Tag: Miami Marlins

Mike Redmond: Latest News, Rumors and Speculation on Marlins Manager’s Future

Buoyed by an offseason spending spree that included a long-term agreement with star Giancarlo Stanton, most expected the Miami Marlins to compete for an NL East title. A disappointing 3-10 start apparently has management reconsidering the status of manager Mike Redmond.  

Continue for updates.


Redmond on Hot Seat

Monday, April 20

Clark Spencer of The Miami Herald reported that not only is Redmond standing on thin ice but the team is considering Mets Triple-A manager Wally Backman as a potential replacement.

Fox Sports’ Ken Rosenthal provided additional details on Redmond’s status with the team:

Backman, 55, is in his third season with the Las Vegas 55s, leading them to the playoffs during his first two campaigns. He has been with the Mets organization since 2010 and also has minor league managerial experience with the Chicago White Sox and the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Should Backman wind up replacing Redmond, he’ll be taking over perhaps baseball’s most disappointing team. Miami is coming off of a four-game sweep at the hands of New York and has completely fallen apart amid struggles on its pitching staff. Only the Texas Rangers have given up more runs through their first 13 games.

High-profile acquisitions, such as starting pitcher Mat Latos and outfielder Ichiro Suzuki, are off to miserable starts, and the Marlins are looking for any way possible to jump-start their roster. If he’s let go, Redmond will be the fourth Marlins manager to either be let go or resign since 2010. (The Marlins also had two interim managers in 2011.)

Overall, he has compiled a 142-195 record since arriving in 2013.

 

Follow Tyler Conway (@tylerconway22) on Twitter.

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Marlins Pitcher Carter Capps Has Bizarre, Leaping Pitch Delivery

You’ll come across some weird sights if you head down to Marlins Park this spring.

There’s rain falling indoors, but perhaps even stranger, a pitcher who leaps like a hunter-gatherer throwing a spear while hurling the ball over the plate.

This is Carter Capps, whose strange pitch delivery has drawn attention from fans and umpires alike as he’s made his way through the minor leagues and into the Marlins bullpen.

Miami called Capps up after losing ace Henderson Alvarez to shoulder inflammation Sunday, and the unconventional pitcher made his 2015 debut during Monday’s 3-2 loss to the Atlanta Braves. Capps pitched one inning, recording one strikeout and allowing zero hits for three batters faced.

Sportscasters began commenting on the righty’s style before his first pitch, mentioning that minor league umpires had recently objected to his leaving the rubber while playing for the New Orleans Zephyrs.

Capps gave MLB.com’s Joe Frisaro the scoop on his controversial style. He says he and officials have come to an understanding and developed a compromise.

“They just said they wanted me to make sure I dragged my foot and not get too elevated in the air, and make sure it’s more on a lateral plane,” Capps said. “As long as I do that, they have no problem with it. But it was very strange.”

Not to be a foot in Capps’ punch bowl, but his pitching on Monday didn’t exactly feature extensive toe-dragging. There didn‘t appear to be any toe-dragging, actually. And by launching down the mound, he does chop off a not-immeasurable distance between him and the plate. In a game where batters have fractions of a second to react to the ball, this difference can be significant.

But hey—if it isn’t an infraction, let the man live. I love a goofy pitching style as much as the next guy, and I would like nothing more than to watch game after game of Capps’ E. Honda leap-pitching.

Let’s keep baseball weird, guys.

 

Dan is on Twitter. He’s all for weird.

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Marlins’ Dee Gordon Dunks on Teammate Christian Yelich in Postgame Interview

Posterized! In baseball? Yep.

The Miami Marlins topped the Tampa Bay Rays 10-9 in 10 innings thanks to a Christian Yelich walk-off single Friday night.

In the postgame interview, teammate Dee Gordon, who scored the game-winning run, decided to change things up from the celebratory “shaving cream to the face” stunt. With help from Mat Latos, Gordon dunked on Yelich right in the middle of his interview. His response was perfect.

“I completely forgot the question; I just got dunked on.”

Yelich gave the Marlins their first win, and blooper, of the season. 

[MLB]

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Giancarlo Stanton’s Superstardom Will Reach New Heights in 2015

For Giancarlo Stanton, there will be no escaping the spotlight in 2015. There will be more eyes and, in turn, more pressure on him than ever before. 

In an environment like that, stars can either fade or shine even brighter. And provided you know how to read and comprehend headlines, you can guess which outcome is about to be discussed in this space.

Stanton, the 25-year-old right fielder for the Miami Marlins, has already shown he can handle being one of baseball’s best players. It feels strange to refer to his 2014 season as his big breakout knowing that he came into the year with a career .889 OPS and 117 home runs in four seasons, but that’s what it was.

Beyond leading the National League with 37 home runs and a .555 slugging percentage, Stanton also posted a career-best .395 on-base percentage, stole a career-high 13 bases and, according to the defensive metrics found at FanGraphs, played quality defense in right field. 

It all added up to 6.2 wins above replacement, which put Stanton behind only Andrew McCutchen and Jonathan Lucroy among NL position players. That captures how he went from being one of the game’s elite sluggers to being one of the game’s elite players, period.

The one tragedy of Stanton’s 2014 season is that it ended both prematurely and gruesomely by way of a wayward Mike Fiers fastball. But he escaped that incident without career-altering injuries—or, judging from his spring training dominance, any ill effectsand still finished second in the NL MVP voting.

After a season like that, the anticipation for Stanton’s follow-up season in 2015 would have been high enough even if nothing of note had happened over the offseason. But as you might have noticed, two things of note happened.

First, Stanton signed a 13-year, $325 million contract. And though the fine print puts quotation marks around the length and dollars of the deal, as ESPN.com’s Jayson Stark explains, officially it’s the biggest contract in sports history. Because of how these things work, Stanton must now look the part of the most expensive athlete ever.

Second, the Marlins followed Stanton’s extension by going all-in on returning to the postseason in 2015. They traded for Mat Latos, Dee Gordon and Martin Prado, and they signed Michael Morse. Now the Marlins look good enough to convince very smart people such as Grantland’s Jonah Keri and Michael Baumann to pick them to win it all in 2015.

The last time anyone actually expected anything from a Marlins team featuring Stanton was in 2012, but the situation now is different. The focus then was on new additions Jose Reyes, Mark Buehrle and Heath Bell. The focus now is on whether Stanton can carry this new-look outfit.

He’s certainly committed to the task. Stanton has often expressed his desire to win, and he recently told Joe Frisario of MLB.com that his sole focus for 2015 is to “just play the whole year and help the team.”

Nonetheless, what ESPN.com’s Buster Olney wrote in December still rings true:

What all of this means is that he’ll face far more scrutiny, far more pressure, than ever. In the past, a Stanton slump was like a tree falling in a forest — nobody heard it — but now everybody will notice. Look, his contract is so enormous that it will be impossible to match in production, and Stanton is known to be a smart guy who will understand that, and that nobody will ever feel sorry for him again.

But Stanton is stepping into a vortex in 2015, ready or not.

How well Stanton survives this vortex will depend on his performance. To live up to the hype and help the Marlins live up to the hype, he’ll need to show his superstar turn in 2014 was no fluke.

Thankfully, this is doable.

The one thing Stanton doesn’t have to prove to anyone is that his power is for real. Rating his power as an 80 on the 20-80 scouting scale might actually be underselling it, a point that he seems intent on making every time he hits one over the fence.

We really don’t need to, but let’s look at an example to illustrate the point:

So yeah, no. His power is not on the pile marked “Prove It” in 2015.

Rather, what’s front and center on that pile is the .395 OBP he posted last year. That’s astronomically higher than an average OBP (.314 in 2014) these days and 41 points higher than the .354 career mark he bore heading into 2014.

As such, it’s a mark that suggests he’s legitimately improving as a hitter. Thus does it compel one to ask, “But is he really?”

Oh, he might be. 

When Stanton first came into the league in 2010, he was basically Pedro Cerrano. Contact off his bat was loud, but he wasn’t wired for consistency. He struck out in 31.1 percent of his 396 plate appearances and walked in only 8.6 percent of those plate appearances.

Ever since then, however, Stanton has been making steady gains.

That’s most obvious when looking at his walks. He’s gone from an 8.6 BB percent in 2010 to 14.7 BB percent rates in each of the last two seasons, which is reflective of much-improved discipline. According to FanGraphs, he chased 34.3 percent of pitches he saw outside of the strike zone between 2010 and 2012. In the last two years, that figure has dropped to 30.8 percent.

Meanwhile, Stanton’s strikeout habit is rolling steadily downhill:

As the league’s strikeout habit has been getting worse, Stanton’s has been getting better.

Mind you, Stanton is never going to turn into a pure contact hitter. His giant 6’6″ frame may be good for generating power, but it also curses him with a big strike zone. And as Brooks Baseball can show, he hasn’t gotten the hang of cutting down his whiffs on breaking balls and off-speed pitches.

Slowly but surely, though, Stanton is doing himself a monumental favor by closing holes in his swing against the hard stuff.

Last September, Jonah Keri penned a piece that referenced how Stanton had largely stopped swinging through high pitches in 2014. Not surprisingly, a search on Baseball Savant revealed that most of the pitches he stopped swinging through were fastballs.

Elsewhere, another search on Baseball Savant revealed that Stanton finally achieved a balance between hitting both inside fastballs and outside fastballs in 2014:

It’s the improvement against outside heat that really stands out, and a closer look offers a hint at what made that possible. Stanton hit an awful lot of outside fastballs the other way to right field.

And that leads us to the biggest improvement Stanton made at the plate in 2014. Get a load of his before-and-after production to right field:

  • 2010-2013: .856 OPS and 15 HR
  • 2014: 1.057 OPS and 9 HR

Stanton always had the tools he needed to be an elite opposite-field producer. But for the first time in his career, he actually was in 2014.

On that note, I believe we’ve earned ourselves a look at another Stanton unreal dinger: 

Yes, good times. Now onward with the analysis.

Stanton’s superstar turn in 2014 wasn’t all about his hitting. He wouldn’t have qualified as one of the game’s elites without also contributing on the basepaths and on defense. And this is where things might look sketchy, as he doesn’t have much of a track record as a skilled baserunner or defender.

But it looks like that was due to circumstances beyond his control more so than to a lack of ability.

Stanton missed quite a few games with leg injuries between 2011 and 2013, most notably spending over 70 days on the disabled list with knee and hamstring injuries in 2012 and 2013. But in 2014, he was able to keep his legs healthy for a change.

As David G. Temple of FanGraphs observed, that provided us with our first real chance to see what Stanton can do on healthy legs. And beyond a stronger base to hit off of, that meant improved footspeed that served him well on the basepaths and helped boost his range in the outfield.

To the latter end, Stanton has already indicated that the good times are going to carry over to 2015 with this beauty of a grab on Wednesday night against the Atlanta Braves:

This, admittedly, is the only highlight Stanton has produced three games into the season. He started slow at the dish, collecting only one hit in his first 12 plate appearances against the Braves.

But rest assured, the highlights are coming. Stanton is coming off a year in which he was an asset in every phase of the game, and the talents that made that possible haven’t gone anywhere.

So all the extra people who will be watching this year? They’re in for quite the show. 

 

Note: Stats courtesy of Baseball-Reference unless otherwise noted/linked.

If you want to talk baseball, hit me up on Twitter.

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The Marlins Somehow Had a Rain Delay in a Stadium with a Retractable Roof

The Miami Marlins spent a lot of money on their new stadium—$515 million, mostly funded by Miami-Dade County, to be specific.

It features some interesting things, like a quasi-strip club at field level, an exploding fantasy fountain and a monstrous retractable roof. 

The last of these is probably the most practical asset, allowing the franchise to showcase and avoid Florida’s notoriously finicky weather as it sees fit.

The roof is a unique and powerful tool when used properly, but the operative words there are “when used properly.” That wasn’t the case Monday afternoon, when groundskeepers at Marlins Park made the mistake of trusting God not to dump his daily tears on South Florida during the team’s season opener against the Atlanta Braves.

Matt Porter of The Palm Beach Post was on the scene prior to the cloudburst. He noted the presence of rain clouds and the stadium’s decision to shrug off said clouds, and then he watched as water began falling through the stadium’s open roof.

The rain came down as the roof slowly closed, soaking fans and proving why we can never have nice things.

The Marlins grounds crew, not exactly a NASCAR pit crew of rain-fighting efficiency, attempted to put some kind of blanket or off-brand Twister mat over home plate.

Naturally, Twitter began making fun of the Marlins immediately:

As a former longtime Florida resident, I can’t give the Marlins a pass here. There are only two certainties in Florida: death and rain. Taxes aren’t even a thing there.

With that in mind, there’s no excuse for ignoring the one phenomenon that happens every day in this swampy hootenanny south of Georgia. Rain in Florida is like winter in Westeros: It may not be present, but rest assured, it is coming.

As for the Marlins, the team says it has no idea why the roof remained open, via Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald

Welp!

I bet a Florida Man is to blame.

 

Dan is on Twitter. He misses Florida in the weirdest way.

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Complete Miami Marlins 2015 Season Preview

Giancarlo Stanton has accomplished a lot in his young career, but this offseason he did something that seemed utterly impossible: He convinced owner Jeffrey Loria to put the Miami Marlins in a position to succeed. 

In November, Loria and the Marlins signed Stanton to the biggest contract in baseball history. The deal served as a $325 million domino that led to an offseason of free-agent signings and trades that made actual baseball sense, something Loria has a track record of ignoring.

In an exhaustive feature on Stanton, ESPN The Magazine‘s Tim Keown wrote that the Marlins star didn’t demand just the 13 years and the parking garage full of Brink’s trucks that came with the deal. Stanton required a commitment to success. 

“I’m not going to sign just any contract because I got hit in the head,” he said. 

The deal ended up including an opt-out after six years and the first no-trade clause Loria has ever granted. Those serve as protection for Stanton in case the front office doesn’t keep its promise to field a winner. 

But so far the organization has held up its end of the bargain.

Michael Morse, Ichiro Suzuki, Dee Gordon, Martin Prado, Dan Haren and Mat Latos all found their way to Miami this winter because of the new leaf the organization has apparently turned over. 

Now, for the first time since they started calling themselves “Miami,” the Marlins can also call themselves contenders.

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Ichiro Suzuki to Marlins: Latest Contract Details, Comments, Reaction

Ichiro Suzuki isn’t done with Major League Baseball just yet.

The 41-year-old outfielder reportedly signed with the Miami Marlins, according to Craig Mish of MLB Network Radio, via Jon Heyman of CBS Sports:

The fact that Ichiro is planning on playing at least another season shouldn’t come as a surprise. The two-time batting champion made it clear in March 2014 that walking away from the game hadn’t been a topic for consideration.

“Retirement from baseball is something I haven’t even thought about,” he said, per ESPN.com.

Ichiro added that he had a lot left in the tank.

“Not just a few, many,” he said about the number of seasons he planned to play beyond 2014. “I feel there’s no reason for me to retire right now.”

In September, his attitude hadn’t changed, per Daniel Barbarisi of The Wall Street Journal:

Despite climbing into his 40s, Ichiro hasn’t suffered the kind of massive decline that has afflicted other aging stars in the past.

In 2014, the 2001 MVP boasted a slash line of .284/.324/.340 with one home run, 22 runs batted in and 15 stolen bases. While his power numbers were down slightly from 2013, his batting average and on-base percentage jumped by 22 and 27 points, respectively.

According to Baseball-Reference, Ichiro also had a 1.4 WAR, which isn’t great but impressive nonetheless for a 41-year-old, and also up from 2013’s 0.8 WAR.

It’s easy to see why Ichiro would want to prolong his MLB career for at least another season. Although his defense has undoubtedly suffered as he continues playing, the Japanese star remains a solid hitter in the right circumstances.

Ace of MLB Stats unearthed one of the most telling statistics when it comes to describing Ichiro’s offense:

Ichiro is a bit like Paul Pierce in that he’ll never really become a terrible player in his advancing age like you see happen to other stars. His talents will wane, but he’ll always contribute to his team in some meaningful way.

By now, the Marlins know what to expect from Ichiro. As long as the surefire Hall of Famer isn’t tasked with being an everyday outfielder and used near the top of the order, he should be a solid addition for the 2015 season.

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Miami Marlins’ Top 10 Prospects for 2015

Few teams have been as busy this offseason as the Miami Marlins.

The decision to extend Giancarlo Stanton with a historic 13-year, $325 million contract thrust the Marlins into win-now mode, and it wasn’t long before the club began to aggressively retool its big league roster around the 25-year-old slugger.

However, building a strong supporting cast around Stanton meant blowing up the farm system, and so the Marlins were forced to part with top prospects.

First, they traded left-hander Andrew Heaney, the organization’s first-round draft pick in 2012, along with Enrique Hernandez and two other players to the Dodgers for Dee Gordon. One day later, they shipped right-hander Anthony DeSclafani to the Reds in a deal for Mat Latos.

Heaney, Hernandez and DeSclafani each debuted in the major leagues in 2014, meaning that the Marlins would have had them under team control for five or six years. Meanwhile, their respective departures have left Miami with few options down on the farm.

Flame-throwing right-hander Tyler Kolek, whom the Marlins selected with the No. 2 overall pick in last year’s draft, has the highest ceiling in the organization and headlines a prospect pool that’s top-heavy with pitching.

Lefty Justin Nicolino’s plus command and advanced pitchability should help him reach the major leagues in 2015, and right-handers Jose Urena and Trevor Williams shouldn’t be far behind.

Second baseman Avery Romero has done nothing but rake as a professional, batting .320 between both Class-A levels, while 2014 draft pick Brian Anderson gives them additional depth at the position. Meanwhile, catcher J.T. Realmuto had the breakout campaign that seemed inevitable and also fared well during a brief audition in the major leagues, and he seems poised to carve out a more important role with the Marlins in 2015.

Here are the Miami Marlins’ top 10 prospects for the 2015 season.

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Martin Prado, David Phelps to Marlins: Latest Trade Details, Comments, Reaction

The Miami Marlins‘ offseason overhaul continued on Friday, as the team reportedly struck a deal with the New York Yankees for super-utility man Martin Prado and right-handed pitcher David Phelps. 

The Marlins officially announced the move on Twitter:

Marc Carig of Newsday had the particulars of the deal, which includes five players and three going to New York in exchange for Prado and Phelps:

In addition, Juan C. Rodriguez of the Sun-Sentinel reported the Yankees were kicking in some of the money owed to Prado:

Marlins President of baseball operations Michael Hill discussed the deal for Prado, according to the team’s official Twitter feed: 

The Marlins, surprisingly, have been one of the most active teams in baseball this offseason. Prado and Phelps are the latest acquisitions, joining Mat Latos after he was traded from Cincinnati at the winter meetings. 

The biggest move of all was re-signing Giancarlo Stanton to a record-setting $325 million contract, though there are skeptics about how legitimate the deal is on Miami’s part due to it being heavily backloaded

Regardless of what happens down the road, it’s clear the Marlins view 2015 as an opportunity to compete for a playoff spot. As Jeff Sullivan of FanGraphs.com jokingly tweeted, Miami’s payroll is suddenly spiking:

Prado isn’t a star-caliber player but did fare well in 37 games with the Yankees after being traded from Arizona. He hit .316/.336/.541 in 133 at-bats and has a career slash line of .291/.340/.429 in nine years, though some of that was likely helped by playing in offensive parks like Yankee Stadium and Chase Field. 

Phelps is best served as a reliever, though he did start 17 games for the Yankees last season. He can open the year in Miami’s rotation if the team wants to move slowly with Jose Fernandez’s recovery from Tommy John surgery. 

All of these moves give the Marlins versatility and at least make them more competitive than they have been in the last two years. Atlanta has taken steps back this offseason, while New York isn’t quite ready to compete offensively, so a playoff spot could be open in the National League for Miami to grab. 

 

If you want to talk sports, hit me up on Twitter. 

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Michael Morse to Marlins: Latest Contract Details, Reaction and Analysis

The Miami Marlins have reportedly reached an agreement with outfielder Michael Morse on a two-year deal.

Joe Frisaro of MLB.com confirmed the signing was complete:

Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports provided the financial details:

Morse will now have played for five teams over the past four seasons. He’s coming off a campaign where he posted a .336 on-base percentage with 16 home runs for the San Francisco Giants before playing a notable role in the team’s World Series run.

In terms of regular-season numbers, his breakout came in 2011. That’s when he hit .303 with a .360 OBP and 31 homers for the Washington Nationals. He hasn’t been able to replicate that production in the years that followed, but he boosted his value with the solid playoff showing.

After the Giants captured the title, Adam Kilgore of The Washington Post passed along the slugger’s comments about the crazy journey he’s been on in recent years.

“It’s been a hell of a ride,” Morse said. “Sometimes you could say, at the end, it all makes it worth it. Sometimes you don’t have a storybook. But you get a big ol’ book. I feel like I’ve done a lot.”

The two main concerns with Morse are injuries and defense.

He’s played in more than 130 games in a season just twice. One of those was his aforementioned best season to date with the Nationals, and the other came this past campaign. Otherwise, he’s spent quite a bit of time banged up throughout his career.

Defensively, the Florida native has played all over the field. He actually broke in as a shortstop with the Seattle Mariners in 2005. He’s gone on to spend time at all of the corner infield and outfield spots without showing great proficiency at any position.

That said, the Marlins are not signing Morse for his glove. They are bringing him in to provide some extra pop in the lineup.

Jesse Spector of the Sporting News notes that he’s likely to wind up in a platoon situation:

The Marlins’ outfield consists of a 25-year-old superstar in Giancarlo Stanton, alongside younger budding stars in Marcell Ozuna and Christian Yelich. So, while Mike Morse played 84 of his 131 games in 2014 in left field, that is not where he will be playing in Miami. … 

… He will be able to spell a corner outfielder on occasion, but mainly he figures to play in a platoon with lefty-swinging Garrett Jones. …

… As important as filling out first base is for the Marlins, a big benefit of signing Morse is the addition of power to the Miami bench in the form of whichever of Jones or Morse is not in the lineup on a particular day. Marlins pinch-hitters combined for minus-1.6 wins above replacement last year according to baseball-reference.com – the only National League teams who did worse were the Phillies and Cubs.

In a perfect world, he’ll be able to play in upward of 140 games while hitting at least 25 home runs and driving in around 90 runs. If he can reach all of those plateaus, there’s little doubt the season would be considered a success, regardless of his defensive contributions.

It all begins with staying on the field. He’s coming off a generally healthy season with the Giants. The hope among the front office will be that he can finally put those injury woes behind him and avoid any extended stints on the disabled list.

Ultimately, signing Morse doesn’t come without some risk. But he definitely adds more potential to the lineup, and when teams are scouring the free-agent market for possible additions, they tend to focus on the upside.

Miami will hope he can parlay his strong finish to 2014 into a successful 2015.

 

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