The 9 greatest players in Philadelphia Phillies history
There are two World Series MVPs in Philadelphia Phillies history, and Cole Hamels is one of them.
During the 2008 MLB playoffs, Hamels, just 24 at the time, came of age. Without much in the way of playoff-caliber rotation depth behind him, Hamels went 4-0 with a 1.80 ERA and 0.91 WHIP across 35 innings. Hamels won the NLCS MVP, an appetizer to the aforementioned hardware that he captured in the Fall Classic, as the Phillies won the second championship in their franchise's history.
A first-round pick in the 2002 MLB Draft, Hamels went 114-90 with a 3.30 ERA and 3.47 FIP in parts of 10 seasons with the Phillies. Hamels -- who tossed 200 or more innings in six different seasons as a Phillie -- was a three-time All-Star during his time in red pinstripes.

Hamels quite literally threw a no-hitter in his final start as a Phillie in July of 2015, days before he was traded to the Texas Rangers. It was the second no-hitter that the lefty was a part of with the Phillies, as he was the starting pitcher in a combined no-hitter that also included Jake Diekman, Ken Giles and Jonathan Papelbon in September of 2014.
There's no debate, Hamels is one of the greatest starting pitchers in franchise history. He's a lock to eventually be on the franchise's Wall of Fame, and we'll see if any other Phillie ever wears the No. 35 again.
Still, the Phillies are a franchise that began play in 1883. So Hamels finds himself among some incredible names -- Chuck Klein, Curt Schilling, Bobby Abreu, Sherry Magee and Dick Allen, just to name a few -- that fell just short of cracking our list of the nine greatest players in Phillies history: