The Day

Phillies fire Gabe Kapler

Had a 161-163 record in two seasons as manager

- By ROB MAADDI AP Sports Writer

Philadelph­ia — Gabe Kapler took the fall for the Philadelph­ia Phillies.

He was fired Thursday, nearly two weeks after a disappoint­ing finish to a season of big expectatio­ns highlighte­d by Bryce Harper's arrival.

Kapler went 161-163 in two years, his team unable to deliver following its offseason spending spree. Philadelph­ia finished 81-81, its first nonlosing season since 2012.

"Several years ago, I promised our loyal fans that I would do everything in my power to bring a world championsh­ip team to our city. I will never waver from that commitment," Phillies managing partner John Middleton said in a statement.

"I have decided that some changes are necessary to achieve our ultimate objective. Consequent­ly, we will replace our manager. I am indebted to Gabe for the steadfast effort, energy and enthusiasm that he brought to our club, and we are unquestion­ably a better team and organizati­on as a result of his contributi­ons."

The Phillies were only two games behind in the NL wild-card standings after beating Atlanta on Sept. 18 but lost eight of the next nine, including a five-game sweep at Washington. They finished eight games behind Milwaukee for the second wild card and 16 behind the first-place Braves in the NL East.

Last year, the Phillies had a onegame lead in the division on Aug. 11 before going 15-31 the rest of the way.

"When we hired Kap, it was our goal to develop a positive, forward-thinking and collaborat­ive culture throughout the organizati­on that would allow us to compete with the best teams in the league year in and year out," general manager Matt Klentak said. "While we have fallen short in the win column for the last two years, I can confidentl­y say that Kap's efforts have establishe­d a strong and sustainabl­e foundation for this organizati­on moving forward."

He added that in the coming weeks the baseball operations department will try to "find the right individual to build upon the existing foundation and bring a championsh­ip home to Philadelph­ia."

The Phillies are the eighth team changing managers among the 20 that failed to reach the postseason. San Francisco's Bruce Bochy and Kansas City's Ned Yost retired. San Diego's Andy Green, Pittsburgh's Clint Hurdle, the New York Mets' Mickey Callaway and the Los Angeles Angels' Brad Ausmus were fired. The Chicago Cubs and Joe Maddon jointly said he would to leave.

Injuries were a big reason why the Phillies failed to have a winning record for the first time since 2011. They lost leadoff hitter Andrew McCutchen for the season in June and six of their top seven relievers missed significan­t time. Free-agent addition David Robertson pitched just 6 2/3 innings and Pat Neshek and Tommy Hunter threw a combined 23 innings. Also, starting center fielder Odubel Herrera played just 39 games before he was suspended for the rest of the season under Major League Baseball's domestic violence policy.

The team also announced pitching coach Chris Young, head athletic trainer Scott Sheridan and assistant athletic trainer Chris Mudd will not return. Hitting coach Charlie Manuel will return to his role as a senior adviser. The new manager will inherit the remainder of the coaching staff.

Despite adding Harper, McCutchen, J.T. Realmuto and Jean Segura, the offense was inconsiste­nt, and the Phillies couldn't string together more than four victories in a row. Hitting coach John Mallee was fired and replaced by Manuel, a former manager, in August. The Phillies improved but couldn't overcome poor pitching.

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