Phillies Fans Face Another Miserable Wait Before Mets Opener

As smoke from Canadian wildfires spreads across the mid-Atlantic, MLB faces potential disruptions, highlighting the league's ongoing struggle with air quality issues.

Smoke from Canadian wildfires is once again hanging over MLB’s schedule, and Thursday night’s Phillies-Mets game in Philadelphia is the one most immediately in play.

The league got clean weather for its All-Star events in Philadelphia, but the second half is starting under a haze. With smoke pushing farther south, the first night back already comes with a real air-quality issue, and Friday could bring even more uncertainty across several ballparks.

Philadelphia was sitting at an air quality index of 185 Thursday morning, according to AirNow. That puts the city in the EPA’s “unhealthy” range and just shy of the “very unhealthy” level, which begins at 201.

AccuWeather projects the AQI at 162 for the 7:05 p.m. ET first pitch and says it could climb to 200 by night’s end.

MLB does not use a fixed AQI cutoff that automatically triggers a postponement, but the league has already shown a willingness to play through some haze. In 2023, the Yankees and White Sox played in conditions with an AQI in the low 200s, while the Nationals and Diamondbacks got in a game with the AQI in the 180 range before a later game was postponed when the number was near 270.

For now, Thursday’s schedule is simple: one game, Mets at Phillies at 7:10 p.m. The matchup is a primetime ESPN game in the same city that hosted the All-Star Game, and both teams are off Friday.

Friday is where the smoke picture gets murkier. Heavy smoke is expected to dip into the mid-Atlantic, though the Nationals and Orioles are both on the road and the Phillies are off.

The Yankees’ game against the Dodgers could be affected, and weather-dependent smoke patterns could also reach Progressive Field in Cleveland and Wrigley Field in Chicago. The Blue Jays are at home against the White Sox, but they can close their roof if needed.

The broader forecast shows another wave of dense smoke moving into New York and New England on Thursday afternoon and evening before shifting into the Mid-Atlantic overnight. Thick, unhealthy smoke is expected in Washington, D.C. on Friday, with some reaching Virginia and North Carolina.

The source of the problem is the same one that has already made this summer feel familiar: raging wildfires in Canada and parts of Minnesota, plus wind carrying the smoke toward the Midwest, Northeast, and mid-Atlantic. More than 830 wildfires are burning, most of them in Canada, with the largest in west-central Ontario. Air quality first worsened in Minnesota and Michigan, then began affecting the Northeast, including New York, on Wednesday.

It’s the same kind of scene MLB dealt with in 2023, when New York’s skies turned gray-orange and three games were canceled between New York, Washington, D.C., and Philadelphia.

In Other News...

Phillies Face A Costly Jhoan Duran Decision They Can't Dodge

Since arriving in Philadelphia, Jhoan Duran has settled into the closer role and given the Phillies the kind of late-inning certainty they were hoping to buy at the deadline. The early returns have been strong enough that the next question is no longer about whether he fits, but how long the Phillies can realistically keep him if they want to turn a short-term upgrade into something more durable.

That is where the decision gets expensive in a hurry. Duran is still years away from free agency, which gives the Phillies time to weigh an extension before the market gets even more complicated, but the timing also means they are staring at a pre-free-agency negotiation rather than a simple retention move. With elite reliever contracts already setting a high bar and the broader financial landscape in baseball potentially shifting again, Philadelphia may have to decide sooner than later how much it is willing to pay to keep its ninth-inning answer in place. [Read more 🡒]

Phillies Just Took A Bullpen Hit At The Worst Time

The Phillies came back from the All-Star break a little earlier than most clubs, opening the second half against the Mets in a nationally televised game with the kind of timing that can sharpen every roster move. They also chose to give Zack Wheeler and Cristopher Snchez a few extra days of rest, leaving Aaron Nola to take the ball in the opener and keeping Jess Luzardo and Alan Rangel lined up behind him as they try to keep the rotation lined up for the stretch run.

The bullpen, though, took the kind of hit teams hate to absorb this time of year. Brad Keller landed on the 15-day injured list because of a right elbow issue, and the Phillies had to turn to Seth Johnson, recalled from Triple-A Lehigh Valley, to fill the vacancy. For a club trying to bank wins while managing its arms carefully, losing a reliable relief option right as the second half begins makes the margin a little thinner. [Read more 🡒]