Andrew Painter, the Philadelphia Phillies' top pitching prospect, delivered a strong MLB debut on Tuesday, striking out eight Washington Nationals over 5 ⅓ innings in a 3-2 victory at Citizens Bank Park. The 22-year-old right-hander allowed one run, walked one and threw strikes on 68% of his 84 pitches. His outing offered a welcome highlight amid Philadelphia's rough 1-3 start to the season.
Painter retired 13 of his final 16 batters faced, limiting the Nationals to three singles and a double that Trea Turner lost in the lights. He fanned James Wood on a curveball for his first big-league strikeout against the game's opening batter. The lone run charged to Painter came after reliever Tanner Banks allowed a single to Daylen Lile, with Adolis García's throw from right field sailing into the stands and allowing CJ Abrams to score from third. > It's been a long journey. I'm super grateful for all the people who've been a part of it. Painter said Monday, according to NBC Sports Philadelphia. Selected 13th overall in the 2021 draft, Painter dominated minor leagues in 2022 with a 1.56 ERA and 155 strikeouts over 103 ⅔ innings. Tommy John surgery sidelined him for all of 2023 and most of 2024, followed by a 5.26 ERA across 118 innings—mostly at Triple-A—in 2025. Painter fills the rotation spot vacated by Ranger Suárez, who signed with the Boston Red Sox. Taijuan Walker shifts to the bullpen upon Zack Wheeler's return from thoracic outlet syndrome surgery in mid-to-late April. The projected rotation now features Painter, Wheeler, Jesús Luzardo, Aaron Nola and Cristopher Sánchez. The Phillies, who opened with one of MLB's oldest rosters, also handed center field duties to 22-year-old Justin Crawford, who sported a .400 on-base percentage entering Tuesday.