The Phillies have been without ace right-hander Zack Wheeler in their rotation since August 15, and late last month it was announced that he had been recommended for surgery to correct thoracic outlet syndrome. Today, the Phillies revealed to reporters (including Charlotte Varnes of The Athletic) that Wheeler is set to go under the knife on September 23.
At the time of the club’s original announcement about Wheeler needing surgery, it was suggested that the procedure typically came with a 6-8 month recovery timeline. Assuming that holds true, Wheeler going under the knife later this month would mean that he could return to the Phillies’ rotation sometime in the first half of 2026. A best case scenario would seem to suggest that he’d miss the first few weeks of the regular season, with the longer end of that projected timeline getting Wheeler back on the mound a couple of weeks before the All-Star break. Of course, timelines like this are all largely hypothetical until the procedure actually occurs, and even afterwards there’s always the possibility of a setback or other developments changing the time table even further.
Still, the idea that Wheeler should be back on the mound at some point in the first half next year should surely be encouraging for fans in Philadelphia. The unquestioned ace of the club’s rotation, Wheeler has become more important to the team than ever as Ranger Suarez enters what could be the final weeks of his Phillies tenure with free agency coming up in November while Aaron Nola scuffles through a career-worst season. Cristopher Sanchez’s emergence as a legitimate front-of-the-rotation arm will go a long way to helping the team get by without Wheeler to take the lead, but it nonetheless goes without saying that the sooner the 35-year-old can return to the mound, the better off the organization will be.
The club’s news on injured right-hander Jordan Romano offers less reason for optimism. Romano has been on the shelf since August 26 due to finger inflammation, and today manager Rob Thomson provided the update to reporters (including Varnes) that Romano has been feeling numbness in his middle finger and stiffness in his neck. Thomson went on to suggest that it could be a “nerve thing” that Romano is dealing with, though he did not elaborate beyond that.
Romano has had a tough season with the Phillies after signing a one-year deal this winter. He’s pitched to a brutal 8.23 ERA in 42 2/3 innings of work this year despite solid peripherals (including a 3.65 SIERA) thanks in large part to an unbelievably low 49.0% strand rate after entering the season with a career 81.3% figure. While it’s not impossible to imagine Romano righting the ship if he can only come back healthy, the possibility of a lingering nerve problem being the cause of his inflammation would seemingly create pessimism about his ability to return this season and help the Phillies out during the postseason before he returns to free agency in November.
There’s more optimistic news to be had on the positional side of things, at least, as both Alec Bohm and Trea Turner are both making progress as they look to return from the injured list. Both players were placed on the shelf on September 8. Bohm was dealing with shoulder soreness, while Turner had been diagnosed with a grade 1 hamstring strain. With the Phillies in the thick of the playoff race and in position to claim a bye through the Wild Card round of the postseason, getting the left side of the club’s infield back in action as soon as possible would be a massive boost. Fortunately, Varnes relays that Turner did some running and played catch today with an eye towards swinging a bat later this week, while Bohm is already set to hit off a tee today.

Trea Turner “played catcher today”
Would think all that squatting would be a bad idea for a guy recovering from a hamstring injury.
Squat Therapy is currently very trendy, especially for osteoarthritis of the knee.
And maybe constipation.
I happened to meander by the Hot Yoga Studio the other day and the ladies class that was in session was doing the most challenging looking reverse-squat type maneuver on one arm that really boggled my mind.
Cool, he fixed it.
Now fix the part where Romano has an 8.23 ERA and a 3.65 ERA in the same sentence.
Fixed.
Hopefully for Wheeler he can make it back, didn’t work well with Harvey. I don’t remember anyone ever being the same after thoracic outlet surgery
Merrill Kelly is the only pitcher I can recall that successfully returned from TOS.
Two types of TOS – Wheeler is getting the one that has a far better success rate…
Yes, I believe Wheeler is getting the same kind that Merrill Kelly got. The other kind (that Harvey, Strasburg, etc got) is pretty much a career-ender.
love it sprankton, love it … bc its true
Of all the season ending injuries this season, I feel like the Wheeler one may be the most devastating to a team’s championship hopes. The Phillies rotation is still pretty good without him, but what a massive loss for a team that was considered one of the favorites to win the WS this year. I’m not a Phillies fan but I do feel badly for their team and fans.
The three southpaws will be just fine so don’t feel to badly. Still the favorite.
I can’t picture any fan of the Phillies waiting with bated breath on any health updates in regards to Romano. That signing looked like a turd sandwich on wheels the day it was announced.
Subdued shallow breathing coming up.
(I looked up the origin of bated breath).
The only way he should be used in the playoffs is if we are ahead by a minimum of 8-10 runs.
Phillies out 3 main guys, and the team doesn’t miss ONE FRICKIN BEAT. Shakin’ my damn head.
Romano is a nerve thing. He’s stinks so bad, he makes you nervous in any spot. The only way he helps the Phillies is if he stays on the IL into The end of his contract.
It happens, lb444. You don’t hit on all of them – Romano was a very good closer until a health issue got in the way last season. The Phils gambled and lost on an injury upside play, and there is no such thing as a bad one year deal.
Every team and every GM misses on a few – some teams more than most. The Phils have had a very good overall track record under DD & Co..
On behalf of all batters who’ve faced Jordan Romano in 2025, I’m filing a class action lawsuit against the Phillies. These victimized barely-replacement-level batters worked hard to draw walks and smash balls thrown right over the plate, and then when on base they’ve had the liberty to roam the base paths at will. With Romano “injured”, these men have to work harder to get on base and will be limited in their ability to just walk to 2nd despite how menacing and attentive Romano tries to look with that Fraggle Rock demeanor on the mount.
JUSTICE FOR REPLACEMENT LEVEL PLAYERS IN LOW LEVERAGE LATE INNING SITUATIONS!
Surprisingly Losing Turner has not slowed them down at all. The Phillies haven’t lost a game since he was put on the injured list. Unlike Anthony for the Rsox whose departure has definitely been missed in that lineup. Very telling.
The team has certainly risen to the occasion but the playoffs of course are a different animal. Guys like Bader, Sosa, Kepler have performed at high levels and have been difference makers. Will it be continue in a playoff series? The bullpen still has holes and against good teams in tight games could be a weakness…as Turner and Bohm get back in the lineup for the playoffs after layoffs, does the chemistry get altered as expectations change…I’m not sold that the Phil’s are really a WS championship team, but the weak competition from other contenders is giving hope. We’ve seen this team shutdown offensively when pressured in the playoffs a couple times against teams they should have beaten (Mets,Diamondbacks), all with the same core offense. Add in the loss of Wheeler and further decline of Nola, the pressure will be higher to produce runs…and when they all start trying to hit it out of the park every AB in the playoffs, they seem to collapse on themselves…anyway…just sayin…I’m tempering my enthusiasm.