The Phillies’ All-Star week plans were already buzzing, with fans pushing to get their favorites into the 2026 All-Star Game and Philadelphia set to host All-Star Weekend. Then Monday brought a sobering note to the celebration: the club announced the death of Al Holland at 73.
Holland’s time in Philadelphia was brief on paper, but it left a lasting imprint. He spent parts of three seasons with the Phillies from 1983-85, and the team called him a dominant closer and an integral part of the 1983 National League pennant winner. He was also an All-Star in 1984.
The Phillies are saddened to learn of the passing of Al Holland, who spent parts of three seasons with the club from 1983-85. As a dominant closer, Al was an integral part of the team’s winning the National League pennant in 1983 and was an All-Star in 1984. The club and fans are… pic.twitter.com/XG14iYwdSC
- Philadelphia Phillies (@Phillies) July 6, 2026
Philadelphia landed Holland in a deal with the Giants just before Christmas in 1982, a trade that also involved Joe Morgan. The move clicked right away. The Phillies rolled to a 90-72 record and won the NL East, while Holland delivered a 2.26 ERA, 100 strikeouts and 25 saves in the regular season.
His biggest stage came in 1983, when the Phillies reached the World Series for the fourth time in franchise history. That was the only postseason of Holland’s career, and he made it count. He pitched in four playoff games, picked up two saves - Game 1 of the NLCS and Game 1 of the World Series - and threw 6.2 scoreless innings with eight strikeouts, two hits allowed and no walks.
Holland’s lone All-Star selection came the next year, in 1984, when he posted a career-high 29 saves.
His path to Philadelphia started well before that. Holland was drafted by the Padres in the fourth round in 1975 out of North Carolina A&T State University, though he did not sign. He later signed with the Pirates in June 1975 and made his MLB debut in 1977, appearing in two games out of Pittsburgh’s bullpen.
He also had stops with the Yankees before retiring after the 1987 season.
Even with those stops, Holland’s strongest legacy was built in Philadelphia. His best seasons came there, and the only playoff innings of his career came in a Phillies uniform.
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