Today is the Phillies’ final off day until the season starts and things are starting to come into focus a little bit as far as what the team will look like come Opening Night. I’ve been gallivanting off watching the World Baseball Classic and March Madness over the last few weeks, so it’s time to focus my attention back on the Phillies. The regular season starts in 10 days. Here are my thoughts on the state of the team right now.
- I don’t think the Cole Hamels thing will be a big deal, unless it is… Everything seems fine with Cole and his inflamed elbow, and he pitched again without any pain. It looks like he probably won’t start opening day, but may end up starting on April 10, which means he basically won’t miss any starts. I’m not sure how many Phillies fans are with me on this, but I’m secretly terrified. We’re not repeating without a healthy Hamels. We’re just not. And the track record for young pitchers who exponentially increase their innings from one season to the next without being injured or ineffective or both the following season is not good. I don’t mean to be alarmist about this, and all of the reports are good. But I wouldn’t be terribly opposed to Hamels starting the season on the DL and coming back somewhere around April 20th. At the very least I wouldn’t mind seeing Charlie Manuel go with 5 starters right out of the gate, even though we technically wouldn’t need a 5th starter until April 20th. The more innings we can save on Cole’s arm (and Jamie Moyer, while we’re at it) the better.
- The 5th starter race is getting interesting. Kyle Kendrick got sent down to the minors and Carlos Carrasco still clearly could use some more seasoning, so it is now a two horse race between JA Happ and Chan Ho Park. Both have been impressive this spring, which will make for an interesting decision for the Phillies front office. My heart is still with Chan Ho because I love his story (and the changeup he’s learned from Jamie Moyer), but everything I hear is that the team will go with Happ. I guess this makes sense, as they have more invested in Happ as a prospect and Park is a veteran on a one year deal who pitched almost exclusively out of the bullpen last season. With the way both of these guys have pitched I don’t think they can go wrong, but I’m still hoping for Chan Ho.
- The final bench/bullpen spot is now probably just the final roster spot. That is to say, how the bottom of the roster shakes out will probably largely depend on whether the team decides to keep 11 or 12 pitchers and who wins the 5th starter job. If they go with 11 pitchers to start the year, Miguel Cairo will probably make the team. Marcus Giles and John Mayberry have kind of crapped out of late, and Jason Donald and Lou Marson were both sent to the minors. Pablo Ozuna has hit very well this spring, but for some reason the team just doesn’t seem that into him. I can’t say I blame them; Ozuna has had 200 ABs in a season just once in his career, and that was 4 years ago. He’s not as versatile as Cairo and doesn’t have the major league track record. If the Phillies go with 12 pitchers, Gary Majewski has a very good chance to make the team, though Dave Borkowski and Mike Koplove have made decent cases for themselves as well.
- It looks like Chris Coste has dodged another bullet. Coste may be the favorite for the backup catcher spot under the “devil you know” clause. Both he and Ronny Paulino have not been very good this spring, with Paulino looking to be a terrible defender. At least Coste has some familiarity with the staff and is a fan favorite. With Lou Marson set to be the full time catcher in Lehigh Valley in ’09, there doesn’t appear to be a spot in the organization for Paulino. He could be traded or released.
- Completely baseless trade rumor. The Rangers are potentially looking to deal Frank Catalanotto to find ABs for Andruw Jones. We have an redundancy of lefty power hitters off the bench in Matt Stairs and Geoff Jenkins. Jenkins and Catalanotto both have cumbersome contracts that make them difficult to deal and expensive to release. Perhaps a swap is in order? Catalanotto is guaranteed $6 million in the last year of his deal; Jenkins is guaranteed $8 million (both figures include ’10 buyouts). Catalanotto can play a few different positions and could provide some pop from the right side. Jenkins could be a decent lefty DH in the AL. Catalanotto would be an instant fan favorite in South Philly. Maybe if the Phillies threw in some cash to even the salaries…alright, they’re not all winners. I do like Catalanotto, though. Ten days until Opening Night!