The Phillies went into this summer with an obvious shopping list, and Aaron Nola has made it longer.
Outfield help was already near the top of the board, especially after the Adolis Garcia injury. The bullpen also needs attention. But now Philadelphia has another issue it can’t ignore: the rotation, and specifically the way Nola has pitched this season.
Todd Zolecki of MLB.com pointed out that Nola’s struggles could force the Phillies to change their plans at the Aug. 3 MLB Trade Deadline.
"Nola's continued struggles figure to complicate the Phillies' approach to the Aug. 3 MLB Trade Deadline," Zolecki writes.
"... It would be nice to focus on a right-handed bat and a high-leverage reliever, but the Phillies need more from the back of their rotation, too."
That’s the crux of it. The Phillies would rather spend their deadline energy on a right-handed hitter and a high-leverage reliever, but the back end of the rotation has become a problem too.
Nola’s numbers tell the story. He owns a 6.04 ERA with 87 strikeouts and a 3-5 record in 17 starts this season. Over the last two years, he has been one of the worst pitchers in baseball, and the Phillies can’t keep leaning on him like this if they want to make a serious World Series run.
That leaves Philadelphia with a tough choice. The team could look for another starter to pair with Nola, or add enough pitching depth to push him down to the fifth spot. Either way, the rotation needs help.
It’s not the cleanest path for Dave Dombrowski and company. They’d probably prefer to attack the deadline with a simple plan: add a good right-handed hitting outfielder and maybe another reliever. Instead, Nola’s struggles have turned starting pitching into another pressing need, and that could reshape what the Phillies do before the Aug. 3 deadline.
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The trade deadline is starting to cast a wider net, and one familiar name from last season is bound to linger around the Phillies center field conversation. San Franciscos rough season could push the Giants into sell mode, which naturally puts their veterans into the mix as teams look for fit, value, and a little certainty in spots that still feel unsettled.
Harrison Bader gave Philadelphia exactly that kind of spark after arriving midseason a year ago, when he hit .305/.361/.463 in 50 regular-season games and settled in as a useful presence. Since then, his year in San Francisco has gone sideways with injuries and inconsistent production, leaving the kind of question the Phillies will know well by deadline time: whether a player who has already worked in their clubhouse can again help steady a tricky center field picture. [Read more 🡒]
Dave Dombrowski Faces A Phillies Deadline Test Fans Saw Coming
The Phillies have clawed their way back from a rough opening stretch and into a much more comfortable place in the standings, thanks in large part to the kind of production they were counting on from Kyle Schwarber and Bryce Harper, plus a boost from Brandon Marsh. Even so, the roster still looks more unfinished than settled, with problems that go beyond one bad week or one cold bat. Outfield help is still a need, catching has room to improve, shortstop remains a question, and the pitching staff could use more reliable depth.
That is the bind facing Dave Dombrowski as the trade deadline nears. The Phillies are good enough to make additions feel necessary rather than optional, but the market does not appear especially rich in solutions, which makes every area of need harder to solve at once. If the front office wants to land the kind of impact piece that can change the clubs outlook, it may have to thread a narrow path between urgency and the reality of what is actually available. [Read more 🡒]
