Former Cubs Bullpen Fix Just Reopened A Brutal Jed Hoyer Debate

With Brad Keller's injury posing a significant challenge to the Phillies' bullpen strength, both Philadelphia and the Cubs must navigate pitching dilemmas as the trade deadline approaches.

The Phillies took a major hit on Thursday when they announced Brad Keller is headed to the injured list with a torn right UCL.

It’s not yet clear whether Keller will need surgery, but if he does, the damage goes well beyond this season. That would knock him out for all of 2026 and likely most, if not all, of 2027 as well.

For Philadelphia, that’s a brutal turn after Keller turned a breakout 2025 into a two-year, $22 million deal. The Phillies now appear to have gotten little return on that investment, much like the Cubs have with Hunter Harvey, whose one-year, $6 million contract has been derailed by injuries and left him a non-factor so far.

Keller’s stint in Philadelphia never matched what he did for Chicago in 2025. He logged 31 1/3 innings for the Phillies and posted a 4.02 ERA, while his home run rate more than doubled from last season and his chase and whiff numbers moved sharply in the wrong direction.

The timing makes the loss even tougher. The Phillies are among the National League’s top teams heading into the second half, and if the season ended today, they would meet the Cubs in the NL wild card round.

Now the pressure shifts to president of baseball operations David Dombrowski, who already had bullpen work to do before Keller’s injury. The Phillies were one of several clubs expected to be active for arms at the trade deadline, and this latest setback only sharpens that need.

Chicago has its own bullpen questions, too. The Cubs still need someone to claim the high-leverage role Keller filled in 2025, and while there have been a few solid developments in the group this year, outside help looks like the most likely route if they want the kind of stability that holds up into October.

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