The Philadelphia Phillies began their 2026 spring training with a reshaped clubhouse, integrating top prospects alongside veterans at BayCare Ballpark in Clearwater, Florida. While core players return, departures like Nick Castellanos and Ranger Suárez mark changes, and pitcher Zack Wheeler progresses in recovery from surgery. Manager Rob Thomson highlighted the team's improved depth.
On Wednesday, the Phillies held their first workout for pitchers and catchers at BayCare Ballpark, revealing a clubhouse designed to blend experience with youth. Prospect Justin Crawford, ranked No. 3 in the organization, now has a locker next to Otto Kemp, Bryson Stott, and Trea Turner. Fellow prospect Aidan Miller is positioned beside Bryce Harper, J.T. Realmuto, and Kyle Schwarber. Andrew Painter, another top prospect, shares space with Zack Wheeler.
This setup differs from tradition, where non-roster invitees like Crawford and Miller dressed separately—a spot once occupied by Chase Utley, Ryan Howard, and Cole Hamels over 20 years ago. The Phillies aim to immerse prospects in the veterans' environment. Crawford is projected as the Opening Day center fielder, Miller could join by midsummer, and Painter may start in the rotation.
"We’ve got a group that’s really special that way," manager Rob Thomson said after the workout.
Notable absences include Nick Castellanos, who lacks a locker and whose photos have been removed from hallways. He will be traded or released before the full-squad workout on Monday, following a soured relationship with the organization. Ranger Suárez, who signed a five-year, $130 million deal with the Boston Red Sox, also has his photo taken down. Matt Strahm and Harrison Bader are gone as well.
Despite retaining much of the 2022-25 core, some fans express disappointment after the team missed out on Bo Bichette, who signed with the New York Mets. The Phillies fell short in the past three postseasons after a 2022 World Series run.
"It’s a lot of the same crew," Wheeler said. "I think we just have to be a little more consistent in the playoffs."
Thomson views the team as stronger than last year, citing a better bullpen without Jhoan Duran, proven performances from Cristopher Sánchez and Jesús Luzardo, Taijuan Walker's form, Painter's progress, and Aaron Nola's World Baseball Classic participation.
"We’re a really good team," Nola said. "We ran into a really good team—the Dodgers."
Wheeler, recovering from thoracic outlet decompression surgery in September after an August blood clot, keeps his removed rib preserved in a home closet. Recovery typically takes six to eight months; he will miss Opening Day on March 26 against Texas at Citizens Bank Park but plays catch from 90 feet and remains optimistic.
"I’m going to be back to where I was," Wheeler said. "Now, I feel pretty much normal."
Wheeler's return would bolster a rotation featuring Sánchez (2025 NL Cy Young runner-up), Luzardo, Nola, Painter (MLB Pipeline's No. 28 prospect), and Walker. Over six seasons with Philadelphia, Wheeler posted a 69-37 record and 2.91 ERA, finishing second in the NL Cy Young voting in 2021 and 2024, with a 2.18 postseason ERA—sixth in MLB history among pitchers with at least nine starts.