5 Phillies prospects the farm system may have ruined forever

Scott Kingery of the Philadelphia Phillies (Mary Holt/USA TODAY Sports)
Scott Kingery of the Philadelphia Phillies (Mary Holt/USA TODAY Sports) /
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The Philadelphia Phillies farm system may be where top prospects’ careers go to die.

The team’s .500-or-under record every year since 2011 has ensured that they get solid draft picks every year, including the first overall pick in 2016, Mickey Moniak.

Yet their farm continues to be ranked at the bottom of the MLB barrel and they’ve had little fruit to show for their labor. At the trade deadline, former top pitching prospect Spencer Howard was dealt to the Texas Rangers after the Phillies were apparently unable to solve his persistent issues on the mound. He had a 5.72 ERA in 11 big-league games with the Phillies this season and has a 9.17 ERA in seven starts for the Rangers since the trade.

At some point, the common denominator is the franchise, and developing prospects becomes an organizational failure. With Dave Dombrowski cleaning house, it’s clear the franchise has reached that realization.

Here are some of the top prospects the Phillies have failed to develop in recent years:

Did the Phillies ruin Scott Kingery?

Kingery was the Phillies’ second-round pick in 2015, and they signed him to a six-year contract extension before he even made his MLB debut on Opening Day in 2018.

In his first two seasons, Kingery hit .242/.291/.407 with a .698 OPS, 27 home runs, 90 RBI, 57 doubles, and six triples in 273 games. He was one of several MLB players who contracted the coronavirus in 2020, and between that and lingering injuries, he struggled in the shortened season.

This year, he began his season in Triple-A and was not called back up until late April. He played in only 15 games before being designated for assignment and being outrighted to the minors. He only managed one big-league hit in 19 at-bats and struck out 12 times. In late July, the team announced that Kingery required season-ending shoulder surgery.

Part of the problem with Kingery’s development was that the Phillies bounced him around, making it hard for him to find his footing defensively. He’s already played shortstop, second and third base, and every outfield position in only 324 career big-league games. But offensively, his struggles have led to him posted negative WAR in three of four career seasons with the Phillies.

It’s unclear what Kingery’s career will look like when he rehabs from his surgery, but between his playing struggles and the albatross of a contract the Phillies gave him, it makes sense that no other franchise bit when the club offered him up this summer.