The Phillies played 82 games from the start of the season to the end of June, going 51-31. In those 82 games, they were eighth in the NL in runs scored. After June, the Phils played 80 games, going 51-29. They led the league in runs scored in those 80 games.
Here’s a look back at what the offense did by position, breaking the season down into two halves — the 82 games through the end of June and the 80 games after the start of July.
Catcher:
Ruiz served as the primary catcher for the Phils in both the first and second half of the season. He was simply much better during the second half (after the end of June) than he was in the first.
| PA | HR | RBI | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| April-June | 221 | 3 | 16 | 243 | 348 | 333 |
| July to End | 251 | 3 | 24 | 317 | 391 | 425 |
Ruiz played a little more in the second half and showed more power, but mostly just got a lot more hits, hitting .317 in the second half after hitting .243 in the first. He actually walked a little less regularly in the second half, about 9.2% of his plate appearances compared to about 11.3% in the first half, but his on-base percentage was a whole lot better thanks to the much better batting average.
First base:
At first, Howard fared about as well after the end of June as he had in the first 82 games of the year:
| PA | HR | RBI | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| April-June | 353 | 17 | 64 | 254 | 354 | 488 |
| July to End | 291 | 16 | 52 | 252 | 337 | 488 |
Very similar numbers for Howard in both halves. He walked more regularly in the first half, but hit for nearly the same average with about the same power.
The Phils did see a benefit at the position in the second half of the year thanks to John Mayberry. Mayberry started just ten games at first the whole year, but nine of those starts came after the end of June. Mayberry crushed the ball in 2011 while playing first for the Phillies — in his 45 plate appearances while playing first he put up a monster 409/422/682 line.
Second:
Second base was an offensive disaster for the Phils in the early part of the season. Chase Utley returned at the end of May and hit .222 in 27 May at-bats, but followed that up with a fantastic June in which he hit 297/387/470. He was even better in July as he hit 293/369/550. From August 1 to the end of the regular season he hit a meager 227/305/343. Here’s what his numbers first and second half look like:
| PA | HR | RBI | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| April-June | 140 | 3 | 16 | 280 | 381 | 449 |
| July to End | 314 | 8 | 28 | 250 | 328 | 414 |
Utley was simply not good after the end of June, hitting just .250 and on-basing .328. As uninspired as those numbers are, they still were a significant improvement for a team that struggled to find offense from the position while Utley was out.
Here’s the numbers of games started at second base for the Phils in the first and second halves of the year:
| 1st Half (April-June) | 2nd half (July-end) | |
| Utley | 31 (37.8%) | 69 (86.3%) |
| Valdez | 31 (37.8%) | 2 (2.5%) |
| Orr | 16 (19.5%) | 4 (7.5%) |
| Martinez | 4 (4.9%) | 3 (3.7%) |
So Utley started about 38% of the games at second through the end of June and about 86% of the games after June. And even though he wasn’t hitting particularly Utley-like, that’s still important. Cause even a sluggish Utley is a whole lot better offensively than those other guys. Here’s what the four guys who started games for the Phillies at second did offensively while playing that position in 2011:
| PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| Utley | 451 | 257 | 340 | 423 |
| Valdez | 126 | 246 | 289 | 307 |
| Orr | 82 | 213 | 280 | 240 |
| Martinez | 30 | 241 | 267 | 379 |
Even an Utley way off his game was way better than the rest of those guys, most notably out on-basing the second-best on-base percentage in the group (Valdez) by more than fifty points.
After Utley returned to the Phillies on May 23, the Phils led the NL in runs scored the rest of the way. That was despite the fact that the offense wasn’t good at all in June, though, as the Phils finished eleventh in the NL that month. Because the offense was so terrible in June (despite a monster 297/387/470 line for Utley for the month) it’s hard for me to see his return as the turnaround point for the offense. The offense was best in the NL after that date because 1) they were fantastic in July, better than any other NL team, and very strong in August and September and 2) in the nine games from May 23 to the end of May, the Phils played nine games and scored 51 runs or 5.67 runs per game.
Third base:
Polanco, you may have noticed, was atrocious in 2011. He didn’t start out that way, though. He hit nearly .400 in April, putting up a 398/447/524 line over 114 plate appearances. After that he hit 243/304/287 the rest of the way.
He played a lot less in the second half of the season, and without the huge April his numbers were a lot worse:
| PA | HR | RBI | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| April-June | 340 | 4 | 39 | 288 | 339 | 363 |
| July to End | 183 | 1 | 11 | 258 | 328 | 294 |
When he did play in the second half, Polanco’s walk rate rose a little (8.7% of plate appearances compared to 7.6% in the first half), but his average was way off and his power nearly gone altogether. He had four extra-base hits from July 1 to the end of the year.
Here’s who started at third for the Phils through the end of June and after the start of July:
| 1st Half (April-June) | 2nd half (July-end) | |
| Polanco | 76 (92.7%) | 39 (48.8%) |
| Valdez | 6 (7.3%) | 15 (18.7%) |
| Martinez | 0 (0%) | 24 (30.0%) |
| Orr | 0 (0%) | 2 (2.5%) |
Polanco got more than 90% of the starts in the first 82 games of the year for the Phils. After the start of July, Valdez, Martinez and Orr combined to start more often at third than he did.
Here’s what the guys did offensively while playing third for the Phils this year:
| PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| Polanco | 513 | 280 | 337 | 343 |
| Martinez | 104 | 231 | 304 | 352 |
| Valdez | 84 | 253 | 286 | 354 |
| Orr | 7 | 000 | 000 | 000 |
Unlike second base, there was not a huge improvement at the position when the Phils got their starter on the field. For the year, Valdez and Martinez both offered significantly more power from the position while getting on base a little less. Not to be forgotten is that Polanco hit 243/304/287 for the year after the end of April — both Martinez and Valdez gave the Phils more offense at third when they played than Polanco did after his strong April.
Short:
At shortstop, Jimmy Rollins was a much better offensive player in the second half of the year than he was in the first.
| PA | HR | RBI | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| April-June | 352 | 7 | 31 | 254 | 327 | 368 |
| July to End | 279 | 9 | 32 | 286 | 351 | 437 |
More hits and more power for Rollins in the second half of the season than the first. His walk rate was down, but just a tiny bit, and thanks to all the hits his on-base percentage was up to .351. From June 26 through August 20, Rollins hit 298/372/461 over 215 plate appearances.
He didn’t play nearly as much in the second half as he did the first. Valdez made 20 starts at short on the season and 15 of them came after the start of July. Valdez had solid numbers while playing short for the Phils in 2011, though, posting a 278/338/414 line over 81 plate appearances. That’s very similar to the 272/340/417 line that Rollins put up while playing short in 2011.
While playing short for the Phils in 2011, Valdez posted a 278/338/414 line over 81 plate appearances. He got 219 plate appearances as something other than a shortstop. In those plate appearances he hit 239/277/313.
Left field:
Ibanez didn’t play as much in left field in the second half of the season, but when he did he was a little better:
| PA | HR | RBI | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| April-June | 309 | 9 | 34 | 235 | 285 | 393 |
| July to End | 266 | 11 | 50 | 256 | 293 | 448 |
He was still terrible at getting on base, but Ibanez did show a bit more power in the second half of the year.
Ibanez started in left in 72 of the first 82 (87.8%) games of the season for the Phils. After the start of July the Phils played 80 games and he started just 59 (73.7%). The other 21 second-half starts were made by Mayberry (12) and Francisco (nine).
Both of those guys were fantastic in the second half. Here’s what the two did after the start of July (at all positions, not just left field):
| PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| Mayberry | 179 | 301 | 358 | 607 |
| Francisco | 65 | 322 | 354 | 407 |
Mayberry was absolutely fantastic in the second half, hitting 12 home runs in 179 plate appearances while on-basing .358. That’s a lot of home runs — at that pace he would hit about 37 over a season of 550 plate appearances. For the season, he actually hit 15 over 296 plate appearances, which would have him at about 25 over 550 plate appearances.
Francisco hardly played at all after the start of July, but when he did he hit .322. That’s more than a hundred points higher than the .220 he hit in 228 plate appearances in the first 82 games of the season when he had a chance to cement his status as an everyday player. Just a tiny number of chances for Francisco in the second half, but I do think it’s curious that he seemingly forgot all about try to walk and hit .322. In the first 82 games of the season he walked in 12.7% of his plate appearances and in the last 80 he got just 65 plate appearances but walked in only 6.2% of them.
As bad as Francisco was with the Phils in 2011, he on-based .340 for the season, which was a career high. I think there’s a good chance that the Phils are going to regret having given him away.
Center Field:
Victorino played about as much in center the first and second halves of the season with about the same results.
| PA | HR | RBI | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| April-June | 288 | 9 | 31 | 289 | 359 | 504 |
| July to End | 298 | 8 | 30 | 270 | 351 | 479 |
More hits in the first half, more walks in the second with about the same power all season long. Victorino started 63 of the 82 first half games (76.8%) and 63 of the 80 second-half games (78.5%). He really only had one month of the season where he wasn’t an outstanding offensive player in 2011 and that was September. After going 2-for-4 with a walk against the Fish on September 2, Victorino was hitting a silly 308/384/542 for the season. He would hit 163/237/288 in 115 plate appearances the rest of the way. Curiously the Phils kept playing him and playing him down the stretch, even after they clinched and he continued to slump. Victorino got 125 plate appearances in September, which led the team and was also the most he had in any month in 2011.
There were 34 games for the Phils in 2011 when Victorino didn’t start at center. Mayberry started 26 of them and Martinez eight. Martinez was predictably terrible, going 5-for-39 with five singles and no walks (128/128/128).
Overall for the year, Mayberry didn’t get on base a whole lot in his 115 plate appearances as a center fielder, but he did show a ton of power. He posted a 236/296/472 line in center for the season.
In his 13 starts in center field in the first half of the year, Mayberry was wretched. In those 13 games he hit 191/255/277. In the second half he started 13 games as well, but with much different results, posting a 291/328/673. In 13 second-half starts in center, Mayberry went 16-for-55 with 12 of the 16 hits going for extra-bases — seven doubles, a triple and four home runs. Four home over 13 starts is impressive, but so is seven doubles. At that pace, over 162 starts you would tally about 50 home runs and 87 doubles.
Right field:
Hunter Pence was traded from the Astros in late July and played his first game with the Phils on July 30. He was great in August (340/413/600) and almost as great in September (317/385/550).
For the 2011 season, Pence hit 325/396/563 in 235 plate appearances as the right field fielder for the Phillies.
This is what the guys for the Phils other than Pence who played right field for the Phils did in 2011 while playing right field:
| PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | |
| Francisco | 208 | 232 | 335 | 367 |
| Brown | 205 | 240 | 332 | 391 |
| Mayberry | 26 | 318 | 423 | 727 |
| Gload | 10 | 300 | 300 | 300 |
| Bowker | 2 | 000 | 000 | 000 |
| Moss | 2 | 000 | 000 | 000 |
Mayberry had some nifty numbers in 26 plate appearances and Gload went 3-for-10, but those guys were bad overall. Most notably, Brown and Francisco combined to get 413 plate appearances in which they hit a meager 236/333/379 combined.
To summarize:
- In right, Pence arrived at the end of July and was not just good but great, hitting 324/394/560 over 236 plate appearances with the Phils.
- At second, the first half production was miserable. Utley returned on May 23 and gave the Phils an enormous boost, replacing at-bats by Valdez, Orr and Martinez with Utley at-bats. He didn’t have a Chase Utley-like performance after the start of July, hitting just 250/328/414 from the start July to the end of the season, but it was still enough to give the Phils a huge boost at the position.
- At catcher, Ruiz was a better hitter after the start of July. Getting about the same playing time in both halves, Ruiz hit 243/348/333 before the start of July and 317/391/425 from the start of July to the end of the regular season.
- At short, Rollins, like Ruiz, was just better at offensively during the second half, hitting 286/351/437 after the start of July having ended June with a 254/327/368 line.
- In left, Ibanez was bad both halves, but did get better in the second half and showed more power. He also played less in the second half as Francisco and Mayberry combined to make 21 starts in left. Francisco was good in limited time in the second half and Mayberry was great, hitting 301/358/607.
- In center, Victorino had similar numbers both halves with a little drop off after July. Mayberry started the same number of games in center in the first and second halves (13), but had much better numbers in his 13 starts in center after July than before it. In 13 starts in center before the end of June he hit 191/255/277. In his 13 starts in center after the start of July he hit 291/328/673.
- At first base, Ryan Howard had similar numbers in both halves. The Phils got a small bump at the position from Mayberry at the second half when Mayberry started nine of the ten games he started at first for the season. For the year, Mayberry hit a silly 409/422/682 as a 1B.
- At third, Polanco, awful with the bat in 2011, did see less time at third during the second half of the year, but his fantastic April plus the fact that the guys who replaced him at third when he didn’t play in the second half didn’t do much of anything to help the Phillies.
Again, the Phils got a huge boost from Mayberry in the last 80 games, helping out in left, center and at first base.
A big question about the second-half surge seems to be whether Utley’s return or Pence’s arrival was a bigger factor. My thinking is that Pence was a bigger factor from July to the end of the year, but Utley’s return was likely a bigger factor for the year. More on that soon.
The comments close two weeks after a post is published, which is why we could not continue the discussion from the previous about whether or not David Wright is coming to the Phils. He’s not. Or at least a lot of people are going to be real surprised if he is.


December 27th, 2011 on 2:14 pm
I fully expect 50 home runs and 87 doubles from Mayberry this year. Anything less than that will be a total disappointment.
By the way, I like the new layout.
December 27th, 2011 on 2:21 pm
At least. And not only that, I heard he once played third at a neighborhood block party. He could be the answer there as well. I would even take 45 HR if we had to.
Not sure about the new theme. Will see how it goes and how many people email to say they can’t see it or comment or whatnot.
December 27th, 2011 on 3:24 pm
They key will be if he can play third and left at the same time. Of course, if that is the case, then I expect 90 home runs and 150 doubles since he’ll get to bat twice (I’m rounding down a bit just in case he gets tired).
December 27th, 2011 on 4:44 pm
Through May 22nd:
46 games, 3.83 runs per game, 12th in NL
May 23rd on:
116 games, 4.63 runs per game, 1st in NL
December 27th, 2011 on 5:00 pm
I don’t see any reason why Mayberry can’t play LF and 3B at the same time. He’s speedy. Jimmy either does or doesn’t have some range, depending on who you ask (I’m going with doesn’t especially if we’re voting, by the way).
I truly do not know what to expect from Mayberry in 2012, but if forced to guess I would go with his numbers at the major league level not continuing to be better than his career numbers in the minors. We’ll see.
On the Phils leading the NL in runs scored after the return of Utley, I agree and think it’s cause they were amazing in July and in that nine-game stretch at the end of May when Utley first returned. It’s obviously hugely important that they led the league in runs scored after May 23, but my concern with breaking up the season there instead of the start of July is 3.78 runs a game in 27 games in June, 11th in the NL. I do agree that the return of Utley to the lineup was probably the single biggest factor in the offensive resurgence, ahead of Pence taking over in right or Mayberry hitting 301/358/607 over the last three months of the season.
December 27th, 2011 on 5:30 pm
Understood. I just think it’s even more impressive that they led in scoring over the last 2/3 + of the season, rather than just the last 1/2.
December 27th, 2011 on 5:49 pm
Well, the left side is an issue, obviously. I am still having trouble believing that RAJ will go into this season – even more of a “Win Now” season than last year – with Mayberry in left and Polly at third. I just cannot believe he will do it. Howard’s not being in the lineup makes upgrading at least one of those two slots even more important. (The urgency here is I do not believe we will see an effective Howard before the All Star break, if then. It is entirely possible, maybe likely, that we will not see 50 ribbies from him next year.)
I am also a little concerned about Chooch. His performance last year, particularly in the post season is worrisome.
December 27th, 2011 on 6:22 pm
I really like the new theme. But I think the comments are formatting goofy (at least in Safari).
I do hope Mayberry is, in fact, learning 3B. That would be nice. Although I expect him to drop off slightly this year.
December 27th, 2011 on 8:16 pm
Checked out the formatting of comments in Safari. v5.1.2 looks good here. I will try it out with an older version tomorrow.
December 27th, 2011 on 9:18 pm
It might just be that it’s rendering properly, and I just don’t like what it’s doing with the wrapping of the words around the fractal-avatar-thing.
December 27th, 2011 on 6:54 pm
Even if Mayberry drops off a little bit from 2011, he’d still be really good. I think the question is whether he’s going to drop off a lot or not. I would guess yes, but it would be great for the Phils if he didn’t. He still only has 369 plate appearances, but he’s shown a lot more power with the Phillies than he did in the minors. With the exception of 90 plate appearances at Double-A in 2008, he never slugged .500 at any level in the minors. His career slugging percentage so far with the Phils is .518.
December 28th, 2011 on 10:17 am
Mayberry always showed the promise of being able to slug like he did last year, but couldn’t hit the bendy pitches. If he figured out how to identify those pitches, then I believe his numbers will stay where they are. If the pitchers adjust to him, then we could really see him crash and burn. My hope is that he at least stays mildly productive, especially against lefties, and that Brown can get some confidence in AAA and the team calls him up in the second half and he continues to improve upon his July numbers from last year. It seemed that he was finally starting to figure things out (offensively) when the Pence trade happened.
As far as off-season moves, I really don’t see anything major happening outside of extensions for Pence and/or Hamels. My thought is that they will go into the season with what they have and see what is available for upgrade during the season. They just don’t have the cache among the minor league players that are left in the system to move any of them for a major piece at third or left. They almost need to let the season get going so some more players can (hopefully) step forward and create some trade value.
December 28th, 2011 on 11:47 am
I’m still surprised by Mayberry, even though he did show power in the minors. Not this much power, though. His Isolated Power with the Phils is at .253, up from .199 in the minors. His time in the minors included nearly a full season in the PCL with the Rangers in ’08 when he hit just 263/316/474 with 16 HR in 475 plate appearances. That’s still less power playing in the PCL than he’s shown so far with the Phils. His Isolated Power for 2011 was .240, which was actually down from the two previous years combined. He got 296 plate appearances in 2011 — among all NL players with at least 275 plate appearances, his isolated power was tenth.
His isolated power in 2011 was better than a whole bunch of notable guys, including Ryan Howard, Matt Holliday, Carlos Pena, Jay Bruce. I think he has power, but not quite that much.
I still think he’s a question mark going forward. I think he’s shown enough to get regular time in 2012, but I still think it’s a mistake to count on him.
I do worry a little about the outfield situation. Not a fan of the Francisco give-away, even if it meant the Phils went into ’12 with five outfielders not including Wigginton. Given the presence of Brown, assuming he starts in the minors, I’m not sure the Phils wouldn’t have been better off letting Francisco play against righties rather than Nix if they had to pick. If you keep five OF plus Wiggington you can keep them both.
Not sure you even need to keep 14 hitters to do it.
Ruiz, Schneider, Howard, Utley, Rollins, Polanco, Wigginton, Thome, Mayberry, Victorino, Pence, Francisco, Nix, Valdez.
That’s 14, but Howard on the DL to start the year opens up one more spot.
Also, it’s hard to believe the Phillies had to act at the time they did to get that kind of a deal for Francisco. It seems like they could have waited and done something similar closer to the start of the season if they still wanted to do so.
December 28th, 2011 on 1:49 pm
Unfortunately, I think you’re forgetting Martinez in that group, which is why the Phils got rid of Francisco. There is a fascination with him that I just don’t understand.
December 28th, 2011 on 2:14 pm
Didn’t forget Martinez — maybe it’s just wishful thinking, but I think the Phillies won’t keep him on the 25-man roster now that they don’t have to. On the other hand, I think they shouldn’t have held onto him as long as they have, so who knows. Valdez plus Martinez on the same team is too much, isn’t it?
On the plus side, if you believe in UZR, he was just absolutely outstanding defensively at SS and 2B last year (and bad at third in the OF). That’s something.
Not enough, but it’s something.
December 29th, 2011 on 10:31 pm
Martinez’ hitting in winter ball has been even worse than last year’s for the Phillies. It is possible that he might just have worked himself off that roster. One can hope.
December 30th, 2011 on 9:07 am
Yup. 113/200/127 in the Dominican Winter League isn’t really what you’re hoping for. Let’s hope the Phils give him less than 234 plate appearances in 2012. I like our chances.
December 30th, 2011 on 7:00 pm
Happy New Year, guys. May it include a parade.
December 31st, 2011 on 9:10 am
.113 in winter league should earn him a one-way trip to Reading..
December 31st, 2011 on 12:56 pm
A 2012 parade sounds good to me. I hoping they sent Martinez even if he hits .413 in the winter league, spring training or wherever else he plays before the start of the season.
January 1st, 2012 on 7:27 pm
Martinez even up for David Wright. Better than keeping him at Reading from where he might pop up at any time again.
January 2nd, 2012 on 6:50 pm
Milwaukee Journal reporting today that the Nats are the favorites now to get Fielder.
There may be trouble, right here in River City, fans. Everyone is quantum better. Except us. With Howard down, aren’t we worse? Even?
January 2nd, 2012 on 7:10 pm
Still think we’re okay, better than okay, barring a significant injury on offense. The pitching is rather good.
January 2nd, 2012 on 9:09 pm
Just not used to the minor tune up mode we’re in I guess. Spoiled.
January 3rd, 2012 on 1:25 pm
I’m assuming that DeMannse is not referring to the Mummer’s Day Parade.
I think this team will be fine in 2012. I doubt that they will won 102 games again just because the rest of the division is so much better, but 95 wins or so will likely still win the NL East.
The NL East, by the way, strikes me as being a slight notch above the AL East these days.
January 3rd, 2012 on 2:14 pm
I see it as an opportunity to play against some good teams throughout the year, so we’re not suddenly surprised in the playoffs when the other team doesn’t hand us the trophy after strike 1. It’ll be hard to get 100 wins in this division, but it’ll also be hard to get complacent.
If there was a big-ticket third baseman on the free agent market, the Phils might have made the Yankee move and swooped in. But it’s not there. Wouldn’t be at all surprised with a deadline move though. Otherwise, there’s just not much they can do to improve this team.
January 3rd, 2012 on 3:12 pm
Hadn’t thought about it but playing really good teams a lot more often could indeed have the effect of making them tougher. And sharper. But the NL East is going to be a whole bunch better if the Nats get Fielder.
I am less sanguine about our position player’s offense. And Howard’s injury may really remove his bat from any significant playing time.
January 3rd, 2012 on 3:12 pm
Hadn’t thought about it but playing really good teams a lot more often could indeed have the effect of making them tougher. And sharper. But the NL East is going to be a whole bunch better if the Nats get Fielder.
I am less sanguine about our position player’s offense. And Howard’s injury may really remove his bat from any significant playing time.
January 3rd, 2012 on 4:51 pm
I still don’t feel that worried about the rest of the division. Not sold on the Fish being great yet. Fielder to the Nats would make them better, but they started out pretty bad. The Braves have been good for a long time — I think they may have dropped off a little bit in 2012.
Halladay, Lee, Hamels at the top of the rotation is a pretty good way to start a team. I think the Phils are going to win a lot of games.
January 3rd, 2012 on 7:06 pm
Yeah. I hear you. My concern is that I do not remember going into a year so unsettled about so many offensive positions. Left. Third. First. Catcher. Four out of eight. HALF the lineup. And traditionally HUGE offensive positions in at least three of the four.
It is likely that our pitching is the best in the division. Likely. I wonder though if it is any longer a lock. But assuming we are the hands down best, can our pitching overcome FOUR offensive question marks, especially when one of those question marks is Ryan Howard?
I am kind of worried. Don’t we need a serious bat, still? Will Amaro just plan on that bat being John Mayberry? Should he?
January 4th, 2012 on 10:51 am
I don’t think he should. The other guy that could be a huge bat for the Phils this year is Brown. I’m not real worried about first or catcher. I think the Phils will be better in left in 2012 than they were in 2011. At first I think it will be close, depending on how long Howard is out and whether or not Thome plays there while he is.