The Phillies are mostly running back the same squad as last year, but with a few key adjustments.
Major League Signings
- DH Kyle Schwarber: Five years, $150MM (includes $15MM signing bonus)
- C J.T. Realmuto: Three years, $45MM
- RHP Brad Keller: Two years, $22MM (includes $4MM signing bonus)
- OF Adolis García: One year, $10MM
- RHP Zach Pop: Split deal, $900K in majors, $250K in minors
2026 spending (not including Pop): $66MM
Total spending (not including Pop): $227MM
Trades and Claims
- Claimed OF Pedro León off waivers from Orioles
- Selected RHP Zach McCambley from Marlins in Rule 5 draft
- Acquired RHP Yoniel Curet from Rays for RHP Tommy McCollum
- Acquired LHP Kyle Backhus from Diamondbacks for OF Avery Owusu-Asiedu
- Acquired RHP Jonathan Bowlan from Royals for LHP Matt Strahm
- Acquired RHP Chase Shugart from Pirates for IF Francisco Loreto
Option Decisions
- OF Harrison Bader declined $10MM mutual option
- Club exercised $9MM option on LHP José Alvarado
Notable Minor League Signings
- Liover Peguero, Bryan De La Cruz, Michael Mercado, Bryse Wilson, Levi Stoudt, Mark Kolozsvary, Tucker Davidson, Génesis Cabrera, Tim Mayza, Dylan Moore, Daniel Robert, Lou Trivino, Connor Gillispie
Extensions
- LHP Jesús Luzardo: Five years, $135MM (includes $32.5MM club option for 2032)
Notable Losses
- Ranger Suárez, Harrison Bader, Max Kepler (unsigned and serving PED suspension), Walker Buehler, Jordan Romano, Rafael Lantigua, Griff McGarry (Rule 5 draft), Matt Strahm, Weston Wilson (waivers), Nick Castellanos (released)
The Phillies went into the winter with a batch of notable players reaching free agency. Kyle Schwarber, J.T. Realmuto, Ranger Suárez and Harrison Bader were among the players heading to the open market. The Phils generally run one of the top payrolls in the league, but it never seemed like they would have the money to bring back all of them.
Schwarber and Realmuto felt like the priorities. Losing Suárez would hurt the rotation, but the Phils could still hope for a good starting group without him. There would be some extra risk because Zack Wheeler required surgery to address thoracic outlet syndrome, but he is expected back fairly early in the 2026 season. Once he is back, four spots would be taken by Wheeler, Aaron Nola, Cristopher Sánchez and Jesús Luzardo. The final spot could then come down to a battle between Taijuan Walker and Andrew Painter. Painter still has options and could be sent to Triple-A if he doesn’t win that battle. Walker has been nudged into a long relief role in the past and could wind up there again.
In center field, the Phils seemed committed to giving Justin Crawford a shot. He was pushing for a promotion in 2025 until they acquired Bader at the deadline. He is still not on the 40-man roster, but the Phils have more or less handed him the job for 2026. He has a particularly contact- and speed-based approach. He’s never hit ten home runs in a season but puts the ball in play and lets his legs do the work.
There is risk in relying on prospects with no major league experience but those are better fallback plans than the Phils had for the other spots. They didn’t have an everyday catcher waiting to take over for Realmuto and certainly didn’t have a Schwarber-esque bat to plug into the DH spot.
Schwarber’s market was hot, unsurprising for a guy who has been so good at the plate in recent years. It felt like the Phillies would match whatever other clubs were willing to offer — and that is exactly how it played out. The Pirates, shockingly, put forth an offer in the $120-125MM range over four years. The Orioles reportedly pushed the bidding up to $150MM over five years but the Phils got it done at that price. It’s a historic deal. Putting aside Shohei Ohtani, no primary designated hitter had earned a nine-figure deal in free agency before. No hitter, regardless of position, had reached nine figures going into his age-33 season.
For a 33-year-old DH to blow past both of those benchmarks and get to $150MM showcases just how good Schwarber has been. He just crushed 56 home runs last year while continuing to run elite walk rates. He has also erased his previous platoon issues, as he was actually better against lefties in both 2024 and 2025.
Bringing back Schwarber left Realmuto as the primary item on the to-do list but the Phils explored a different path. With Bo Bichette lingering unsigned into January, the Phils tried to take advantage by offering him a seven-year deal worth almost $200M. He decided to opt for the short-term route with high average annual values, accepting a three-year deal from the Mets worth $126MM with opt-outs.
With the Phils having Trea Turner and Bryson Stott in their middle infield, it seemed the plan was to put Bichette at third. The Phils could have then traded Alec Bohm and his $10.2MM salary, perhaps for catching. The Bichette offer was worth about $28MM annually, so they would have been adding about $18MM to the payroll if they were able to flip Bohm for a league minimum player or prospect. When Bichette went elsewhere, the Phils quickly turned to Realmuto and gave him $45MM over three years, or $15MM annually.
Bringing back Schwarber and Realmuto is nice, but there’s a bit of risk in continually committing to an aging roster. Both guys are now signed through their respective age-37 seasons. Turner and Bryce Harper are going into their age-33 seasons and still under contract into the next decade. Wheeler and Nola are in their mid-30s as well. There’s a financial aspect in hoping for Crawford and Painter to carve out roles on the 2026 club, but they also need some young guys to step up in order to avoid getting blindsided by the aging curve.
One area where change seemed to be guaranteed was right field. Manager Rob Thomson and Nick Castellanos had clashed a few times in the 2025 season. The organization seemed to have no questions about where they stood in terms of that spat. Within a few days of the Phils being eliminated from the playoffs, it was reported that Thomson would be back for 2026. He and the Phils would sign an extension in December.
Castellanos, on the other hand, was out the door. In mid-October, just a few days after the report of Thomson staying, it was reported that the Phils were going to move on from Castellanos. They held onto him throughout the winter to see if a trade could come together but it never did. He was released in February, just before camps opened for spring training.
In the interim, they had replaced him with Adolis García. He had been non-tendered by the Rangers after two down years. Castellanos is one of the worst outfield defenders in the league and García is pretty good with the glove, so he’ll certainly be an upgrade in that department. His offense is more questionable, as he is coming off a dismal .227/.271/.394 showing. He’s not too far removed from a 39-homer season in 2023 but is now 33 years old. Helping him get back on track will be pivotal to the Phillies’ success.
There was another bit of internal drama, but with no real consequences. President of baseball operations Dave Dombrowski made some disparaging remarks about Harper’s 2025 season, which annoyed Harper and led to some brief trade rumors. Those rumors were quickly shot down and Dombrowski suggested the proverbial water had passed under the bridge.
A third note of clubhouse discord seemed to impact the club’s bullpen plans. Left-hander Matt Strahm was traded to the Royals for right-hander Jonathan Bowlan on Dec. 19. Dombrowski framed it as simply a product of circumstances. Bowlan is less established than Strahm, but he has big stuff, is still making the league minimum and can be controlled for six years. Strahm had one season left on his deal and will make $7.5MM in 2026. The Phils had three lefty relievers at the start of the winter, with José Alvarado and Tanner Banks being the other two. But in the days after the trade, it was reported that the Phils were motivated to move Strahm because he had regularly clashed with team officials.
Regardless of the motivation, a key piece of the bullpen had been subtracted. The Phils then used free agency to bolster the group, signing Brad Keller to a two-year deal worth $22MM. Keller was once a decent starter with the Royals but was largely in the injury wilderness in 2023 and 2024. He had a tremendous bounceback season out of the Cubs’ bullpen in 2025, tossing 69 2/3 innings with a 2.07 earned run average, 27.2% strikeout rate, 8% walk rate and 56.1% ground ball rate. Some clubs were interested in putting Keller back in a starting role but the Phils plan to deploy him as a reliever.
A few more notable developments popped up during spring training. Outfielder Johan Rojas has received an 80-game suspension after testing positive for a performance-enhancing drug. He is the third member of the 2025 Phillies to receive a PED suspension, alongside Alvarado and Max Kepler. With the Phils giving Crawford the center field opportunity to start the season, Rojas was going to be a potential fallback plan if Crawford struggled.
It’s not a devastating loss, but it gives the Phils a bit less of a safety net in a position where they are taking a risk. Perhaps they’ll look to add some center field depth in the coming weeks as spring training ends and other clubs make their cuts, which will send some players to the waiver wire or back to free agency.
The other big development out of Phillies camp was the Jesús Luzardo extension. He and the club agreed to a five-year deal worth $135MM, beginning in 2027. That doesn’t impact the 2026 club but staves off a potential rotation pitfall a year from now. Both Luzardo and Walker were slated for free agency after 2026. The ’27 rotation projects to have a core four of Wheeler, Nola, Luzardo and Sánchez. With Walker’s impending departure, there’s a path for Painter or someone else to step up a seize a future spot. If not, the Phillies are never hesitant to spend in free agency.
On the whole, the Phils are mostly keeping the band together. The rotation is losing Suárez, but perhaps Painter can make up for his loss somewhat. The outfield has been shaken up a bit, with Crawford and García set to replace Bader and Castellanos. The bullpen has had a few changes as well.
But the core will largely be the same. With Schwarber and Realmuto back, those two will be lineup fixtures alongside Harper, Turner, Bohm, Marsh and Stott. It’s obviously a strong group, with an active streak of four straight postseason appearances. The playoff results have been more disappointing recently, but the regular season numbers keep getting better. They went from 87 wins in 2022 to 90, 95 and 96 in the next three campaigns.
It seems the club has tried to strike a balance. With most of those core players being in their mid-30s and signed for many years to come, there’s surely a concern about eventually getting too old at some point, but they do want to keep it going for now. They will try to get an injection of youth from Crawford and Painter. They almost got a bit more youth from the Bichette signing but couldn’t quite pull it off, which led to the Realmuto reunion and greater continuity.
How would you grade the Phillies' offseason?
Photo courtesy of Bill Streicher, Imagn Images

I am cautiously optimistic. If Wheeler comes back as something approaching his old self we’re a top 5 rotation. Stott finally matures. And an aging core somehow stays healthy.
At the risk of triggering a couple of nudniks, I’m hopeful about Zack Wheeler’s return.
WTH -nudnik- you are definitely a philly guy
Mickey Morandini style!
D. This will not age well and I feel they should’ve gotten Bo Bichette and there were for sure more moves they could’ve made. If Wheeler is healthy, it’s Sanchez, Wheeler, Luzardo, Nola, and Painter. This isn’t a bad roster, but I feel like they should’ve have made some more moves and trading Strahm for Bowlan doesn’t look good.
They tried to get Bichette. He didn’t sign here. That’s not the Phillies fault. and paying more would not have aged well. They have a very good team. Wheeler coming back earlier helps. Strahm was becoming an issue in the clubhouse and he wasn’t signing here. The bullpen will be fine and is starting better than this time last year.
Need to see how Crawford and Painter do.
Team could use an infusion of younger talent.
If they get off to a slow start and/or underperform, then I can see
Dombrowski making a blockbuster deal to shake up this ballclub.
Is Dallas Green still available? 🤣
The guy with the .487 winning percentage?
The guy who brought Philly its first World Championship EVER in almost a century of playing baseball.
And neither is Dallas Goedert.
Moe Green maybe
Or possibly Moe Szyslak?
Woe is me. Moe is we.
B. The Castellanos distraction is no more and they filled the holes with the cash in hand. The team wasn’t bad to begin with.
Philly fans will boo Santa and Mike Schmidt though so I imagine it won’t go well.
Still on the hook for that 1968 booing. Tough crowd.
Based on that picture looks more like the town of brotherly love or heated rivalry than booing
Basically, that’s been Dombro’s M.O. He signs FA, trades away prospects and does get his teams into the playoffs. But once that party ends there ain’t much left and he moves on elsewhere to rinse and repeat.
He hasn’t done that here…… hasn’t traded Miller, Painter, Crawford….
Nori will stay in AA and be the next OF to be put on the 40 man roster when needed. Thanks WBC for the showcase on Team It-Lee
Speaking of booing, Philly fans better get their vocal chords warmed up because Adolis Garcia will stack strikeouts like firewood this year, just as he has each season.
He’s good for at least two to three a game.
Believe me. As a Rangers’ fan, I suffered through his at bats for several seasons, even the 2023 World Series title year.
If you knew any of truth.
A) That was the Philadelphia “Eagles” fans (Not “Phillies” fans. There IS a difference. I am a Phillies fan, NOT an Eagles fan.) that booed Santa and that was misconstrued by the media to make the fans look bad.
B) Schmidt admitted the fans had the right to boo him when they did and he even joked about it when returning home to Philly to play the next homestand. There is absolutely no bad feelings between Schmidt and the Phillies fans even today. Schmidt actually does Sundays with Schmidt game broadcasts.
So give it up.
Love this! In 250 years, when the United States of Trump celebrate 5 centuries, there’s still going to be fire back and forth over Philly Santagate!
Great defense. We learned this in law school. 1) It never happened but 2) when it happened it was misconstrued by the media and 3) while it didn’t happen the guy booed admitted that they had the right to boo him. Though it didn’t happen.
“They will try to get an injection of youth from Crawford and Painter. ”
Johan Rojas got an injection of youth and it didn’t work out so well.
You win.
Johan Rojas has never hit at any level and there was never any expectation he would hit major league pitching. Crawford and Painter are way better projects. Crawford is a contact hitter with a lot of speed plus he is selective at the plate. Let’s see how he does but I suspect he will be way better than Rojas. They say the second year after TJ surgery helps a pitcher get back to his former self. I think Painter will be fine. Neither player has the burden on them to be the man.
Nola is 32 years old, that is not “mid – thirties”. He has looked really good in spring training and in two starts with the Italian National team.
Had the Phillies signed Bichette, he was never going to play third base. He was slated to play second base. Bohm was never going to be traded.
Yep, could have made Stott a CF, played Crawford in RF and Marsh in LF. Pretty good defense there.
Ah, that’s because you haven’t used the pitching years formula:
Pitcher’s age = age + TJ surgeries + 1 year for every 100 innings pitched – months on a PED regiment x pi / 10
This looks bad. An old team got even older, and committed $45m a year for the next three seasons and $30m a year for the two seasons after that—just to ensure they do worse than tread water compared with 2025.
Not a tasty recipe.
They did not improve, and in fact I think they got worse.
I feel this group peaked in 2022-23, and it was an awesome run, just got unlucky. Running it back with the same group four years later seems kind of desperate.
Don’t like the A. Garcia signing. Okay, he’s a better glove than Castellanos, but that ain’t saying much. Would have preferred they brought back Harrison Bader instead. Also don’t quite get how quickly they opted to move on from Walker Buehler. He signed a minor league deal with SD, and it looks like he’ll now be part of their rotation. Heck, I’d take any SP over Taijuan Walker.
Buehler wanted more of a guarantee to be a starter…. Phillies couldn’t promise that. Buehler chose to go elsewhere….. it’s not always the team decision.
Doing the same thing (putting the same post-season losing team on the field) over and over and expecting a different result is the definition of ………?.
No worse than running out in a panic and making wholesale changes that there is absolutely no guarantee that different players would improve the team
Never know if you dont try ,and this doesnt look like trying.
You’re the typical Monday morning quarterback…. if they made wholesale changes, then you would still gripe…..not unusual for fans. 4-6 new players on the team this year and a full year of Duran…. not exactly running it back. Thats a decent turnover of the roster
MLB?
Isn’t that what the Astros were doing when they brought back Correa?
I gave them a D. Would have been an A if they could have actually found anyone willing to trade for Castellanos, but instead they just wound up eating the money
I’ll split the difference with you and enjoy watching Nick from afar. I rooted for the guy from the day he arrived until the day he departed, but he seriously needed a change of scenery.
Because nobody wanted him badly enough to give the Phillies anybody in return.
So no one wanted Casty in a trade and that’s the Phillies’s fault? As an opposing GM, how much would you have paid for Casty? Or do you just wait until released and then pay the minimum?
Schwarber good. But there is more dead weight to cut. And more talent to elevate.
Their outfield is terrible. Real contenders shouldn’t have so many IF’s in the starting lineup.
They went to the WS with a worse outfield.
That’s just a stupid comment, at least from an offensive perspective.
No loss with Rojas. Can’t use a roster spot for a defense first outfielder and a pinch runner. Besides, I have flashlight batteries with more power than Rojas.
They didn’t really need to do much, but I think they should’ve done better than Garcia. They’ve essentially replaced Casty with a better defender and similar bat. I think they needed more there. Painter and Crawford need to play, so it was smart giving them the opportunity. I think their rotation is one of the better ones, but it’s lacking depth if anyone gets hurt. They’ll still compete for the division crown and should win around 90 games barring injury.
Agreed……with the normal course of injuries a team has each year, this team should be able to win 90 plus games…… some of the Phillies fans really forget the bad years…
This team sort of reminds me of the early 2000s Phils, who held onto fading stars like Utley, Rollins and Howard for too long. I hope it turns out better for this squad.
I think it’s quite different because they’re very intentionally injecting youth into the mix. Painter and Crawford are getting spots. The Luzardo signing was a clear message that Sanchez and Luzardo are the future of this rotation. The 2011-12 Phillies didn’t have this youth movement.
It was a c and that’s being generous.
I’m a bit confused by the article. early on it notes the Ranger Suarez loss yet further on down it still counts him in on the rotation. Am I missing something?
No, Ranger has departed the Phillies organization.
The season really depends on Wheeler being healthy and a HOF pitcher in September to October. I don’t see them making it to a WS without him.
If Crawford doesn’t work in CF, and the platoon plan in LF doesn’t work, they do not have real pieces to trade to fix those holes in a meaningful way. It may require sending Miller out there?
Bo would have been such a good addition bc he is a consistent hitter. when the deadline comes along they need to target someone that isn’t going to just go cold in October which is easier said than done but that’s a legitimate concern. They need someone that can be plugged into the middle of the lineup and get the engine going when Schwarber and Harper go cold.
I gave them a B. I was flipping back and forth between B and C. I believe they did what they had to do in resigning Schwarber, Realmuto and Luzardo. They did about as much as they could do with what was available in the offseason and with this contract juggernaut of a team. Which definitely does put them in a predicament in the coming years as they all age.
But the main goal is to win it all this year. Which most of the team played together to know each other’s abilities and flaws and can mesh as a team. For after this year who knows what becomes of baseball anyway. I’m not feeling too hopeful for the future of baseball after this year.
So, with that, I’ll give them a B for this year.
I voted B. Tacking in on their age seems fine to me given who the players are
Clear F… Dumbo did nothing to improve the roster, threw away $20m letting Casty walk, failed to bring in a legit Right Handed bat to protect Harper and/or Schwarber.
Leaves the team with zero trade leverage by criticizing players like Casty and Bohm with the press.
Declines the paltry club option on Bader, and trades away one of the most reliable bullpen arms we’ve had for the last 3 years in Strahm.
The only good move was letting that overrated bum Bichette get away to butcher 3B somewhere else.
That’s Hall of Famer Dave Dombrowski you are referring to. Bader isn’t the missing link. In fact, Nori may be it. And Casty deserves every bit of bad press. The guy became disgruntled. Starting rotation seems fine to make a long run and have an enjoyable season. Strahm??? Come on…..
OPENING DAY B%$#&@S