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Did Phillies learn their lesson from not signing Patrick Corbin? | Extra Innings

The Phillies will have to sign a free-agent pitcher this offseason. Last year, they walked away from Corbin.

The Phillies pursued pitcher Patrick Corbin last offseason but wouldn't offer him a six-year contract.
The Phillies pursued pitcher Patrick Corbin last offseason but wouldn't offer him a six-year contract.Read moreJohn Bazemore / AP

Just win, baby. Gabe Kapler will do his best Al Davis this week in Washington, but it likely will not be enough to rally his team for five games in four days against the Nationals.

“We’re going to have to win out,” Kapler said after the Phillies lost two of three to Cleveland.

The Phillies could win their final eight games and still miss the playoffs. They will face Patrick Corbin, Max Scherzer, and Stephen Strasburg. Good luck. The Phils’ wild-card chances are running thin, and they’ll likely be extinguished before the team leaves D.C. A disappointing season is entering its final week.

“We understand that’s a tall task,” Kapler said of winning the final eight games. “We also understand that’s a possibility. There’s not a guy in that room that’s not going to fight to the very end.”

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— Matt Breen (extrainnings@inquirer.com)

Phillies must be willing to sign starting pitcher to long-term deal

The Phillies will begin a five-game series Monday night by facing Patrick Corbin, the Nationals left-hander who has a 2.76 ERA since the All-Star break and has registered the National League’s second-highest groundball rate in the second half and still struck out more than 10 batters per nine innings.

Corbin is a challenge, and it is a challenge the Phillies could have avoided had they signed him this winter. The Phillies hosted Corbin last winter at Citizens Bank Park, but ultimately walked away when the Nationals offered Corbin a six-year contract, one year longer than the Phillies were willing to go.

The Phillies are leery of signing pitchers to long-term contracts. Team president Andy MacPhail said after last season that 80% of what happens in baseball is decided by what happens on the mound, but “going out and trying to procure pitching either through free agency or trades when they get into their 30s is a dicey proposition.”

That’s why the Phillies walked away from Corbin. But a year earlier, they signed Jake Arrieta — then a 32-year-old who was showing signs of regression — to a three-year contract. Both Corbin and Arrieta will be 34 when their contracts are complete.

Arrieta’s contract was shorter, but his average annual value is higher than Corbin’s. The Phillies are paying Arrieta a premium price ($25 million per year) for his age 32, 33, and 34 seasons. The Nationals are paying Corbin $23.3 million for his age 29-34 seasons.

The first half of Corbin’s contract will likely cover his prime years as one of baseball’s elite left-handers. The second half could include his regression. For the Nationals, that’s fine. They’re paying for what they get in the first three years, not the last three.

But the Phillies, when they signed Arrieta, paid a price but did not receive the rewards of having the pitcher in his prime. That’s where it gets dicey.

Imagine if the Phillies were able to sign Arrieta to a six-year deal before the 2015 season. They would have signed a Cy Young winner and a pitcher who had a 2.71 ERA over three years. The Phillies would have had an elite pitcher in his prime. And that’s the bet the Nationals made on Corbin: Give us three elite years.

The Phillies will have to sign a free-agent pitcher this offseason. Last year, they walked away from Corbin and clung to Nick Pivetta and Jerad Eickhoff and Vince Velasquez and Zach Eflin. That did not work.

This year’s Corbin is Gerrit Cole, the Astros right-hander who leads the free-agent class and will attract even more suitors than Corbin did. The Phillies will be in on him. This time, the Phillies can’t walk away.

The rundown

In case you were watching “Sunday Night Football” or the Emmys, the Phillies were boat raced Sunday night in Cleveland. Vince Velasquez and Rhys Hoskins struggled and the Phillies were pushed to the brink of wild-card elimination.

Gabe Kapler was not the people’s choice to lead the Phillies, Scott Lauber writes, so owner John Middleton must not allow public opinion to decide Kapler’s future. “When it comes to the future of manager Gabe Kapler, Middleton would be wise to turn down the radio and shut out the Twitterati. This subject, at least, isn’t binary. It’s too nuanced for a poll.”

Matt Klentak’s support of Kapler, Bob Brookover writes, is an interesting twist in the team’s managerial decision. “Unsurprisingly, general manager Matt Klentak believes Kapler has done a fine job in his second season as manager. It is a biased opinion, and it should be. Klentak hired Kapler, and after two seasons, he still sees a lot of things to love about him as the Phillies manager.”

Important dates

Tonight: Zach Eflin faces left-hander Patrick Corbin, 7:05 p.m.

Tomorrow afternoon: The Phillies open a doubleheader with a make-up game from June, 1:05 p.m.

Tomorrow night: Aaron Nola starts against right-hander Max Scherzer, 7:05 p.m.

Wednesday: Drew Smyly faces right-hander Anibal Sanchez, 7:05 p.m.

Thursday: Jason Vargas makes his final start of the season against right-hander Stephen Strasburg, 4:05 p.m.

Stat of the day

If the Phillies miss the playoffs, it will be the eighth straight season without postseason baseball in Philadelphia. Of the 15 National League clubs, only the Phillies, Marlins, and Padres have failed to make the playoffs after 2011.

None of the three have had a winning season in that span, and only the Marlins have had a second-place finish. Keeping company with San Diego and Miami was never the Phillies’ intention.

From the mailbag

Send questions by email or on Twitter @matt_breen.

Question: What do you think about this scenario for 2020: Phils sign Anthony Rendon, Alec Bohm moves to first base, Rhys Hoskins traded for some top-of-the-line pitching. Far-fetched? — Don D. via email.

Answer: Thanks, Don. I don’t think it’s far-fetched, but it could be a bit unlikely.

The Phillies are going to have to add starting pitching this winter, or else they’ll be in the same place in a year. One of those ways could be to get creative and trade a player such as Hoskins. If you trade Hoskins this winter, you’d probably be dealing at a low price because he has batted .188 with a .715 OPS since the All-Star break. It might be hard to get the right value in return.

The Phillies have a lot of money to spend this winter and will be on Rendon, the prize hitter of this free-agent class. And it is interesting that Bohm played some first base this season and will play some in the Arizona Fall League. The Phillies might not make the playoffs, but the offseason should be interesting.