Zack Wheeler had a chance to get to the All-Star Game after all. He just wasn’t interested in being MLB’s backup plan.
The Phillies ace declined the league’s invitation to join the Midsummer Classic as a replacement, and the reason was blunt: he felt “disrespected” by being treated like the “fifth choice” instead of the first one. According to Charlotte Varnes of The Athletic, Wheeler was approached by the league last night about the spot and turned it down.
“Zack Wheeler said the league approached him last night about being an All-Star replacement,” Varnes reports. “He declined. He said he did not want to be the fifth choice and felt disrespected.”
That decision closes the book on what has been a frustrating All-Star storyline for Philadelphia. For the second straight year, the Phillies have watched one of their top arms get left out, with Cristopher Sanchez serving as the snub last season after finishing second in the NL Cy Young race. This year, it’s Wheeler wearing that label.
And it’s not hard to see why the omission stung. Wheeler has posted a 2.28 ERA with a 9-1 record and 4.4 bWAR in 14 starts, numbers that only got stronger after his latest outing: a 14-strikeout, seven-inning win over the Cincinnati Reds.
The invitation would have given Wheeler a shot at his fourth All-Star appearance, all of them coming with the Phillies, and his third straight selection. Instead, he passed, unwilling to accept a spot that came after he’d already been overlooked.
So the All-Star snub saga ends there. Wheeler had one last opening to get in, and he chose not to take it.
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The latest move comes after Velasquez made two appearances in Chicago before heading back onto the market, keeping his next chapter open for a while longer. For a pitcher who has bounced through different roles and organizations, the appeal remains the same: one more chance to find a foothold and prove there is still something left in the arm that once made him a fixture in the Phillies rotation. [Read more 🡒]
Phillies Just Lost Valuable Draft Ground At The Worst Time
The Phillies draft position for next summer just took a hit, and it comes at a time when every bit of draft capital matters. Because they went over the highest surcharge threshold of the Competitive Balance Tax, their first selection in the 2026 MLB Draft has been pushed back 10 spots to No. 36, a setback that leaves them with less room to maneuver as they keep trying to build around a roster that still has some obvious long-term needs.
Philadelphia has not exactly been shy about chasing pitching help through the pipeline, and this could sharpen that focus even more. With Andrew Painter back at Triple-A Lehigh Valley after a rough big league debut and Aidan Miller sidelined by a back injury, the organization is already dealing with some uncertainty in key developmental spots, which makes losing draft ground feel even more costly when the next class finally arrives. [Read more 🡒]
