Tag: Miami Marlins

Miami Marlins’ Thin Outfield Could Lead to Christian Yelich’s Early Debut

In case you haven’t heard, the Miami Marlins have traded away most of their experienced big league talent. This could lead to the promotion of their top prospect, Christian Yelich, ahead of schedule.

Right now, according to MLB.com, the Marlins’ center field depth chart includes Justin Ruggiano at the top. He had a solid 91 games in Miami last season, but he has only 527 career plate appearances and is already in his 30s. He is not a long-term solution.

Gorkys Hernandez has the speed and defense to play center, but often looked overmatched at the plate. He’s still a prospect at the age of 25, but he needs to develop now.

Bryan Petersen will be 27 in 2013. His .195 average and .530 OPS suggest he is not an everyday major league bat.

The Marlins’ long-term solution at center field does not appear to be Cuban defector Dariel Alvarez. According to Juan C. Rodriguez of the Sun Sentinel, the Marlins don’t seem interested in the 24-year-old center fielder and might not even attend his January 5th showcase.

This seems to be paving the way for Yelich. The 21-year-old California native has yet to play a game above Single-A, but looks to become an All-Star at the big league level. He has power, speed and a solid average. The only drawback is a freak injury he suffered when he was hit by a teammate’s bat. 

According to Steph Rogers of the Miami Herald, he was the young Marlins representative at winter ball in 2012. Perhaps the two-time Organization Player of the Year can become Miami’s answer to Mike Trout and Bryce Harper.

There aren’t many obstacles blocking his path to the majors, and Joe Frisaro of MLB.com feels that Yelich‘s big league debut will indeed be in 2013.

If the production in center field does not improve, his promotion could be sooner rather than later.

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Miami Marlins: 5 Changes to Make Before Spring Training

Every New Year’s Day, we watch the ball drop in Times Square, tune in to the six million bowl games on TV and make at least one New Year’s resolution.

For the Miami Marlins, as well as the other 29 Major League Baseball teams, the goal is to win the World Series—or at least it should be. In order for that to happen soon—perhaps as early as the 2013 season, when no one expects them to win—changes must occur before Spring Training begins.

Some are cosmetic, others much larger in grandeur. 

If the Marlins apply these changes successfully, then a third World Series parade might not be out of the realm of possibility. However, if these resolutions fail, as is the case 88 percent of the time according to a 2007 survey of more than 3,000 people conducted by the British psychologist Richard Wiseman, then it might be generations before the Marlins have reason to celebrate.

So, before pitchers and catcher report to Jupiter, Fla., here are five changes the Marlins should make. 

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Miami Marlins Sign Pitcher John Maine to a Minor League Deal

In 2007, John Maine was a 26-year-old 15-game winner for the New York Mets and looked like a mainstay in their rotation.

Going into 2013, the Miami Marlins are just hoping he can be a major league pitcher.

According to Joe Frisaro of MLB.com, Miami signed the 31-year-old veteran to a minor league contract with an invitation to spring training for 2013.

After dealing away Mark Buehrle and Josh Johnson to the Toronto Blue Jays, the Marlins’ rotation needs pitchers with some big league experience. Maine fits the bill, despite not pitching in the majors in 2011 or 2012.

Maine was originally drafted by the Baltimore Orioles in the sixth round of the 2002 draft. He made his debut with the 2004 Orioles.

Baltimore sent him packing to the Mets in the Kris Benson deal. While Benson never panned out in Baltimore, Maine had initial success. He pitched for the 2006 National League champion Mets. His career highlight was out-pitching Chris Carpenter in Game 6 of the 2006 NLCS to force a Game 7.

2007 was his best over all season and his future in Queens looked secure.

Unfortunately for Maine, he developed rotator cuff problems that needed surgery. Then, his shoulder needed surgery.

He also had stints in the Colorado Rockies, Boston Red Sox and New York Yankees systems that did not yield a single major league appearance.

He pitched 79.2 innings to a 4.97 ERA in Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre in the Yankees’ system—the most he has thrown in professional ball since 2009.

The Marlins are taking a low-risk gamble that he will resume pitching like he did in the late 2000s and give them a big league arm in this upcoming rebuilding season.

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Miami Marlins Commit Suicide, Take Florida’s Baseball’s Legitimacy with Them

Rarely, if ever, do I choose to write about baseball. It’s not that I don’t like the game; it’s just that there are people here who are far better at it than yours truly. 

But every now and then, a subject is so important—or so ridiculous—that the urge strikes.

The latest example of this has come in the form of the Miami Marlins‘ historic salary-dump trade with the Toronto Blue Jays.

By now you know the particulars: Virtually every player with a pulse on the Marlins’ roster is heading north of the border. And while it’s a great day to be a Blue Jays fan, it’s a bad day to be a baseball fan.

Now, don’t get me wrong—I don’t begrudge the Blue Jays one bit. For them, this deal was a no-brainer, and makes them instant contenders in the rough AL East—a position they haven’t been in for about two decades.

The real villain here is the man behind the Marlins: Jeffrey Loria.

It was Loria who for years in Miami complained that the reason his payroll and his teams weren’t competitive year in and year out was the lack of a new ballpark, and all its accompanying revenue. 

Both Loria and officials from Major League Baseball banged the drums, arguing that baseball in Miami would die without the new stadium. Mind you, Loria had no designs to pay for the stadium himself—after all, that’s what the taxpayers of Miami are there for, right?

When the Miami-Dade County Commission began dragging their heels on the financing, MLB got directly involved, with then-President Robert DuPuy telling them:

I just want you to know that if you decide not to make a decision tonight, that will be the death knell for baseball in Miami

This statement rings with a bitter irony today, now that we have heard the death knell for baseball in Miami, less than a year after the ballpark was finally opened.

The County finally approved the deal, agreeing to use taxpayer money to cover the majority of the cost—a total of a little under $350 million dollars

At the time, Loria was effusive in his thanks to the County, crediting them with “saving” baseball in Miami.

Obviously, it was not saved for long.

With the ballpark set to open this past April, the Marlins were more active in free agency than they ever had been in the past. After all, with a new ballpark, a new name and a new image, it was time to make a splash.

And they certainly did, signing big-ticket free agents Jose Reyes, Heath Bell and Mark Buehrle. They were also in on the market’s biggest prizes in Albert Pujols and C.J. Wilson, before those players signed with the Angels.

Coming into the season, you had good reason to be optimistic about the long-term future of an organization which, despite its two championships, has always struggled to attract a loyal fan base.

When the team struggled on the field, especially given their expectations, it was natural for changes to be considered and made. But this is altogether different. 

What the Marlins organization—and primarily Jeffrey Loria—have done is perpetuated a fraud on the city of Miami, Major League Baseball and their fans. 

And ultimately, and perhaps most importantly, they are now dead to the city of Miami and its people. Even the most diehard Marlins fans cannot countenance this move. 

Perhaps the best way of looking at it is how Michael Cramer, the former President of the Texas Rangers and director of the sports and media program at the University of Texas at Austin, told Businessweek.com:

It looks like they just looted the city. It doesn’t smell right, but as a business person looking at that team, I probably would have been real tempted to do the same thing

This wasn’t a fire sale—it was a blatant, naked money grab from an ownership group whose stadium is already paid for by the working stiffs who work and spend money in the city, and who, quite frankly, could care less about what people think.

He’s already executed the swindle; the city is on the hook, and he’s once again sitting pretty. 

Don’t forget, Loria has a history of shady dealings. Many people forget the circumstances surrounding his brief ownership of the doomed Montreal Expos

It would have been better for baseball, and for Miami, if the County had not approved the stadium. That would’ve either forced the sale of the team, perhaps to an owner who is as concerned about winning as the bottom line, or perhaps the team would have moved.

Either outcome would have been ultimately better than the travesty that has been perpetuated through this trade. 

Think for a second about the effect this has on the organization’s ability to be competitive going forward. And also think of the reverberations this will have for other small-market teams who might be looking for ballparks in the future.

What high-profile free agents in their right mind are going to seriously consider Miami after this move? This is further inflamed by reports this week that both Jose Reyes and Mark Buerhle received verbal assurances from the Marlins that they would not be dealt if they signed with the team.

So if you’re a free agent, are you going to consider Miami when you know that if the team decides they need to once again shake off all their players like a dog does with fleas, you could wind up in Kansas City

Absolutely not—and this is a fact acknowledged today by Marlins President of Baseball Operations Larry Beinfast:

It’ll be a factor. I don’t think we’re happy about this at all. I understand there may be some disdain in the marketplace. We won’t know until we get into those negotiations with free agents. It’s definitely not great for the club, and we’re going to have to deal with it.

Disdain is putting it mildly. This is a franchise who found a way to reduce their already ludicrous lack of credibility with their fans and with baseball as a whole.

No player is going to want to go there, and no fan is going to want to pay money to sit there and watch them play.

While this is certainly bad for the Marlins and the city of Miami, there are implications that go beyond this specific case.

Say you’re a small-market city going forward, and your local team wants a new ballpark funded by taxpayer dollars—an issue currently being faced by the Oakland Athletics.

Are you not going to look at the Marlins as a cautionary tale? This is not to imply that the A’s, or any other owner, would do what Loria did. But it’s a realistic concern, is it not?

What type of assurances are you going to look for to ensure you don’t get swindled like Miami did? 

Because that was exactly what this was—a robbery. It was deal that cost a city a ton of money, which they will have a heck of a time recovering, and which ironically killed what it was intended to save.

Rest in Peace, Miami baseball.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Analyzing the Shock Wave Bud Selig Nixing Jays-Marlins Blockbuster Would Cause

So now Bud Selig wants to expand replay in MLB.

As reported by USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale on Thursday (Nov. 15), baseball’s commissioner announced that he will review the blockbuster trade between the Miami Marlins and Toronto Blue Jays.

Presumably, Selig will try to determine if anything unethical took place with this deal in an attempt to appease Marlins fans outraged by owner Jeffrey Loria’s latest salary dump. Virtually every Marlins player worth watching—including Jose Reyes and Mark Buehrle, who signed with the team as free agents—was sent to Toronto in the trade. 

The weapon that Marlins fans—and fans throughout baseball—hope that Selig will use is the “best interests of baseball” clause that gives the commissioner power to make whatever changes are deemed necessary to maintain competitive integrity in MLB.

But can the commish really hit the reset button on this trade? 

Selig has used those “best interests” powers in recent years to influence the sales of the Texas Rangers and Los Angeles Dodgers. But when it comes to how individual owners run their teams, he’s let each franchise conduct its own business.

“The notion of an almighty commissioner directing the business of baseball is incorrect,” he said to The New York Times in 1994. 

Given his actions with the aforementioned ownership situations, it’s clear that Selig’s view has changed since then. Steering the Houston Astros and new owner Jim Crane to move to the American League—and making the move a condition for Crane buying the team—also seems to indicate that Selig is willing to use those “best interests” powers to facilitate what MLB needs to be done.

However, stepping in to tell a team how it should put together a roster and spend its money is a different circumstance. This is where Selig has appeared to draw the line. 

But the Marlins’ situation has apparently raised the commissioner’s eyebrow. Building a new ballpark with local taxpayer funds, paying big money for top free agents and hiring a star manager certainly conveyed the impression that this was a new era for baseball in South Beach.

Instead, Loria showed it was business as usual with the Marlins. The team performed far below expectations and by midseason, players like Hanley Ramirez and Anibal Sanchez were traded away for prospects. When Miami finished the season last in the NL East with 69 wins, Loria decided to pull the plug on his baseball revival and had his most expensive players dealt away to Toronto.

That left Marlins fans feeling jilted and suckered for funding Loria’s charade and believing that the team was serious about putting together a perennial contender that would compete with the other top teams in MLB.

“I am aware of the anger,” Selig said to Nightengale. “I am. I’m also aware that in Toronto they’re very happy.”

There’s the dilemma for Selig.

The Blue Jays made a great trade to better themselves and assemble an AL East contender with this trade. And though it appeared unseemly to dump off its most expensive players, the Marlins received excellent prospects in return. It’s just that the team running a fire sale has no benefit of the doubt with baseball fans.

This was actually a good baseball trade. According to MLB.com’s Paul Hagen, Selig consulted two independent baseball people who informed him that Miami “in terms of young players, did very well.”

How can Selig reverse a trade under those circumstances? A gesture of good faith to the city of Miami and its fans would be a slap in the face to the people of Toronto and the Blue Jays organization? Then the commissioner has to placate another community and fanbase. Where does the cycle end?

This isn’t like Oakland Athletics owner Charlie Finley literally trying to sell Vida Blue, Joe Rudi and Rollie Fingers off for nothing but money in 1976. The commissioner at the time, Bowie Kuhn, stepped in and killed the transactions, invoking his “best interests” powers. 

Kuhn might have vetoed this Marlins-Blue Jays trade, too. And he almost certainly wouldn’t have cared for Loria’s way of doing business.

Another comparable situation is NBA commissioner David Stern rejecting the trade of Chris Paul from the New Orleans Hornets to the Los Angeles Lakers. But one key difference in that scenario is that the league owned the Hornets and didn’t want to see its best player used to help the Lakers continue its dominance. Additionally, the belief was that trading Paul could hurt attendance and the value of the franchise.

Selig utilizes his authority differently, ostensibly attempting not to influence competitive integrity. Finley claimed he needed the money that would have come from selling Blue, Rudi and Fingers to help compete financially. Selig likely would have encouraged him to sell his team. 

Loria isn’t crying poverty. He doesn’t like that he spent so much money for a last-place team and tried to recoup his expense. When asked by CBS Sports’ Jon Heyman if he would sell the team, Loria called that “stupidity.”

While the way Loria runs the Marlins is unsatisfactory to virtually everyone who follows or is involved in baseball, he’s not using the team as a personal bank account, like Frank McCourt did with the Dodgers. Loria hasn’t plunged the team into bankruptcy. He just built a new ballpark for his team. Business is going well. 

To veto this trade would set a terrible precedent for MLB. Would teams no longer have the right to dump off big contracts to create payroll flexibility or financial profitability? If Selig killed the Marlins-Blue Jays deal, shouldn’t he have to go back and squash the Dodgers-Red Sox trade in which Boston unloaded $260 million of salary? 

Clubs with bad records and high-priced veterans consistently trade those players to playoff contenders and hopefuls for prospects as a way of rebuilding with young, cheaper talent. The Marlins arguably did the same thing here, though on an obviously much larger scale. 

In such trades, both teams are presumably trying to get better, just on different timetables. 

This is why Selig drew the line that he did. The slope gets too slippery. Where would it end? Overturning the Marlins-Blue Jays trade would fundamentally change the way baseball teams run themselves. That’s why he can’t—and won’t—do it.

 

Follow @iancass on Twitter.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Miami Marlins Trade Heath Bell to Arizona Diamondbacks

If Alex Rodriguez is indeed traded to the Miami Marlins, as Keith Olbermann wrote in his blog, then the Yankees will not be getting Heath Bell back to help off set the costs.

The Miami Marlins sent their beleaguered closer and free agent bust Heath Bell to the Arizona Diamondbacks in a three way trade that also involved the Oakland Athletics.

According to the Twitter feed of Sun Sentinel reporter Juan C. Rodriguez, the Marlins will pick up the tab of $8 million of his remaining $21 million contract.

Bell was one of the celebrated free agents brought to Miami for what was supposed to be their glorious entry to being a big market club with a high payroll and a brand new stadium. No doubt they had images of Bell leaping in the air as the closer of the World Series.

Instead it was a match made in hell. He clashed frequently with manager Ozzie Guillen. According to ESPN.com, Bell said on 560 AM’s The Dan Sileo Show towards the end of the season that “it is hard to respect a guy that doesn’t tell you the truth or doesn’t tell you face to face.”

That may be true. But Bell could have made Guillen’s job easier if he pitched better. He only saved 19 games while posting a 5.09 ERA in 63 2/3 innings. He was consistently removed from the closer role and turned the ninth inning into a horror show in South Florida.

He had to be dealt. And now he will settle in Arizona and the Marlins will continue to shed high priced players less than a year after becoming a big time player.

In exchange the Marlins will acquire minor league shortstop Yordy Cabrera, who played in the Oakland organization’s California League team in Stockton last season.

According to scoutingbook.com, the 22-year-old Cabrera is a shortstop with potential power who is projected to be a third baseman.

So far his numbers have not shown him being a reliable power source. But right now he is a name for the future. The main part of this deal was not to bring in Cabrera but to rid the Marlins of Bell.

Essentially the Marlins have continued to cut bait from this terribly disappointing season. The Heath Bell nightmare has ended. Who knows what the Yordy Cabrera era will bring.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Why the Miami Marlins Should Offer Heath Bell for Seattle’s Chone Figgins

The Miami Marlins signed Heath Bell in the offseason as part of their expensive and aggressive push to win in their new stadium for 2012.

If anything has gone over worse than the dancing Marlins statue in center field, it has been Heath Bell’s first year in Florida.

He has fallen in and out of the closer role, seeing his ERA balloon to 5.34 as of this writing. He gives up more than a hit an inning, and his WHIP is an amazing 1.610. He isn’t walking many batters, but that seems to be because he is giving up so many hits.

He has blown seven of his 26 save opportunities and has been the very symbol of this disappointing season in South Florida.

And good news, Marlins fans! He is signed for the next two years.

It would probably be best for Bell to have a change of scenery. But how can the Marlins move him and his $18 million guaranteed?

Obviously, the first call would be to the Dodgers to see if they are willing to take on even more big bucks for rotten contracts.

Failing that, the Marlins need to find a partner who also wants to move a player needing a change.

The Vernon Wells and John Lackeys of the world make too much money. But the Marlins, the team at the furthest point Southeast in the major leagues, should look clear across the country to the Northwest and the Seattle Mariners.

They have Chone Figgins, whose time away from the Angels has also been a disappointment. Virtually all of his stats dropped in 2010, his first year in Seattle.

And that season was by far his best. His average has plummeted to sub .190. He has 22 extra base hits total in the past two seasons combined. And his walk total is falling like a rock as well.

He is owed $17 million over the next two seasons if he gets 600 plate appearances in 2013.

Here is the proposed deal: Have the Mariners pick up the option and send Figgins and $1 million to the Marlins for Heath Bell and a minor leaguer.

The Mariners would get a veteran pitcher entering a pitchers park. Bell would pitch alongside closer Tom Wilhelmsen and young relievers Charlie Furbush and Lucas Luetge, as their bullpen is strong enough to have a veteran in a smaller role.

The Mariners would also get a minor leaguer that would be the equivalent of getting a draft pick for Figgins had they let him go via free agency. Chances are they would never have offered Figgins arbitration, so the farmhand would be an extra bonus.

Meanwhile the Marlins would remove the tension of using Bell and would have the versatile Figgins on their roster.

Cut from the same speedy and hustling cloth as Ozzie Guillen, perhaps Figgins could be a useful tool for a National League team. He can come in as a pinch runner and fill in in the outfield and infield. Plus he would bring a veteran presence to the bench that goes with 35 career playoff games and a World Series title.

The trade may not work. Figgins might be buried on the bench in Miami, and Bell could be shelled in the American League.

But we already know the players are not working where they are currently playing now.

How bad could a change be for them? It’s certainly worth traveling 3,355 miles to find out.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


MLB Trade Rumors: The Miami Marlins Know They’re Stuck with Josh Johnson

The Miami Marlins are doing the opposite of trying to sell Josh Johnson. To ask for an organization’s top prospects in return for a guy who’s been battling health issues is one thing, but he hasn’t been the World Series champion pitcher we still try to envision him as. 

The asking price for Johnson is high, unreasonable and irrational for most every team in the majors. 

According to ESPN’s Jerry Crasnick, the Marlins are asking for players comparable to Jurickson Profar and Travis d’Arnau to get the trade talks going.

Josh Johnson is not worth the Texas Rangers‘ and Toronto Blue Jays‘ major league ready, No. 1 prospects—plain and simple.

Unless the Marlins are willing to lower the price on JJ, there’s no way any team is going to bite. The Rangers and Angels have reportedly backed out from trade talks involving Johnson because they feel the price tag is too high. But if the price comes down, Texas is willing to talk. 

Another issue is Johnson’s home and away split. He is definitely a better pitcher in Miami (5-4, 3.35 ERA) as opposed to his awful numbers on the road (1-3, 5.48 ERA).

Is Josh Johnson a sub-par pitcher? No. But he is not as high-priced as the Marlins organization is trying to sell him as. His 2012 numbers aren’t as attractive as his 2009-10 numbers, when he was a combined 26-11.

Since then, he’s 9-8 and has struggled with injuries.

Will JJ go at this year’s trade deadline? Possibly. According to Danny Knobler of CBSSports.com, the Marlins want more for Johnson than the Los Angeles Angels gave up for Zack Greinke.

If that isn’t an indication of what the Marlins are trying to do, I don’t know what is.  

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Miami Marlins: Finally There Is Sanity in the Bullpen

Chances are most baseball fans are not familiar with Miami Marlins left-handed reliever Mike Dunn. This is his fourth year in the big leagues and second with the Marlins. He had cups of coffee with the New York Yankees and Atlanta Braves earlier in his career.

He has good strikeout totals for his limited innings and does not let up many homers, making him a commodity in the bullpen, especially among lefties.

He has one career save. But that one save was significant. It might have illustrated a shift in thinking for the underachieving Marlins.

Last night, the Marlins played the first place Washington Nationals. A loss would have put them twelve games back in the loss column, and put the Fish in a terrible position.

The Marlins led behind pitcher Carlos Zambrano and manager Ozzie Guillen, who began to mix and match his pitchers. Wade LeBlanc, Ryan Webb and Randy Choate got the team through the seventh. Then embattled closer Heath Bell came in to pitch the eighth. No doubt, Marlins fans gulped at the concept of a six-out save from Bell when he has a hard enough time recording three outs.

Bell let up a leadoff single but miraculously did not let him score. Then the event happened.

Mike Dunn was called into the game to pitch the ninth. He was shaky, letting up a single to Bryce Harper and a walk to Ryan Zimmerman. But he struck out Adam LaRoche to end the game and earn his one career save.

And with that move, the Marlins have hope. This author has been urging Ozzie Guillen to not only remove Heath Bell from the closer role, forgetting how much Bell is paid, but also to mix and match in his bullpen like he did with the 2005 World Champion Chicago White Sox.

Last nigh,t he did both. Bell was out of the ninth, and a pitcher got the save because he was the right pitcher for the situation. That may be a novel concept, using the best matchups instead of the highest paid reliever to get the most critical three outs.

If the Marlins are no longer going to give away close ballgames, maybe their underachieving squad could make a run at the overachieving Nationals.

And maybe Mike Dunn will get a few more saves along the way, provided the situation calls for him.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


3 Bizarre Lineups Ozzie Could Use to Try to Break the Miami Marlins’ Slump

Ozzie Guillen has done almost everything he can to try and turn this season around.

The Miami Marlins find themselves desperately trying to make a run at the postseason. Meanwhile, the team stands nine games back in the division and 4.5 games out of a Wild Card spot.

Guillen is a very unconventional big-league manager who isn’t afraid to shake things up a bit when it comes to setting a lineup.

With the All-Star break approaching and the recent acquisition of first baseman Carlos Lee, the Marlins hope to turn things around in the second half of the season.

Now with Giancarlo Stanton reportedly out four-to-six weeks (according to an earlier tweet from CBS Sports) due to knee surgery, Guillen and the rest of the Marlins staff have to experiment with their lineup in hopes that one may stick.

For a team that is struggling to keep a .500 record, here are three rather bizarre lineups Guillen could try to break this Marlins slump.

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