Tag: Miami Marlins

Dusty Baker Rumors: Latest Buzz, Speculation Surrounding Former Manager

Dusty Baker hasn’t been an MLB manager since 2013, but he is reportedly mulling a potential return to the dugout next season.

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Report: Baker in Discussions for Marlins Manager Job

Tuesday, Sept. 22

Joe Frisaro of MLB.com reported the Miami Marlins may be tabbing Baker to be the full-time successor to Mike Redmond, whom they fired in May. Frisaro added Baker is “a very strong candidate.”

Dan Jennings is currently in the interim skipper spot after Redmond’s third season with the club was cut short amid a 16-22 start.    

Baker, 66, joined Turner Sports as a studio analyst for TBS’ MLB playoff coverage on Sept. 15.

In a recent interview with Awful Announcing’s Andrew Bucholtz, Baker spoke about the state of the game and how someone with his throwback type of philosophy still has relevance:

[Baseball]’s changed a lot, with the overall philosophy of how the game should be run, with the sabermetrics, the changing of the guard so to speak, and those that are in charge. There’s less baseball people in charge and more businessmen in charge. But there’s still a spot for guys that played the game. If you didn’t play the game, you may know the game, but you don’t see things in advance like we see things. The whole thing about being prepared is you can be prepared, but you also have to have forethought and anticipation and feelings on what you feel may happen. 

It almost sounds as though Baker is justifying himself as a managerial candidate to a degree.

Baker is an old-school personality known for getting along with players, but he hasn’t made it out of the first round of the playoffs since 2003. That was also the last year the Marlins made the postseason, when they proceeded to win the World Series and beat Baker’s Chicago Cubs in the National League Championship Series.

MLB.com’s Dylan Heuer doesn’t believe Baker is a good fit for the Marlins:

Miami called upon 2003’s championship skipper, Jack McKeon, to lead the team for a brief 90-game stint on an interim basis in 2011. In total there have been six different managers since 2010, excluding the one-game interim stint Brandon Hyde had before McKeon’s second brief tenure.

So there has been a fair amount of instability in leadership in the Marlins clubhouse. Based on the influence analytics and sabermetrics have had on pro baseball, a known commodity in Baker with little recent success may not be the best candidate to pitch to Marlins fans.

The Marlins have reportedly interviewed Manny Acta for their manager position as well, per ESPNdeportes.com’s Enrique Rojas. Acta hasn’t managed since 2012, so it will be interesting to see if Miami continues to pursue options who’ve been away from the game for multiple years or mixes in other viable candidates who are currently active.

 

Note: Managerial records courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com.

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Giancarlo Stanton Injury Update: Scar Tissue in Hand Delays Marlins OF’s Return

Miami Marlins All-Star outfielder Giancarlo Stanton has suffered a setback in his bid to return to the field from a broken bone in his left hand.

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Scar Tissue Buildup Will Delay Stanton’s Return

Thursday, September 17

Doctors in New York told Stanton the following in regard to his hand, according to the Miami Herald‘s Clark Spencer: “The strength’s not there. Don’t overdo it. Do what’s manageable.”

Spencer continued: “And [Stanton] said the scar tissue won’t be gone anytime soon. ‘Not in a couple of weeks,’ Stanton said, understanding it might require the entire offseason for the hand to completely heal.”

The outfielder was originally supposed to be out for four to six weeks after undergoing surgery on his hand in late June. Unfortunately, the Marlins have been without the reigning National League MVP runner-up for a chunk of the 2015 campaign.

Amid heightened expectations after signing a new $325 million contract in the offseason, Stanton was an All-Star this year and has hit 27 homers to go with 67 RBI in only 74 games. Ace of MLB Stats highlighted how proficient Stanton has been in terms of dingers:

The Marlins entered Thursday’s game against the Nationals sitting 20 games below .500 (63-83). Considering Stanton’s 6.5 WAR mark in 2014, per Baseball-Reference.com, it comes as little surprise that Miami has struggled throughout his lengthy absence.

At this point, it doesn’t make a lot of sense to play him so late in the season. Miami figures to rest its franchise cornerstone until the team is certain he is fully recovered from his nagging injury.

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Dan Jennings Rumors: Latest Buzz, Speculation Surrounding Marlins Manager

The Miami Marlins are not having their best season. At 54-79, they sit one game out of last place in a weak National League East division, and it seems like changes are on the horizon, especially for manager Dan Jennings. 

Continue for updates.


Jennings’ Future in Doubt

Wednesday, Sept. 2

According to the Miami Herald‘s Clark Spencer on Sept. 1, Jennings will “almost certainly” not be managing the Marlins for the 2016 season. Jennings started the year as Miami’s general manager and soon stepped down to take over responsibilities in the dugout after he fired Mike Redmond in May. 

Jon Heyman of CBS Sports corroborated this report on Sept. 2, and noted the team was looking for an “experienced” manager to take over the team, like the Dodgers‘ Don Mattingly. 

He has not been dealt the most fortunate hand this season. He did not have ace Jose Fernandez for most of 2015, who made just seven starts after coming back from Tommy John surgery last season. Fernandez went 4-0 in that time only to suffer a strained right bicep on Aug. 8, per the Associated Press (via ESPN.com).

To make matters worse, slugger Giancarlo Stanton was leading the majors with 27 home runs before he was hit by a pitch that fractured his wrist at the end of June, forcing him to undergo surgery, according to SI.com. While he was projected to come back at the end of August, it might be better to just shut him down for the rest of this lost season. 

The Marlins have the second-worst offense in the league with just 485 runs scored as Jennings has watched his team and his chances of staying a manager crash and burn.

The lack of productivity has made things difficult with the manager’s relationship with owner Jeffrey Loria, per Spencer: “Sources said the relationship between Jennings and Loria has become increasingly strained over the course of the team’s disappointing season. Jennings could return to the front office, but not necessarily as general manager.” 

There could be another hope for Jennings if his relationship with the Marlins is beyond repair. Spencer stated that Jennings could be a candidate for the Seattle Mariners‘ GM position, but no one has contacted him or the Marlins yet. 

It might be best for both parties to go their separate ways after this season. This kind of season is tough on a fairly inexperienced roster that has the eighth-youngest average age in the majors. The Marlins need a fresh look and healthy stars if they want to make a run toward relevancy in the National League, and a new influence in the clubhouse could provide a spark that makes this team a threat in the future. 

 

Stats courtesy of ESPN.com.

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Christian Yelich Injury: Updates on Marlins OF’s Knee and Return

The Miami Marlins‘ disappointing season has gotten worse, as star outfielder Christian Yelich has landed on the disabled list with a knee injury. 

Continue for updates. 


Yelich Out with Knee Contusion

Saturday, August 15

Per the Marlins’ official Twitter, Marcell Ozuna has been called up to take Yelich’s spot after he was placed on the 15-day disabled list retroactive to August 10. 

Even though Yelich’s power hasn’t shown up this year—he’s slugging .376 in 2015—his .343 on-base percentage trails only Dee Gordon and Giancarlo Stanton, who is also on the disabled list, among the team’s regular starters. 

With the Marlins entering play today with a 46-69 record, they are smart to play things safe with Yelich to ensure he’s 100 percent before playing again. The 23-year-old is a big part of the future for the franchise and will be instrumental in the team getting back into contention as soon as 2016. 

 

Stats via Baseball-Reference.com

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Has Tommy John Surgery Actually Made Jose Fernandez Better?

Jose Fernandez went into his Tommy John operation last May as one of baseball’s elite pitchers. Coming out of the operation, however, it wasn’t fair to expect him to pick up where he left off right away.

Instead, here we are a month into Fernandez’s return in 2015, and the only thing to say is this: Whoa.

You wouldn’t know that the Miami Marlins ace is a year removed from reconstructive elbow surgery. Fernandez has returned with a vengeance, following up the 2.25 ERA he posted across 2013 and 2014 with a 2.13 ERA in his first six starts of 2015. Rather than a pitcher struggling to get back on track, he looks better than ever.

And you don’t just have to look at his ERA to think as much.

Among the peripherals next to the 23-year-old right-hander’s sparkling ERA is a 1.75 FIP—that’s fielding independent pitching—that puts his 2.60 mark from 2013-2014 to shame. Feeding into this is an 11.1 K/9 rate, a career-low 2.1 BB/9 rate and a career-low 0.2 HR/9 rate.

And feeding into these, meanwhile, are career-best strike, swinging-strike and soft-contact and hard-contact rates:

Granted, we’re only looking at six starts. That’s a small sample size. 

But with Fernandez looking even more unhittable after his Tommy John surgery than he did before, you can’t help but wonder: Did the surgery somehow make him an even better pitcher?

This is generally not the best thought to have with a pitcher coming back from Tommy John. For while there is a train of thought that the surgery can be a performance enhancer, among the topics Will Carroll covered in his Tommy John series for B/R back in 2013 is the reality that this is not the case.

And there’s no need to tell the man himself. He knows.

“You’d be surprised how many times I’ve heard that from kids,” Fernandez told Anthony Castrovince of Sports on Earth in April. “They say, ‘Oh, I want to get Tommy John, because then I’m going to throw harder.’ Let me tell you something, kid. It’s not magic. Otherwise, everybody would do it. It’s really complicated and really tough and you have to be really disciplined.”

Knowing this, it’s best if we don’t wonder whether the surgery itself has changed Fernandez for the better. What we can wonder, however, is whether the experience of having gone through the surgery has done the trick.

What’s changed for Fernandez in 2015? Well, admittedly nothing stands out as much as his fastball velocity.

Through his six starts, Fernandez’s fastball has been sitting at a career-high 95.7 miles per hour. Per Brooks Baseball, that helps explain why he’s getting whiffs on a career-best 11.9 percent of his heaters and would seem to confirm the notion that Tommy John surgery can result in a velocity uptick.

But while this may be easy to notice, this is also where it’s dangerous to make assumptions.

Carroll noted in his piece that research has concluded that “there does not appear to be a lasting change in velocity for someone who has come back” from Tommy John. Given that he’s only made six starts, it’s very possible that Fernandez’s fastball velocity will prove the point by shifting downward as he throws more pitches and piles up more innings.

How Fernandez has been commanding his fastball, however, seems to point toward a lesson that his Tommy John operation taught him.

We saw how Fernandez has been throwing strikes at a higher rate, and part of the reason for that has to do with how often he’s finding the strike zone with his fastball. Per the PitchF/X data at FanGraphs, his four-seamer is hitting the zone a career-best 59.3 percent of the time.

Mind you, Fernandez had good fastball command to begin with. More than anything, that’s a result of his having mechanics that Doug Thorburn of Baseball Prospectus has graded as plus across the board.

But Brooks Baseball can show that there’s a slight difference this year. After Fernandez’s release point dropped from 2013 to 2014, it’s back up in 2015 to where it was in 2013. It thus may not be a coincidence that his fastball’s zone percentage is his best since 2013, not 2014.

That Fernandez’s release point has gone up at all looks like another non-coincidence. As he was going through his rehab earlier this summer, Fernandez told Christina De Nicola of Fox Sports Florida that he wanted to make sure his arm angle didn’t drop because doing so “obviously [puts] a lot of pressure to my elbow, and that’s the main reason I got hurt in my opinion.”

So, we can put two and two together. Fernandez’s injury warned him of the dangers of a low arm angle. He’s responded by raising his arm angle in 2015 to where it was in 2013. We shouldn’t be surprised that one of the results of that is a return of the fastball command he had that season.

And it looks like improved fastball command isn’t the only result of Fernandez’s release point going retro. His command of his breaking ball has also improved.

We don’t say this because Fernandez is throwing more curveballs—yes, calling it a slider also works—in the strike zone. Far from it, in fact, as his curveball’s zone rate of 41.3 percent is a career low.

Rather, we say it because, as Jeff Sullivan of FanGraphs was first to observe, Fernandez is putting his curveballs in the best possible location. Instead of pounding the zone with his hook, Fernandez’s heat map (via Brooks Baseball) shows that he’s putting his curveballs just below the strike zone:

All that red shows that Fernandez has been bunching his curveballs below the knees off the corner of the zone on his glove side. Rather than more curves in the zone, this means he’s throwing more curves that sweep across the zone only to end up in a spot where they can’t be hit. They’re bait that hitters can’t resist, and also can’t catch.

No need to use your imagination. Via Pitcher List, here’s San Francisco‘s Justin Maxwell illustrating the point in Fernandez’s 2015 debut back on July 2:

Fernandez has gotten a lot of swings like that on his curveball, as it’s drawing cuts outside the zone an absurd 55.2 percent of the time. On a related note, Brooks Baseball puts the whiff rate on Fernandez’s curveball at a career-high 26.3 percent.

Like his improved fastball command, this traces back to Fernandez’s raised arm slot. When he told De Nicola about wanting to keep his release point elevated, he noted that it was particularly important for him to stay on top of his curveball. And as Sullivan correctly observed: “Dropping down would cause the pitch to flatten out. Staying on top would aid him in spotting the pitch somewhere low.”

So while nothing should be taken for granted with Fernandez’s fastball velocity, it does look like his learning the hard way through Tommy John has had its benefits. By raising his arm angle, he’s achieved better-than-ever command of both his electric fastball and his electric curveball.

But there’s another adjustment at play in Fernandez’s successful return, and this one involves his changeup.

Fernandez has always had a changeup, but he treated it as more of a show-me pitch in throwing it just 9.2 percent of the time across 2013 and 2014. This year, however, he’s throwing it in 14.3 percent of his offerings. For the first time, it’s a legit third pitch.

Not surprisingly, left-handed batters have been on the receiving end of Fernandez’s increased changeup usage. Brooks Baseball says over 25 percent of Fernandez’s pitches to lefty batters have been changeups, and that’s been bad news for them. They’re swinging and missing 18.2 percent of the time at the changeup and hitting it at just a .167 clip.

This isn’t surprising. Though it’s not as impressive as his curveball, Michael Beller of SI.com rated Fernandez’s changeup as another plus-plus pitch. And he has the GIFs to prove it, too.

Why is Fernandez throwing more changeups? Maybe it’s as simple as his wanting to be a more complete pitcher by expanding his arsenal from two pitches to three. But we can also theorize that this is another lifestyle change inspired by his Tommy John operation.

Though it’s uncertain whether breaking balls are dangerous for a pitcher’s elbow, a 2012 article by Jon Roegele at Beyond the Box Score indicates that high-velocity breaking balls (sliders more so than curves) may be dangerous.

Since Fernandez’s curveball comes in at over 83 miles per hour, it definitely qualifies as a high-velocity breaking ball. It may, therefore, be a risky pitch to begin with. And if so, he upped the risk by throwing it nearly 40 percent of the time in 2014.

So far in 2015, Fernandez is throwing his hook just about 32 percent of the time. His increased changeup usage has thus come at the expense of his curveball usage. In addition to keeping his arm slot high, that could be another change dedicated to preserving his elbow.

If so, Fernandez has learned all the right lessons from undergoing Tommy John surgery. We can’t say that the surgery itself has made him better, but it does look like he’s turned himself into a better pitcher by avoiding the things that landed him on the operating table in the first place.

This is bad news for all the poor hitters who have to go up against Fernandez. When his elbow quit on him last year, goodness knows how many of them were hoping that would put a permanent end to his reign of terror.

Instead, it doesn’t look like Tommy John surgery stopped it. It looks like it merely postponed it.

 

Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com and FanGraphs unless otherwise noted/linked.

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Jose Fernandez’s Return Will Remind Us All of MLB-Best Upside

He’s coming back. Whisper it, sing it, shout it from the mountaintopJose Fernandez of the Miami Marlins, arguably the most exciting young arm in baseball, is about to pitch in a big league game for the first time in more than a year. 

This season has given us an avalanche of burgeoning stars: Kris Bryant, Noah Syndergaard, Joey Gallo, Carlos Correa and Byron Buxton, among others. So it’s easy to get distracted, to forget what Fernandez meant and, more importantly, what he could mean.

The Marlins right-hander has been MIA since May 2014, an eternity in our modern, what-have-you-done-for-me-lately world.

Allow us to refresh your memory. Or, actually, just go ahead and watch this:

That’s filth, cheddar, gas—pick your ham-fisted metaphor. Fernandez has the stuff to be the best pitcher in the game—no hyperbole—and he’s only 22 years old.

In fact, those highlights up there are from 2013, when he broke in as a 20-year-old wunderkind and wound up winning Rookie of the Year honors with a 2.19 ERA and 187 strikeouts in 172.2 innings.

Entering the 2014 campaign, it was worth wondering whether Fernandez would knock Los Angeles Dodgers ace Clayton Kershaw off of his Cy Young pedestal. Or, as Sports Illustrated‘s Cliff Corcoran put it in August 2013, “[If] this is how he pitches as a raw rookie after having just two months to adjust to making the leap from High-A to the majors, how good is he going to be next year?”

Unfortunately, those sky-high expectations crashed to Earth when Fernandez went down after eight starts with a torn ulnar collateral ligament and had to undergo Tommy John surgery. 

It’s a familiar tale. Right in Fernandez’s division, the National League East, you’ll find two other emerging studs who ran the Tommy John gauntlet: Matt Harvey of the New York Mets and the Washington Nationals‘ Stephen Strasburg.

The good news for Fernandez and the Marlins is that both Harvey and Strasburg returned strong.  

That said, even elite hurlers usually face an adjustment period coming back from Tommy John. ESPNNewYork.com’s Adam Rubin cited data collected by Dr. Glenn Fleisig, research director at the American Sports Medicine Institute, that shows 80 percent of pitchers successfully return to the big leagues after the increasingly common procedure but typically take six months to hit their stride.

Fernandez’s final rehab tuneup Saturday for Double-A Jacksonville offered encouraging but imperfect results, per CBS Sports‘ Jason Lempert: 5 IP, 6 H, 4 ER, 2 BB, 8 SO.

Don’t ask folks in South Beach to temper their expectations, though.

Not after suffering through a disappointing season, during which the Marlins have limped to a 31-46 record entering play Tuesday.

Not after a head-scratching managerial saga that saw Mike Redmond kicked to the curb in favor of Dan Jennings, who stepped down from the general manager’s office with zero pro coaching experience.

Not with Giancarlo Stanton sidelined for four to six weeks with a broken hamate bone.

When Fernandez takes the hill Thursday at Marlins Park, he’ll carry the last, best hope of Marlins fans with him. Surely they want—desperately—to see that guy, the one capable of carrying the franchise with his crackling high-90s fastball and golden right arm.

Surely it’s been agony for Fernandez to sit on the sideline, to get a tantalizing taste of MLB success and then be forced to watch the action like a common spectator. Now, however, on the eve of his comeback, he talks about the experience like a seasoned veteran.

“I feel like I’ve gotten a little better. Not only for pitching but for everything in life,” he told Craig Davis of the Sun Sentinel. “I’ve been following it for 13 months, so if I learned something, it’s how to be patient. It was much needed at my age.”

At long last, Fernandez gets to start learning lessons between the lines again. He gets to pull on a uniform, grab a sphere of cowhide, yarn and cork and try to throw it past the best hitters in the world.

He’s coming back, and that’s good news for us all.

 

All statistics current as of June 29 and courtesy of Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted. 

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Giancarlo Stanton’s Injury Prone, Bad Luck Mix Continues to Plague Career

The injury affects us all. 

Giancarlo Stanton’s bad luck continued Friday night as he injured his left wrist whiffing on a swing against the Los Angeles Dodgers.

The Miami Marlins knew their superstar slugger was hurt Friday night, but the extent of his latest injury was not known until Saturday morning, when it was confirmed Stanton has a broken hamate bone that will cause him to miss 4-6 weeks. Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal first had news of the severity, and ESPN’s Tim Kurkjian followed with specific details.

The news caused even casual baseball fans to shake their heads at the ongoing plague of bad luck attached to Stanton’s young career. Because of that bad luck, he played 150 games in a season just once in his six years with the Marlins.

Stanton, at age 25, should be one of Major League Baseball’s most marketable players with his cartoonish power, herculean build and electric smile. But once again, the game is deprived of his star power by an injury that seems freakish. And again, bad luck is halting a career that has already taken off but is having trouble reaching full altitude.

Just on a swing my bat dug into my hand a little bit,” Stanton said after the game, according to Christina De Nicola of Fox Sports Florida. “Didn’t feel the greatest, so just get it checked out and know for sure what’s going on. I think it just kind of got worse and worse (during the game).”

Since the 2012 season when he was on his way to having a monster year, Stanton has been unable to avoid the debilitating injury. First, it was a knee injury and then an abdomen strain that sucked 39 games from his 2012 season. In 2013, it was shoulder, thigh and ankle injuries that cost him 46 games.

And we all should remember too vividly what happened last season. Stanton was hit in the face by a fastball last September that caused facial fractures and dental damage. The injury forced him to miss the final 17 games of the season, one in which he had established himself as a legitimate National League MVP candidate.

Like this year’s hamate bone, that HBP can be viewed as a freak injury.

Call it bad luck or call Stanton injury prone. Whatever you choose, this is not only bad for the player and the Marlins. This is bad for baseball, a sport that needs all its young stars to shine as brightly as possible while it tries to reach a younger, more diverse demographic that tends to gravitate more toward football and basketball.

Stanton, along with a player like Bryce Harper, would be the perfect pitchman for the sport. If only he could keep himself on the field long enough to put up truly eye-popping numbers in an era when offense is muzzled.

Stanton’s counting stats obviously suffer with his injuries. He has never eclipsed 37 home runs in a season, a total he’s reached twice. The first time he hit the mark was in 2012, when he played in just 123 games. The second time was last season before taking the fastball to the face.

This season, Stanton was already at 27 after going on a June home run binge that saw him collect 12 in a 21-game span. He, along with a handful of other players, could have legitimately chased the 50-home run benchmark. Stanton, and maybe a couple others, could have also had a real shot at 60.

With hamate fractures, there are mixed results when it comes to players returning with their power in tow. If Stanton comes out on the down side upon his return, baseball could lose one of its most dynamic power hitters for longer than this DL stint.

Stanton, who in the offseason signed a 13-year, $325 million contract extension with Miami, struck out three times Friday. His comments on his final whiff—the swing that put the baseball world on notice of a possible injury—could also apply to his latest wound being one in an already long line of frustrating ailments that have kept him from becoming the power-hitting demigod his talent certainly warrants.

“[The injury happened on] one of my at-bats prior, but this one was the icing on the cake,” Stanton said, per De Nicola.

The same line could be uttered by MLB and its fans who truly care about the state of the game and how it is marketed to the next generation. The sport has been sitting on an out-of-this-world season from Stanton for several years now, and the first half of this one seemed like it would finally give it to us. He had played in all but one game in 2015 and had been among the game’s elite hitters.

“It’s certainly not great news when you lose a guy that means what he means to this ball club and to baseball,” Marlins manager Dan Jennings told reporters Saturday, per Shandel Richardson of the Sun-Sentinel.

It’s unclear what this latest Stanton injury means to the Marlins, but it certainly could make them sellers at the trade deadline. Just as important, though, is the fact that baseball is once again deprived of a full season from one of its stars.

Maybe this is the last significant injury of Stanton’s career. Maybe he returns and is as good as ever, his power returning with him. Or, maybe not.

Right now, the game waits and sees, as we all do, with the hope that Stanton’s plague is nearing an end.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired first-hand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

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Giancarlo Stanton Injury: Updates on Marlins Star’s Hand and Return

Miami Marlins outfielder Giancarlo Stanton felt discomfort in his hand during a June 26 game against the Los Angeles Dodgers. That discomfort was a broken hamate bone, which landed Stanton on the 15-day disabled list June 27 and will sideline the star slugger for at least a month.

Continue for updates.


Stanton Reportedly Out 4-6 Weeks

Saturday, June 27

ESPN’s Tim Kurkjian (via SportsCenter) originally reported the diagnosis and recovery timeline for baseball’s home run leader, while Joe Frisaro of MLB.com added the outfielder would need surgery to repair the injury but noted the team doesn’t think there is ligament damage. Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports reported the team hoped the break was clean, which would mean the outfielder would be out closer to four weeks than six. 

The team announced outfielder Cole Gillespie was called up to the majors to replace Stanton on the roster.

“On the swing, my bat dug into my hand a little bit,” Stanton said after Friday’s game, per Clark Spencer of the Miami Herald. “Didn’t feel the greatest.”

Entering the evening, Stanton had been on a tear. Following Friday’s 0-for-4 showing, Stanton is still batting .344 with 12 home runs and 23 RBI in June. That’s wildly impressive compared to May, when Stanton batted a lowly .185 with nine home runs and 23 RBI. Thanks to his recent surge, Stanton’s season-long batting average has ticked up to .265. His 27 homers and 67 RBI continue to lead MLB. 

An MVP finalist in 2014, Stanton’s season abruptly ended in September after a fastball from Brewers pitcher Mike Fiers hit him in the face. He suffered multiple face lacerations and fractures, and he missed Miami’s final 17 games while recovering.

Despite the injury, Stanton and the Marlins agreed to a historic 13-year, $325 million contract that is the richest in baseball history. The deal represented a stark deviation from Miami’s modus operandi, which typically sees Jeffrey Loria’s club trade away its stars before offering them long-term deals.

Stanton’s standing as the game’s best power hitter and a beloved figure in the Miami area helped change the team’s approach. However, the Marlins are still not in a position to have him sit out for an extended period of time. His contract, despite it being back-loaded, makes the Marlins thinner in other positions they may otherwise have been able to fill.

 

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Marlins Must Protect Jose Fernandez from Himself as Season Sits on Brink

Jose Fernandez is still learning how to make a deliberate comeback. 

He is coming back from the first significant injury of his baseball life. It’s been a long process to this point as he nears his return to the Miami Marlins sometime within the next month, if everything stays on schedule. His natural tendency is to throttle forward and punch it, especially since he hasn’t pitched in the majors in more than a year. 

That is why the Marlins must protect their ace from himself.

The 22-year-old Fernandez made his first rehab start Saturday since having Tommy John surgery in May 2014. He cranked it up, as he is known to do, his fastball topping out at 99 mph in the 54-pitch outing for Class A Jupiter. His two strikeouts both came on 97 mph fastballs.

“That means I was a little amped up,” Fernandez told reporters after the game.

The outing was a success despite Fernandez allowing five runs on eight hits in three innings because he came out of it healthy. And as long as that continues to happen, the final lines will not matter too much. 

The lines that will matter during Fernandez’s rehab are those of the Marlins. Where they sit in the National League East standings at the time their ace is set to return should have more of an effect on how he is deployed going forward.

Their need for Fernandez is voided if they continue to torpedo downward in the standings. Their season is already wasting away at 10 games under .500 and seven games out of first place with three teams in front of them. They are farther back in the wild-card standings, with more teams to beat out.

Their rotation has been depleted with Mat Latos, Henderson Alvarez and Jarred Cosart all on the disabled list with Fernandez, and none of them have been very effective when they have been healthy. Through Monday’s action, the rotation’s ERA is 4.42, which ranks 11th out of 15 NL teams. Heading into Monday’s loss to the Toronto Blue Jays, in which fill-in starter Brad Hand lasted less than an inning and allowed six earned runs on six hits, the Marlins also ranked 11th in the NL in WAR (2.4), per FanGraphs.

The injuries to Alvarez, Latos and Cosart—those three were expected to lead the rotation during Fernandez’s injury—have been significant, but so have their shoddy performances.

“Is it a big blow? Absolutely,” manager Dan Jennings told reporters. “Those guys came into the season one, two and three.”

Because of where the Marlins stand, and how they got there in the first place, Fernandez is undoubtedly eyeing his return to stall the rotation’s struggles and find a way to pitch the Marlins back into relevancy. But that is the thought process of a young pitcher and completely unrealistic, as the Marlins are far from a single pitcher on an innings limit saving their season.

The bullpen has thrown 195 innings, the second-highest total in the league, and its ERA (3.74) and WHIP (1.33) are 11th.

The offense ranks 11th in OBP (.309), OPS (.686), weighted on-base average (.301), 12th in slugging percentage (.377) and 13th in weighted runs created plus (87), according to FanGraphs.

Fernandez has been patient through his entire recovery, and in spring training he even acknowledged he had surprised himself with that fact.

“Knowing how I am, I thought I was going to be crazy,” Fernandez told reporters in February. “It hasn’t been easy. But I think this surgery teaches you a lot. It teaches you as a person and teaches you how to be patient.”

But patience can wear thin. The Marlins as a franchise know that—their 2012 fire sale is plenty of proof—and the team’s standing could make their ace a little jumpy as his return date draws closer.

Fernandez is on a five-start plan with strict limits on pitch counts. His next start is expected to be Friday, and then the Marlins will discuss his next steps in the process.

What should also be discussed is if the Marlins can realistically find their way back into the playoff race. And with that, reassuring themselves that Fernandez’s tight leash cannot wriggle loose at any point, especially if games become meaningless after his return. Fernandez has to continue surprising himself with patience.

He is a franchise cornerstone, the pitching equivalent to Giancarlo Stanton. Handling his comeback with the utmost care is the way to go. No matter what.

So far, Fernandez seems to understand that.

“I feel really, really healthy,” Fernandez told reporters after his rehab start, “and I can’t ask for anything else.”

Neither can the Marlins.

 

All quotes, unless otherwise specified, have been acquired firsthand by Anthony Witrado. Follow Anthony on Twitter @awitrado and talk baseball here.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


Dan Jennings Named Marlins Manager: Latest Details, Comments, Reaction

Mike Redmond couldn’t win with the players Dan Jennings picked out, so Jennings decided to try it out himself. The Miami Marlins general manager will move down from his front-office post and take over as manager, the team announced Monday.     

Jennings discussed the transition, per Joe Frisaro of MLB.com:

I’ve always considered myself, now 31 years in the game, as a baseball man. … I respect the [manager] position because in my time, I know how hard these men have worked to get there. I also know that a lot of them take different avenues to arrive in that seat. This is definitely a different avenue to arrive in this chair.

The move received some criticism due to possibly violating the “Selig Rule,” as USA Today‘s Ted Berg pointed out. Fox Sports’ Jon Morosi provided a synopsis of owner Jeffrey Loria’s explanation on the matter:

Jennings has been with the Marlins since 2002. He has slowly moved up and built trust within the organization, starting as a vice president of player personnel before eventually landing the GM gig at the end of the 2013 season. His move down to the managerial position comes a day after Miami fired Redmond and bench coach Rob Leary after a 16-22 start, which the team announced on Twitter.

Mike Goff, who served as a bench coach for the Seattle Mariners in 2007, will take over as Miami’s bench coach. Goff was previously serving as an advanced scout for the Marlins.

Jennings’ managerial hire is an unconventional move to say the least. Working in player personnel for almost the entirety of his baseball career, Jennings has never held a coaching or managerial post in an MLB organization. 

Jennings even shared some of the skepticism from his own family members, via Juan C. Rodriguez of the Sun Sentinel

Expected to compete for a division crown, Jennings has his work cut out trying to right the ship. The Marlins are six games behind the New York Mets for first place in the National League East and have dropped six of their last seven games.

With Jennings boasting no managerial experience of note, his feet will be to the fire early and often for the remainder of 2015.

 

Follow Tyler Conway (@tylerconway22) on Twitter.

Read more MLB news on BleacherReport.com


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