National Post

Phillies pitch their way to baseball’s best record

- DAN GELSTON

• The Phillies are winning games at such a torrid pace, you have to stretch to the halcyon days of when Grover was a hip name in America to find anything like what Philly’s favourite team has achieved this season.

Take ace lefty Ranger Suarez.

The 28-year-old Suarez is 9-0 with a 1.36 ERA, the third-lowest ERA by a Phillies pitcher in his first 10 starts of a season. Suarez trails only Baseball Hall of Famer Grover Cleveland Alexander, who had a 1.24 ERA in first 10 starts of 1916 and a 1.31 ERA in his first 10 starts of 1915.

Or how about the entire team?

Riding high with the best record in baseball, the Phillies are 29-6 over their last 35 games, which matches the best 35-game span in franchise history, last done in 1892.

Who can forget the 1892 presidenti­al election, when Grover Cleveland beat Benjamin Harrison to become the only president elected for two non-consecutiv­e terms?

Grover may be out of style these days as a first name — with apologies to the furry blue monster, if the Phillies win it all, they’ll take a parade ride down Broad Street rather than Sesame Street — but the Phillies are still rocking winning streaks like they did more than 130 years ago.

The Phillies were 37-14 and led the NL East by six games over the Atlanta Braves before they opened a six-game trip in Colorado on Friday.

They’re winning at a clip that not even Steve Carlton and Mike Schmidt or Jimmy Rollins and Ryan Howard could muster this early in a season.

Their recent streaks are about as eye-popping as a Schwarbomb: Philadelph­ia is 17-3 in May, it opened with the best 50-game start in baseball since the 2001 Seattle Mariners and it has already swept seven series, the most recent being a three-gamer over the World Series champion Texas Rangers.

“This is best team I’ve ever been a part of,” right-fielder and 12-year-veteran Nick Castellano­s said.

The root of the early run just might be found in last season’s playoff failure. A year after a surprise run to the World Series in 2022 that saw them lose to the Houston Astros, the Phillies blew NL Championsh­ip Series leads of 2-0 and 3-2 to the Arizona Diamondbac­ks in 2023.

Kyle Schwarber, Trea Turner, Bryce Harper and Castellano­s went 5-for-53 (.094) with 11 walks, 22 strikeouts and two RBIS in Philadelph­ia’s four NLCS losses. Against six Arizona pitchers in Game 7, the four went 1-for-15 (.067) with five strikeouts and no RBIS.

“I had a real hard time enjoying any part of the off-season, even when I was on vacation, just because of how that bitter season ended,” Castellano­s said.

The Phillies suffered the kind of franchise-crushing losses that often lead to a roster overhaul. Maybe one of their free-swinging sluggers gets traded for an arm. Maybe they let a couple of free agents walk.

Instead, team president Dave Dombrowski essentiall­y stood pat. In sports parlance, the Phillies decided to run it back.

They re-signed homegrown right-hander Aaron Nola to a seven-year, Us$172-million contract. They signed manager Rob Thomson to an extension through 2025. They eliminated any possible distractio­n Zack Wheeler might have had in the final year of his deal by re-signing the righty on a three-year, Us$126-million contract.

“There’s kind of an edge to everybody,” Thomson said. “They want to finish it.” Why bust up a good thing? “The fact we were able to face adversity together (and) feel losses together, it just makes our bond as a group better,” Castellano­s said.

“That’s hats off to ownership and the front office for believing in pieces that were already here.”

The Phillies boasted a US$243,476,617 payroll on opening day, a far cry from 2002, when New York Times writer Murray Chass described the franchise as “a major-market team disguised as a small-market welfare recipient.”

Oh sure, Harper is on a tear again with 12 homers. J.T. Realmuto has hit in a career-high 13 straight games. Third baseman Alec Bohm is second in the NL with 46 RBIS and tops in baseball with 20 doubles.

Yes, the Phillies can slug. But it’s a throwback approach to the rotation that has it posited as the best in baseball.

Phillies starters have pitched at least seven innings in 18 starts this year, the most in baseball.

“They all, obviously, have plus, plus stuff,” Realmuto said. “But just the fact they all throw strikes with multiple pitches and can attack hitters different ways inside of the strike zone makes them really tough to game plan against and be successful off of. Just throwing different pitches in different counts and they’re all for strikes when they want them, that’s rare in this game and we have a lot of guys that can do it.”

So yeah, maybe the Phillies keep it old-school, in comparison­s to the best teams and players in franchise history, and with a way of thinking that has them tops in baseball.

They know, though, each time they look beyond another packed house and at the 1980 and 2008 World Series flags that fly at Citizens Bank Park, a record start means nothing without a championsh­ip finish.

“It’s cool, but, again, we all know what we want to accomplish,” reliever Matt Strahm said.

“Other Phillies clubs have won World Series and that’s the most impressive thing. So that’s what we want to do.”

 ?? MATT SLOCUM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Ranger Suarez is 9-0 with a 1.36 ERA, the best stats a Phillies pitcher has posted after 10 starts in over a century.
MATT SLOCUM / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Ranger Suarez is 9-0 with a 1.36 ERA, the best stats a Phillies pitcher has posted after 10 starts in over a century.

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