The Philadelphia Phillies show mixed results as after a loss. Since 2014, they're 212-197-1 against the spread—a 0.0% win rate with an ROI of -1.0%. While not a strong standalone angle, this data provides valuable context when combined with other factors.

⚖ Neutral
Record212-197-1
Win Rate0.0%
Sample Size410 games
ROI-1.0%
Units Won-4.3u
Time Period2014-2024

Year-by-Year Performance

SeasonRecordWin %ROI
201418-16-00.0%+1.1%
201512-15-10.0%-15.2%
201623-13-00.0%+22.0%
201720-26-00.0%-17.0%
201815-10-00.0%+14.6%
201923-22-00.0%-2.4%
202016-17-00.0%-7.4%
202119-12-00.0%+17.0%
202222-16-00.0%+10.5%
202317-25-00.0%-22.7%
202427-25-00.0%-0.9%

Why This Trend Exists

The Phillies' mediocre bounce-back performance after losses stems from their historically inconsistent pitching depth and tendency toward emotional volatility. Philadelphia has long struggled with rotation reliability beyond their top starters, meaning losses often expose underlying weaknesses that don't magically disappear overnight. When their ace falters or the bullpen implodes, the team frequently lacks the depth to immediately course-correct, leading to extended rough patches rather than sharp rebounds. The franchise's passionate fanbase and media scrutiny amplify this effect. Philadelphia players often carry the weight of previous failures into subsequent games, particularly during playoff pushes when every loss feels magnified. The team's aggressive offensive approach, while explosive when clicking, can become pressing and mechanical when players try to force results after disappointing performances. Manager Rob Thomson's steady approach has helped recent bounce-back efforts, but the underlying roster construction issues persist. The Phillies tend to either dominate series or struggle through them entirely, rather than showing consistent game-to-game resilience. This trend becomes most critical during late-season pennant races and playoff series, where the ability to immediately respond to setbacks separates contenders from pretenders. Bettors should be particularly cautious backing Philadelphia after road losses in high-pressure situations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Philadelphia Phillies's ATS record as after a loss?

The Philadelphia Phillies have gone 212-197-1 against the spread (ATS) when playing after a loss from 2014-2024. This represents a 51.8% ATS win rate over 410 games in this situation.

Is betting on the Philadelphia Phillies as after a loss profitable?

Betting on the Philadelphia Phillies after a loss has not been profitable, showing a -1.0% ROI over the 2014-2024 period. Despite a slightly above .500 ATS record, the negative return indicates the betting market has efficiently priced this situation.

How does this compare to the league average?

The Phillies' 51.8% ATS win rate after losses is slightly above the typical 50% baseline expected in spread betting. However, the -1.0% ROI suggests this marginal edge doesn't overcome the standard betting juice/vigorish built into sportsbook lines.

ANALYZE This Trend

This trend is near break-even. Combine with other factors and compare odds before placing any bets.

Compare Sportsbook Odds

Methodology

All trends in The Archives are calculated from official game results and closing point spreads from 2014 to 2024. ROI assumes a flat $100 bet at standard -110 juice. Win rate is calculated as wins divided by total decisions (pushes excluded). A minimum of 10 games is required for a trend to be published. Data is sourced from The Odds API and verified against official league records.