For the faithful, the Phillies offseason began at September’s end, and the speculation continues regarding the future of some local stars general manager Matt Klentak might move.

Positional deals:

While the Philadelphia Phillies front office considers their in-house talent, part of the equation is their surplus: a third baseman, a second sacker and a center fielder. Of course, Klentak realizes the anticipated success of hitters, fielders and hurlers is not only critical to the next campaign but also to tomorrow’s.

IN OTHER WORDS “What’s called a difficult decision is a difficult decision because either way you go there are penalties.” – Elia Kazan

As the postseason draws closer to its end, some Phils fans are hoping management signs two superstar hitters, a starter and/or a closer. Unfortunately, this ignores all the hurdles Klenak is facing per acquisition. And don’t underestimate waiting.

Regarding roster construction, the first part is setting the active 25 for Opening Day. Basically, a GM reviews his data in the two weeks following his team’s last game, and it includes his best 40 to 45 players for roster protection. Continuing during and after this evaluation, Klentak fields calls from other organizations.

The result will be a 40-man roster and the groundwork for potential swaps during or after the Winter Meetings beginning on Dec. 9 through Dec. 12. Yes, Klentak will also have powwows with many agents: Interest or due diligence. Slow is not no! Lastly, March’s battles produce the active 25.

During the first half, the exec will discover those who are excelling or underperforming from his Opening Day projections. In other words, he’ll know the areas to improve before the trading deadline including health concerns. But the standings will dictate his approach for the stretch drive.

Currently, the red pinstripes have their pluses with two center fielders, three middle infielders and four bats on the corners. They also have six starters and nine relievers. Basically, they have four extra regulars and two additional pitchers. Quality notwithstanding.

As for the minuses, one center fielder is streaky to the max, while the other is a DL regular. And, presently, shortstop will be a platoon. Also, Rhys Hoskins improves left field defense by switching to first, and Carlos Santana is the left-side power threat and adequate at third, while Maikel Franco and Justin Bour are available.