more I heard media and other people saying things about my putting, I think it got to me more and more over time. 'Yeah, I think this one just means a little bit more to me. I mean, obviously U.S. Open is my absolute favorite, but in terms of my most deserved I think this one is the one.' This article originally appeared on Golfweek: Minjee Lee wins third LPGA major championship at KPMG Women's PGA

Rhyne Howard scores 22, Allisha Gray adds 19 to help Dream beat Sky
Rhyne Howard scores 22, Allisha Gray adds 19 to help Dream beat Sky

CBS News

time20 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Rhyne Howard scores 22, Allisha Gray adds 19 to help Dream beat Sky

Rhyne Howard scored 22 points, Allisha Gray added 19 and Brionna Jones had 13 points and 11 rebounds on Sunday to help the Atlanta Dream beat the Chicago Sky 93-80. Rookie Te-Hina Paopao hit a career-high five 3-pointers and tied her season high with 16 points for Atlanta and Naz Hillmon scored 12. Angel Reese had 10 points, 19 rebounds, four assists and three steals for the Sky, a day after finishing with nine points and a career-low two rebounds in a 107-86 loss to Phoenix. Ariel Atkins scored a season-high 29 points and Elizabeth Williams added a season-best 16. Atlanta (10-4) has won five of six and nine of 11. The Dream hit five 3s — two by Paopao and one apiece by Gray, Howard and Hillmon — in a four-minute span to take an 84-75 lead with 4:35 left in the game. Howard made a wide-open corner 3 with 1:09 left and Jordin Canada hit two free throws with 41 seconds left to make it 91-80. Each team shot 42% from the field but the Dream hit 16 of 33 (49%) from 3-point range while Chicago made 4 of 15 from behind the arc. Chicago (3-10) has lost three consecutive games and six of seven. Up next The Dream play at Dallas and the Sky host Los Angeles on Tuesday.

Pacers fans gasp at Haliburton's Game 7 injury in NBA Finals before responding to Indiana's effort
Pacers fans gasp at Haliburton's Game 7 injury in NBA Finals before responding to Indiana's effort

Associated Press

time20 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Pacers fans gasp at Haliburton's Game 7 injury in NBA Finals before responding to Indiana's effort

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Indiana Pacers fans arrived at Gainbridge Fieldhouse ready to celebrate their first NBA title. Seven minutes into the game came the hush. As star point guard Tyrese Haliburton fell to the floor in Oklahoma City on Sunday night with what his father, John, later called an Achilles tendon injury, fans gasped as the replay was shown and they saw the anguished look on John Haliburton's face. The moment may go down as another cruel chapter in the franchise's long, painful history. 'Absolutely not what we wanted to see but you know what he's going to want. He's going to want this team to continue to fight,' Chris Denari, the Pacers' television play-by-play announcer, said to tempered cheers. 'He is the leader of this team. We know what he's meant since he arrived from Sacramento and he's going to need all of our thoughts and prayers, but he is going to want this team to fight and win an NBA title.' The Pacers didn't stay down long. As the Pacers fought through the loss of Haliburton, the near-sellout crowd had raucous reactions to each Pacers 3-pointer, Thunder foul or turnover. It is Indiana, after all. But these fans are also plenty familiar with what happened Sunday. Since the ABA powerhouse joined the NBA in 1976-77, it has endured seemingly every imaginable and unimaginable setback: the 1977 telethon that saved the team, the Malice in the Palace that cost Reggie Miller his last title shot, the near-misses against LeBron James more than a decade ago and last year's Eastern Conference finals sweep as the injured Haliburton watched the last two games from the bench. There's also the injury legacy. Danny Granger, Paul George and Victor Oladipo all appeared to be ascending when their careers were derailed by injuries, and now the fear is Haliburton could join that list. How painful has it been to be a Pacers fan? Just ask 27-year-old Anthony Brehob, who came dressed in a No. 55 Roy Hibbert jersey and had big expectations before tip-off. 'Heartbreaking,' Brehob said, describing the back-to-back conference finals losses to James and the Heat in 2013 and 2014. 'I'm expecting a close game, and I'm really hoping Haliburton pulls it off at the end. If they lose, it's going to be a long night.' The Pacers' effort brought the crowd back into it. Indiana fought through Haliburton's injury, rekindling thoughts of another comeback story from the state that produced 'Hoosiers.' Pregame lines snaked around the arena for more than an hour and with the roaring crowd and familiar soundtracks, it was hard to tell if the first Game 7 in an NBA Finals since 2016 was being played in Indy — or nearly 800 miles away in Oklahoma City. 'This is like triple what it was, and they won it that year,' 53-year-old Rick McNeely said after making the journey from Dayton, Ohio, to Indy, comparing this trip to the one he made to Chicago when Michael Jordan won his last title. 'I think it's because this is Indiana.' ___ AP NBA:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store