Should The Phillies Let Brandon Marsh Face Left-Handers?
Dave Dombrowski has assembled an impressive roster that’s rolled through the competition on their way to the best record in baseball at the All-Star Break.
However, the Philadelphia Phillies have questions to answer during the second half of the regular season and as immediately as the MLB Trade Deadline on July 30th.
One important nugget of information will shape their roster construction and Rob Thomson’s managerial decisions.
The Phillies don’t have confidence in Brandon Marsh to produce offensively against left-handed pitchers.
Brandon Marsh By The Numbers
The Phillies have distributed Marsh’s opportunities unevenly since they acquired him from the Los Angeles Angels in July 2022 shortly after Thomson managed his first major league game.
He’s faced right-handers in 684 regular-season plate appearances in red pinstripes. He’s only made 187 plate appearances against lefties, accounting for about 22% of his chances.
Virtually all left-handed MLB hitters face left-handed pitchers less commonly because of the league’s surplus of righties and the natural platoon advantage. However, the drastic split indicates a lack of confidence in Marsh in an everyday role.
Thomson platooned Matt Vierling with Marsh in center field during the 2022 postseason. The Phillies skipper even began the 2023 postseason using Cristian Pache in a left field platoon. Marsh made only seven plate appearances against lefties in each of the two playoff runs.
Why doesn’t he get more opportunities? He simply hasn’t taken advantage of the chances he’s gotten to inspire the confidence of his manager or the front office.
Batting Average vs. RHP | Batting Average vs. LHP | At-Bats vs. RHP | At-Bats vs. LHP | OPS vs. RHP | OPS vs. LHP | Home Runs vs. RHP | Home Runs vs. LHP | |
With Los Angeles Angels (July 2021-July 2022) | .243 | .227 | 378 | 150 | .691 | .537 | 8 | 2 |
2022 (with Phillies) | .312 | .174 | 109 | 23 | .853 | .391 | 3 | 0 |
2023 | .292 | .229 | 308 | 96 | .864 | .717 | 9 | 3 |
2024 | .297 | .146 | 185 | 48 | .896 | .385 | 9 | 0 |
Postseason | .254 | .286 | 63 | 14 | .808 | .786 | 3 | 0 |
Marsh brings a great glove to the outfield. His 11 defensive runs saved in left field account for more than double any other player on the Phillies roster in 2024.
His presence in the clubhouse has played a major part in establishing the atmosphere that’s made the current group of Phillies an incredible hit within the fan base.
However, the Phillies can’t overlook the glaring weakness in his offensive game.
They might choose to accept underwhelming offense from Johan Rojas in center field with a more defensive mindset. If the 23-year-old starts during the postseason, a World Series contender can’t afford another outfielder like Marsh with limited offensive expectations in certain matchups.
Phillies Outfield, Trade Deadline Plans
Tom McCarthy spoke on 97.5 The Fanatic about how the Phillies lineup will take shape down the stretch in 2024. Bob Cooney wants Thomson to commit to an everyday lineup with no platoons, but McCarthy pointed out Marsh’s key weakness.
“He’s close to being an everyday player offensively, but they just are not sold on his ability to hit left-handers.” –Tom McCarthy on 97.5 The Fanatic
The Phillies play-by-play broadcaster estimated a 90% chance that the Phillies don’t feel confidence in Marsh’s ability to fix his Achilles heel by October.
If fans need confirmation of that outlook, look at recent roster decisions. The Phillies ate serious money by releasing Whit Merrifield. They signed the veteran expecting that his ability to platoon in the outfield would be a major contribution.
They’re determined to give Weston Wilson a chance to play the role they wanted for Merrifield. They’d rather give a 29-year-old who had only 20 MLB at-bats before his promotion on July 12 a chance against left-handed starters for 18 days rather than give Brandon Marsh a short-term chance to improve his weakness.
If Wilson doesn’t impress drastically and immediately, Dombrowski will almost certainly look for a right-handed platoon option as his primary need ahead of the MLB Trade Deadline.
Lane Thomas, Taylor Ward, and Kevin Pillar would make sense as more affordable options than acquiring Luis Robert Jr. as a full-time center fielder.
Will Brandon Marsh Face Left-Handed Pitchers?
The Phillies don’t know what the playoffs hold. The Los Angeles Dodgers have leaned on primarily right-handed starters at the top of their rotation. Future Hall of Fame lefty Clayton Kershaw will make his push to regain form in the second half of the season, however.
A series against the Atlanta Braves would almost certainly mean facing left-handed pitchers Chris Sale and Max Fried.
Related Content: MLB Trade Deadline: 11 Options For The Philadelphia Phillies
The scrutiny to predict playoff matchups that are far from guaranteed seems like a stretch at first glance. Playoff games also provide opportunities for late-inning defensive replacements and pinch hit chances with favorable matchups. Marsh could be valuable in either spot if he doesn’t start against lefties.
However, consider that Dombrowski and the Phillies will pinpoint the smallest details in a season focused solely on the goal of winning the World Series.
Brandon Marsh is a talented major league outfielder with a great bat against right-handed pitchers, but the left-handed opponents have gotten the best of him too consistently.
Expect to see him platoon with another outfielder when the games matter most for the Phillies.