Curt Schilling was in town last week for his induction into the Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame, so The Review caught up with him for a few minutes to discuss his career in Philly and the present state of the Phillies; he spoke candidly and wasn't afraid to place blame on the front office.  .

By PATRICK GORDON, Managing Editor
November 17 2014, 1:00 pm EST.
@Philabaseball

Curt Schilling has never been one to mince words, but when you've won three World Series' and been named an All-Star six times you can pretty much say whatever you want.

"I look at [the Phillies] right now and I see a huge mess," Schilling said last week while in town for induction into the Philadelphia Sports Hall of Fame. "I think they are in a huge, huge mess that I don't think they can get out of."

Of the nine seasons Schilling spent in Philadelphia, the Phillies finished above .500 once.

"I've been there, I know exactly what it's like to be in a spot where you really have little chance to win," Schilling said. "That's Philadelphia right now, the team is far away from again being able to compete."

Like nearly every other writer and baseball pundit, Schilling believes long and costly contracts have been the biggest contributor to the Phillies' decline.

"They kept giving out these long deals with a ton of money attached," Schilling said. "You have some star talent that's just crushed by some really, really bad contracts. Truthfully, I think the organization signed some players for too long and too much money."

According to Schilling, the organization's lone bargaining chip is Cole Hamels.

"Face it, you are not just a player or two away from winning here," Schilling said. "Hamels is built for October and that's not happening here any time soon, so moving him makes sense because you'll get a ton of young talent back in return. It just makes sense."

As for placing the blame for the Phillies struggles, Schilling has no problem pointing directly at general manager Ruben Amaro Jr.

"The record speaks for itself right now," Schilling said. "He's made some moves that have not panned out and made some decisions that just don't lend themselves to putting together a strong competing club. Philadelphia is a great place to win in, it's just a shame the recent run was so short lived."

- The Philadelphia Baseball Review is the top baseball news source in Philadelphia, providing news coverage and analysis of all things baseball related in the Philadelphia region.

2 Comments

Matt said…
It's an evolving organization.... oh oops....
Carriersailor said…
This entire front office needs cleaned out what Is wrong with these nutz In the owners group are they In love with pain ?
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