Home/MLB
feature-image

via Imago

feature-image

via Imago

With the Philadelphia Phillies holding sole possession of the NL East, they have a five-game lead over the New York Mets. The Phillies are heading toward a potential October run, where DH Kyle Schwarber, who’s putting together one of his strongest seasons, could play a crucial role and also lock up a massive contract to stay in Philadelphia. However, his agent will definitely be fielding calls nonstop. Any contending club would go all in to land him and be willing to pay top dollar.

The 32-year-old led the National League to win in the All-Star Game home run derby “swing-off.” Across 100 at-bats, he’s hit 13 home runs and driven in 32 runs. He brought his season total to 43 homers. With that, he’s tied with Dodgers star Shohei Ohtani for the National League lead.

It’s just Seattle Mariners’ Cal Raleigh who is sitting ahead with 46 home runs across the league. However, his dominance will make him a highly coveted free agent. According to Jim Bowden from The Athletic, Schwarber ranks at No. 4 in the top free agents for the 2025-26 offseason.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

The Phillies star has crushed both righties (.563 slug) and lefties (.600) this season. Bowden also emphasized his intangibles, calling him the “king of teammates.” His baseball IQ and leadership are commendable. Well, all teams except the Dodgers (with Shohei Ohtani) and Yankees (with Giancarlo Stanton) would want Schwarber.

But at the same time, “the Phillies will make every effort to re-sign him, but it will be fascinating to see what the open market brings for this special power bat and teammate,” he noted. However, at this point in the season, manager Rob Thomson is shaking things up.

He is moving to a six-man rotation with Aaron Nola, who is returning soon, alongside Ranger Suárez, Cristopher Sánchez, Jesús Luzardo, Zack Wheeler, and Taijuan Walker, at least for one cycle. This will significantly affect the rhythm of the team. Moreover, moving forward, it could have an impact on Schwarber’s contract extension as well.

He signed a 4-year, $79 million contract ahead of the 2022 season. It’s fair to say that he has justified the contract. Now, even if he expects a massive multi-million-dollar deal, the Phillies shouldn’t flinch in meeting his expectations. But for now, he is helping the Phillies to stack wins.

Kyle Schwarber’s clutch dinger helped the Phillies snap a losing streak

The Phillies were restless to record some slump-busting runs on Friday night against the Washington Nationals. And there he was, Kyle Schwarber, who was excellent at the plate. He slammed a go-ahead three-run homer during the seventh inning. It contributed to the Phillies’ 6-2 win at Nationals Park, putting an end to their three-game losing skid.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

What’s your perspective on:

Can the Phillies afford to let Kyle Schwarber test free agency with his current form?

Have an interesting take?

After the seventh inning, he stepped up again and slugged. He crushed a 456-foot homer into the second deck in right field. It immediately drew loud cheers from the Phillies fans, who are known to be hard to impress.

Later, Bryce Harper added to the damage by crushing a slider over the center field wall. After that, the Phillies’ bullpen took over to finish off the Nationals. All three—Tanner Banks, Orion Kerkering, and Matt Strahm — pitched a scoreless inning.

Entering Saturday, the Phillies were sitting at 70-52. Friday night also marked Zack Wheeler’s second start since returning to the rotation after shoulder soreness. Wheeler pitched five innings, allowed four hits and two runs, while striking out six and walking two.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Coming to Schwarber, with the pace he is approaching this season, he could notch his first 50 home runs this season. The Phillies do need a proven power hitter like Schwarber. But there is a high possibility that the veteran will test the free agency waters.

ADVERTISEMENT

"Can the Phillies afford to let Kyle Schwarber test free agency with his current form?"

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT