While the drama for the Phillies builds to an offseason crescendo at or slightly before day one of spring training, general manager Matt Klentak knows a winning record this summer will accelerate expectations.

Hidden gem:

Viewing the roster with dread, some Philadelphia Phillies fans have already decided the rotation after Aaron Nola is hopeless. Ergo, a diamond is not among the cast-aside stones because they saw no one other than Nola shine in the last two years.

IN OTHER WORDS: “A thing long expected takes the form of the unexpected when at last it comes.” – Mark Twain

Setting the tone for limited hot-stove activity, super agent Scott Boras is your villain. He has the top-four starters on the free-agent market, and he will make the fans, writers, front offices and players wait until pitchers and catchers report to maximize the earnings.

Yes, Boras is even affecting trade possibilities because organizations can demand lopsided hauls for their premium pitching talent. In fact, those GMs have sky-high asking prices to capitalize on the lack of free-agent movement. No signings, no swaps!

The good news–if you consider it that–is almost every franchise is at a standstill regarding their starting staff. Fortunately, the entire industry isn’t grinding to a halt, but most clubs are still constructing their rotations. So, Klentak is doing his due diligence and waiting for a bargain if it comes.

As for the Internet, knowledgeable locals on one Phillies site believed they could steal a Jake Arrieta or a Yu Darvish for $90 million over three campaigns. But neither will offer such a discounted opportunity length-wise. No, Klentak has only a marginal shot at acquiring Alex Cobb.

Underestimating the market and overestimating the Phils’ outfielders in center and right field, the faithful have convinced only themselves regarding desirable moundsmen on other teams. But those franchises can deal for outfielders without parting with their top arms.

Among the candidates for the five-man staff, one in-house challenger could emerge to slot behind Nola and form a one-two punch by April’s end. Will it be Ben Lively, Vince Velasquez, Thomas Eshelman, Jerad Eickhoff, Zach Eflin, Jake Thompson, Mark Leiter or Nick Pivetta?

By March 15, many hopefuls will have decent numbers because they’ll be busting their tails to make the rotation. Will the two-slot starter be a flamethrower, a finesse hurler or a finally healthy pitcher?