Andrew Painter’s latest stop in Triple-A looked a lot more like a reset than a comeback, and that’s exactly what the Phillies need it to be.
Philadelphia can’t afford to lose the upside that made Painter such a prized prospect in the first place. With only three reliable starters in a five-man rotation, the Phillies need young arms like Painter to develop into answers - or at least into assets. What they absolutely cannot have is a former top prospect who never gets back to the level he once flashed.
For now, the organization has hit pause and sent him back to Lehigh Valley after his rough big league run. The 23-year-old right-hander was shelled over his first 14 major league games, finishing with a 7.06 ERA.
The trouble was constant traffic on the bases: 84 hits and 24 walks in just 65 innings. His six-pitch mix never really played the way the Phillies wanted, and hitters kept making him pay for shaky command and inconsistent feel.
After nearly two full weeks away from the mound, Painter returned to action in Triple-A and delivered a more stable line. He worked four innings, allowed one earned run on two hits and three walks, and struck out four. It took him 80 pitches to get through those four frames, which tells you the outing was better than what he had been showing - but still far from clean.
The fastball command was there today. Had trouble locating the other pitches.
4 IP, 1 ER, 2 H, 4 K, 3 BB
80 pitches, 44 strikes.
Still lots of work to do. Fastball looked to have more movement. #Phillies
- Jeff Kerr (@JeffKerrPHL) June 28, 2026
That’s the tricky part with Painter right now: the damage wasn’t there this time, but the control issues still were. The Phillies are clearly treating this as a rebuilding stage, not a quick detour. The safest move is to let him stay in Lehigh Valley for a while instead of sending him right back up to get knocked around again.
There’s more than mechanics at play here, too. Painter’s confidence has to be part of the equation, because it has been a long road since he looked like the future ace the Phillies thought they had.
The 2021 first-round pick flew through the minors early in his career, reaching Double-A at 19 and posting a sub-3.00 ERA there. The Phillies were expecting him to help the major league club by 2023, his age-20 season, but Tommy John surgery wiped out all of 2023 and 2024. When he returned in 2025, he never really found his rhythm, and in 22 Triple-A starts he put up a 5.40 ERA that pushed him out of the conversation for a call-up.
Since 2023, Painter has gone through a major arm injury, two seasons lost, a rough return to the minors, and then a brutal start in the majors. That’s a lot for any young pitcher to absorb.
The Phillies still don’t know exactly where this ends. Painter could still get back to the talent level that made him such a coveted arm, or he could end up another highly touted high school pitcher undone by injuries. But he’s still younger than both Chase Utley and Ryan Howard were when they made their major league debuts, and the Phillies have time to let this play out the right way.
For now, the path is simple: slow it down, let him reset, and see if the stuff and the confidence can come back together.
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