Don’t Expect The Phillies To Sign Another Big Name Starter
Blake Sell and Jordan Montgomery are still on the market. There have at various times been reports connecting each of them to the Phillies. Adding a pitcher of their caliber would certainly be nice. Even if it would be a luxury move. Don’t expect the Phillies to do it though. Jayson Stark joined Andrew Salciunas down at Phillies Spring Training and poured cold water on the idea either of those starters could end up in a Phillies jersey.
Jordan Montgomery Will Cost Too Much
According to Jayson Stark, Montgomery just wants too much money. Which would explain why we are less than a month out, and he is still available. Stark told Andrew that Montgomery is looking for a deal bigger than what Aaron Nola got. If you forget what the Phillies paid Nola, it was 7-years $172 million. Perhaps less per year than people expected for Nola, but a lot of years. The Phillies have already invested about $300 Million total in their rotation this offseason between Nola and Zack Wheeler. Adding another $170 million on top of that, may not really be possible.
Could they be interested if the number comes down? Maybe. Stark didn’t rule it out. But there are teams far more desperate for starting pitching than the Phillies. They already have Wheeler, Nola, and Ranger Suarez. Add on Taijuan Walker who is getting decent money, and Cristopher Sanchez who had a breakout year in 2023, and starting pitching is just not a big enough need to break the bank for another one.
Hasn’t Heard Anything About The Phillies Being In On Blake Snell
https://x.com/975TheFanatic/status/1764674706374824179?s=20
Jayson Stark is usually clued in on what is going on. He told us he has heard nothing about the Phillies being connected to Blake Snell. He will tell you himself that does not mean it can’t happen. But usually, if he is saying something it has merit.
Snell seems like he could be had on a shorter deal. Maybe the Phillies would be willing to pay him for 1-year. But then it also costs them draft picks and international money. Again, if they were desperate for a starter, it would make more sense. But they already have one of the best rotations in baseball. Their starting pitching in the past two post-seasons was elite. The pressing need that would motivate them to accept those sacrifices just is not there.