Phillies Weekly Trends: 4 Up & Nobody Down
It’s become harder and harder throughout the season to put any Philadelphia Phillies in downward trends. Kody Clemens is the latest Phillie to lift the best team in baseball to a series sweep.
Up: Kody Clemens
It’s easy to tell things are going well when a player who started the season in AAA hits a game-tying home run with two outs in the ninth inning.
Kody Clemens has made the most of limited at-bats in 11 MLB games with a .321 batting average and an 1.166 OPS this season. He’s comfortably played games at second base and added lineup flexibility for Rob Thomson.
His dramatic home run on Saturday night crushed the spirits of the Washington Nationals. They almost had the Phillies for a rare loss, but Clemens wouldn’t let them get away with it.
He also belted a pair of doubles on Sunday to help the Phillies close out the sweep. The line drives led Tom McCarthy to refer to Clemens as “The Missile” on the game broadcast.
Thomson openly called Kody Clemens a big league player, saying that he didn’t make the 26-man roster to begin the season just because he couldn’t fit.
Edmundo Sosa has also filled in well for Trea Turner. Whit Merrifield has struggled, however, and Turner might return sooner than the initial mid-June estimation.
Dave Dombrowski and the Phillies might face an interesting roster decision. It’ll be tough to send such a hot bat back to AAA.
Up: Matt Strahm
The Atlanta Braves rocked Matt Strahm and Jose Alvarado to spoil Opening Day at Citizens Bank Park. Alvarado has settled into a role at the back end of the bullpen, and Strahm has somehow outdone the Hefty Lefty.
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After allowing two earned runs in ⅓ of an inning, Strahm has made 18 consecutive scoreless appearances. He’s allowed only 10 hits during that span and driven his WHIP down to .737 (MLB Average in 2024- 1.27).
Taijuan Walker left Thursday’s game against the New York Mets in the fourth inning with a toe injury. Thomson looked to Strahm for 1 ⅔ innings in the unusual circumstance.
“I trust him as much as anybody really. He’s throwing the baseball really well right now, as good as I’ve seen him to tell you the truth. He’s got a scoreless streak going… His fastball is really getting on people. His secondary pitches are good. He has no heartbeat. He really lives for those moments.” -Rob Thomson
Bryson Stott
When Trea Turner went on the IL, Bryson Stott hadn’t gotten off the ground yet in 2024.
The 26-year-old has caught fire at the plate, and he’s slid back to shortstop to allow the red hot Kody Clemens to start some games at second base. He made an incredible leaping catch at short on a line drive in the third inning on Sunday.
His game-tying home run on Saturday night pushed his manager to compliment after a win in extra innings.
“He got off to a little bit of a slow start. Actually, he hit a lot of balls hard early for outs, and then he got into a little bit of a funk. But now you’re seeing the at-bats that we’re expecting to see where there’s he’s seeing a lot of pitches. He’s drawing his walks. He’s barreling up balls. He’s aggressive in the strike zone.” -Rob Thomson
Up: Aaron Nola
National MLB analysts have talked up Zack Wheeler as a potential Cy Young candidate. Ranger Suarez has pitched even better statistically.
Don’t forget about Aaron Nola. He retired the first 15 Mets hitters he faced on the way to a complete game shutout at Citi Field on Tuesday.
Although his strikeout numbers are down slightly in 2024, Nola has used his knucklecurve effectively to catch hitters off balance with two strikes.
Nola was in command of the Nationals in his Sunday afternoon start despite allowing three runs. Two of the runs came on what looked like a lazy fly from Eddie Rosario that carried over the fence at the shallowest part of Citizens Bank Park.
The bullpen watched quietly as Nola turned away the Nationals in the seventh inning. Rob Thomson trusted his veteran righty to go deep into the game in a strategy that now seems like the norm for a dominant starting rotation.
“This is the best rotation I’ve ever been a part of. It’s pretty awesome. I love watching each guy go out there and compete. That’s the biggest thing that they do, that we all do… The pitch ability of every single guy is so fun to watch. All in all, they can go out and compete, and they want to go deep into games every single time.” –Aaron Nola