Tag: NL East

Atlanta Braves Manager Search: Latest News, Rumors and Speculation on Position

The Atlanta Braves have reportedly begun the process of interviewing in-house candidates for their vacant managerial position, but they still plan to speak with other options from outside the organization.

Continue for updates.


Braves Talk About Job With Three Coaches

Saturday, Oct. 1

Ken Rosenthal of Fox Sports reported Saturday the Braves discussed the opening with third base coach Bo Porter, first base coach Eddie Perez and bench coach Terry Pendleton on Friday. Brian Snitker has filled in on an interim basis since Fredi Gonzalez was fired in May.

It’s no surprise Atlanta is planning to take its time to consider every alternative, including coaches from both inside and outside the club. The Braves are looking to take their first major step forward in 2017 after an often painful rebuilding process.

In addition to the arrival of some top prospects, led by shortstop Dansby Swanson, the team is also preparing to open its new home—SunTrust Park—next year.

Although the job could attract interest with the Braves ready to start climbing the standings, Snitker has emerged as a strong candidate to transition from an interim role into the full-time manager.

Jesse Spector of the Sporting News commented on how well the team, which looked destined to finish at the bottom of the standings by a significant margin early in the season, has played since the managerial change:

The 60-year-old coaching veteran, who’s managed all around the Braves’ minor-league system, told Mark Bowman of MLB.com this week he’d “love” to keep the job into 2017 and beyond, but general manager John Coppolella didn’t commit to anything.

“[Snitiker] has been outstanding on the field and off the field,” Coppolella said. “He’s been exactly what we’ve needed right now. We’ll continue to evaluate it and see which direction we go.”

Chris Cotillo of MLB Daily Dish reported in May that Los Angeles Angels special assistant Bud Black and Boston Red Sox bench coach Torey Lovullo were potential outside candidates for the position.

Ultimately, it would be tough for the Braves to go away from Snitker given how well the team, which remains short on talent as it awaits more highly rated prospects to arrive in the big leagues, has performed under his guidance in recent months.

Atlanta can afford to give the interim manager a couple of years to prove himself while the team makes the transition back into a legitimate contender in the National League.

                                                      

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Jay Bruce Catching Fire as Mets Seek Heroes for 2016 Playoffs

They won’t have Matt Harvey, they won’t have Jacob deGrom, and they won’t have Daniel Murphy.

If you’re expecting the New York Mets to be the same roadblock they were for the Chicago Cubs they were last October, well, a lot of the power pitching is hurt, and the power-hitting second baseman is gone.

But they do have Jay Bruce.    

A week ago, you’d laugh when you said that. A week ago, Mets fans would cringe or worse if you said it.

But now the Mets are nearly assured of getting back to the postseason, and Bruce is part of the reason. Now the Mets are one regular-season win and one Wild Card Game win away from an October rematch with the Cubs, and Bruce is a reason to think they might just have a chance again.

“We knew when we got him, if he starts swinging the bat, he changes our whole lineup,” Mets manager Terry Collins said on the Mets TV broadcast Friday night after Bruce’s three hits and three RBI keyed the 5-1 win over the Philadelphia Phillies that dropped the Mets’ magic number to one. “Hopefully he can stay hot from now on.”

Presumably Collins meant from now to whenever the Mets are done in 2016. Bruce’s history through eight-and-a-half years with the Cincinnati Reds tells you he can stay hot for a while and that he can carry a team when he does.

That same history tells you he can get ridiculously cold and can drive his own team up the wall when he does.

The Mets saw that after acquiring Bruce from the Cincinnati Reds Aug. 1. Their fans saw it, and because they’d never really seen the hot version of Bruce, they booed him almost nonstop during the team’s last homestand. They stopped only when they didn’t have a chance, because Collins pinch hit for Bruce—with Eric Campbell!—and then left him out of the lineup four straight days.

The final day of that benching was last Saturday, and that night, Bruce pinch hit in the ninth inning and hit his first home run in three weeks (he went 3-for-39 in those three weeks, with no extra-base hits and one RBI).

Since then, Bruce has been back in the lineup every game, and he’s hit safely in each one. The Mets have won every game but one.

Beginning with that home run, Bruce has 10 hits in 20 at-bats, and four of them have left the ballpark.

As my friend Jared Diamond of the Wall Street Journal tweeted sarcastically Friday:

With Bruce, with Yoenis Cespedes, with a revitalized Jose Reyes and an impressive Asdrubal Cabrera, the Mets head toward October with a lineup that might match or beat the one they rode to the World Series a year ago. They’ll need it, because as well as Seth Lugo and Robert Gsellman (who won again Friday) have done as fill-in starters, it’s a little much to expect them to dominate in October the way Harvey or deGrom could.

Even if this season ends with a wild-card loss next Wednesday or even if it ends with a division-series loss to a Cubs team that will be heavily favored, the Mets can be proud of what they’ve done.

They lost three-fifths of their Opening Day rotation and also Zack Wheeler, the young power pitcher who was supposed to come back from Tommy John surgery and join the rotation at midseason. Three of the four starting infielders suffered major injuries, and two remain out.

They were 60-62 on Aug. 20, when they had just lost Steven Matz and were about to lose deGrom. They’ve gone 26-12 since then, the best record in the major leagues in that span.

Most of that came with minimal contributions from Bruce, who was leading the National League in RBI at the time of the trade but drove in just 11 runs in his first 42 games with the Mets.

It’s only been a week since then, two games against the Phillies sandwiched around a series against a Miami Marlins team stunned by Jose Fernandez’s death. It’s not much.

But Bruce’s history says these hot streaks can last. The Mets hope this one does.

Already, Bruce has the hits that have them on the verge of clinching a playoff spot. Now maybe he can give them the hits that help make that playoff spot count.

           

Danny Knobler covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.

Follow Danny on Twitter and talk baseball.

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Jose Fernandez Celebrated at Funeral, Public Memorial in Miami

A public memorial service was held Wednesday for former Miami Marlins starting pitcher Jose Fernandez, and his family and friends held a private service Thursday.

The 24-year-old died Sunday morning in a boating accident.

WSVN 7 News shared Scott Boras‘ eulogy during Fernandez’s funeral Thursday. Boras was Fernandez’s agent:

The Sun Sentinel‘s Craig Davis posted a photo of fans honoring Fernandez on Wednesday at a memorial set up outside Marlins Park:

ESPN.com’s Jerry Crasnick reported approximately 150 fans were on hand to pay tribute early in the day:

The Miami Herald‘s David Smiley reported an automobile procession began at Marlins Park on Wednesday and ended at Ermita de la Caridad (Shrine of Our Lady of Charity), and a public viewing was scheduled at St. Brendan Catholic Church.

The Miami Herald‘s Andre Fernandez showed the procession arriving at the church in the afternoon:

Upon its arrival, Jose Fernandez’s family draped his casket with his 2016 All-Star jersey, as Andre Fernandez shared:

Clark Spencer of the Miami Herald posted a photo of Jose Fernandez’s teammates surrounding his hearse at Marlins Park:

WSVN‘s Katrina Bush shared a clip of the players escorting the hearse down its route:

WPTV’s Jason Hackett showed fans lining the route outside the stadium:

Fernandez’s death sent shock waves throughout baseball. He was one of the brightest talents and best pitchers in MLB. He reached his second All-Star Game earlier in the year and was a strong contender for the National League Cy Young Award.

The Marlins canceled Sunday’s game against the Atlanta Braves after Fernandez’s death was confirmed. In Miami’s first game back Monday, second baseman Dee Gordon led off with a solo home run:

It was Gordon’s first homer of the season.

“I ain’t never hit a ball that far, even in [batting practice],” he said of the moment, per Walter Villa of USA Today. “I told the boys, ‘If you all don’t believe in God, you better start.’ For that to happen today, we had some help.”

Team owner Jeffrey Loria announced Monday that the team will retire Fernandez’s No. 16 jersey. Jackie Robinson, whose No. 42 jersey is honored leaguewide, is the only other player to have his number retired by the Marlins.

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Marcell Ozuna, 2 Teammates Declined Invitations to Ride on Jose Fernandez’s Boat

Marcell Ozuna was among the Miami Marlins players who declined an invitation to join pitcher Jose Fernandez on a boat the night he was killed in a fatal crash. 

According to the Associated Press’ Curt Anderson, Ozuna was one of at least three Marlins teammates who who opted against going on the boat with Fernandez, 24, Emilio Jesus Macias, 27, and Eduardo Rivero, 25, shortly before they crashed into a jetty. 

“That night I told him, ‘Don’t go out,'” Ozuna said, per the Miami Herald‘s Andre C. Fernandez. “Everybody knew he was crazy about that boat and loved being out on the water. I told him I couldn’t go out that night because I had the kids and my wife waiting for me.”

“It was a bad decision for him,” Ozuna added, per Anderson. “He heard everybody say, ‘No, go back to your house and take it easy.’ Then you wake up and see the news.” 

According to Anderson, Will Bernal, who was a friend of Rivero‘s, also expressed concern about his decision to take the boat out after midnight on Sunday and posted their text message correspondence on social media

“Yo please be careful bro,” Bernal texted at 12:07 a.m.

“I will bro,” Rivero said.

“Try to keep him close to shore if you go out,” Bernal wrote back.

“Trust me,” Rivero wrote, “it’s not my time yet.”

Bernal then asked Rivero to turn on his “find iPhone” application and to “keep Jose cool.”

A public memorial will be held for Fernandez on Wednesday, according to USA Today. The procession will reportedly begin at 2:16 p.m. ET as a way to honor Fernandez, who wore No. 16. A private funeral will also be held for Fernandez on Thursday. 

Monday, Marlins owner Jeffrey Loria announced the team will retire No. 16, per the Palm Beach Post‘s Hal Habib.  

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A.J. Cole Suspended: Latest Details, Comments and Reaction

MLB announced Tuesday that it suspended Washington Nationals rookie pitcher A.J. Cole five games for intentionally throwing close to the head of Pittsburgh Pirates infielder Jung Ho Kang during Sunday afternoon’s contest.

Cole will appeal the suspension. 

The feud began in the third inning when Nationals star Bryce Harper tripled down the right field line. The throw from Pirates right fielder Josh Bell sailed over both cutoff men and bounced well to the left of third base, where Harper was headed. 

As Kang covered third, he faked as though the ball was coming at him by pretending to prepare for a tag. To beat the imaginary tag attempt, Harper slid awkwardly into third, where he injured his hand, which forced him to leave the game:

According to the Washington Post‘s Chelsea Janes, Harper jammed his thumb and underwent X-rays on Monday. He isn’t expected to miss much time. 

Harper missed Monday night’s game and is not in the Nationals’ lineup for Tuesday night’s game against the Arizona Diamondbacksper Rotowire.

He had torn the ligament in his left thumb in 2014 and was initially worried that it happened again Sunday, voicing his displeasure with Kang’s actions in the process, per Janes:

First initial thought in my head was my UCL [ulnar collateral ligament] was gone and I’ll have to go back through surgery and things like that. Right now, I don’t feel that feeling. More like a jam, like in basketball kind of thing. Just a bad play. Ball’s up the line, shouldn’t do it. I understand the deke at second base, double play kind of thing. But that kind of thing? It’s not part of the game.

In the bottom of the inning, Cole seemingly came to the defense of his teammate by unleashing a fastball that sailed behind Kang, which ushered an immediate ejection. 

The benches proceeded to clear, but that was the extent of the fireworks. 

Per MLB.com, Cole is the Nationals’ 13th-ranked prospect and is 1-2 with a 5.09 ERA in seven games this season. 

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Wilson Ramos’ Torn ACL Could Be Straw That Breaks Ailing Nationals Offense

The Washington Nationals offense has taken some big hits lately. On Tuesday, the Nats might have received a knockout punch.

All-Star catcher Wilson Ramos was injured while receiving a throw at home in Monday’s 14-4 loss to the Arizona Diamondbacks. The diagnosis? A torn ACL, per Comcast SportsNet Nationals.

Needless to say, Ramos will miss the remainder of the regular season and any postseason games the Nationals play.

Given the battered state of their lineup, they may not play too many.

We’ll talk about Washington’s outlook and its other wounded warriors in a moment. First, let’s recount what Ramos has done this season and just how deeply his absence will be felt.

Before he went down, the 29-year-old backstop was tearing through his contract year. He ranked second among qualified Nationals in batting average (.307) and slugging percentage (.496) and fourth in home runs (22) and RBI (80).

And while all catchers wrestle tired legs this time of year, Ramos had been on something of a hot streak, collecting 15 hits in his last 11 games.

“There’s nothing you can do about it,” manager Dusty Baker said Monday, before the full severity of Ramos’ injury was known, per Jorge Castillo of the Washington Post. “You got to play. You got to play and nobody feels sorry for you, so we’re not going to feel sorry for ourselves.”

That’s the correct line to feed reporters. But no one would blame the Nationals for feeling a little sorry for themselves. Nationals SPORTalk agrees:

Second baseman Daniel Murphy, the NL’s batting-title front-runner for most of the season, is out with a glute strain and “may not be ready for the playoffs,” Baker told Craig Heist of 106.7 The Fan (h/t Chris Lingebach of CBS DC).

Reigning NL MVP Bryce Harper, in the midst of a down year, is battling a jammed left thumb.

The Harper and Murphy dings were troubling and already placed Washington in a precarious position ahead of its National League Division Series showdown with the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Now, with Ramos a spectator, the task goes from daunting to Sisyphean.

Just as the Nationals offense is crumbling like a dry autumn leaf, the Dodgers are getting healthy.

Ace Clayton Kershaw has made four starts since returning from a serious back injury and appears to be rounding into form. Trade-deadline acquisition Rich Hill has put blister issues behind him and owns a 1.53 ERA in five outings with L.A. 

Add Japanese import Kenta Maeda, and Los Angeles can throw out a top three to rival any playoff rotation in baseball.

Even at full strength, this would have been a tough slog for the Nats. With three of their top hitters either banged up or out, it could be nearly impossible.

Oh, then there’s the Nationals rotation, where Stephen Strasburg and his balky right elbow still haven’t thrown off a mound.

Recently, I wrote about the possibility of Max Scherzer taking the Nats on his back and carrying them to World Series glory. With Ramos gone, the weight gets considerably heavier.

Things aren’t hopeless in the nation’s capital. The Nationals have weapons, including speedy rookie Trea Turner (.340 average, .923 OPS and 27 stolen bases in 67 games), third baseman Anthony Rendon (18 home runs, 81 RBI) and left fielder Jayson Werth (21 home runs, 70 RBI). 

October is the time when unlikely heroes rise. Heck, maybe Jose Lobaton—who figures to take over behind the dish—will start hitting out of his mind. His .220 average doesn’t suggest that’s likely, but stranger things have happened.

With six games remaining, the Nats (91-65) hold a one-game lead over L.A. for home-field advantage in the NLDS. It’d be nice to hang on to that position, but right now their primary focus has to be on avoiding any more injuries. 

If that means gluing key players to the bench, so be it. Because if the Ramos blow wasn’t the one that laid Washington on the canvas, the next one surely would be.

    

All statistics current as of Tuesday and courtesy of MLB.com unless otherwise noted.

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Wilson Ramos Injury: Updates on Nationals Catcher’s Recovery from Knee Surgery

The Washington Nationals have been dealt a huge blow heading into the postseason next week, with All-Star catcher Wilson Ramos suffering a torn ACL during Monday’s game against the Arizona Diamondbacks.

Continue for updates. 


Nationals Announce Ramos Injury

Tuesday, Sept. 27

Per Comcast SportsNet Nationals, Washington manager Dusty Baker announced Ramos’ injury Tuesday. 

Ramos’ injury adds insult to what was a forgettable 14-4 loss by the Nationals on Monday. He was hurt during the sixth inning after coming down awkwardly while trying to catch a high relay throw from first baseman Ryan Zimmerman. 

The Nationals clinched the National League East title on Saturday, but they are ailing with just five games remaining in the regular season. 

Stephen Strasburg’s return is uncertain right now, though Nationals general manager Mike Rizzo told reporters Monday that the team “may be able to answer” if the right-hander can pitch in the division series on Tuesday, per the Washington Post‘s Jorge Castillo.

Daniel Murphy hasn’t played since September 20. Bryce Harper has been banged up most of this season and is dealing with a thumb injury that kept him out of the lineup Monday. 

Ramos’ injury is particularly devastating because a catcher with a .307/.354/.496 slash line and 22 home runs is a valuable commodity. He controlled the pitching staff and provided the lineup with more depth behind Murphy, Harper and Anthony Rendon

Jose Lobaton is a decent backup catcher who has been with the Nationals since 2014 and knows the pitching staff, but his production with the bat pales in comparison to what Ramos has done this season. 

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Martin Prado, Marlins Agree on New Contract: Latest Details and Reaction

The Miami Marlins prevented third baseman Martin Prado from hitting free agency at season’s end by signing him to a contract extension Tuesday. 

According to Clark Spencer of the Miami Herald, the Marlins inked the 32-year-old veteran to a three-year deal that will pay him a total of $40 million through 2019. MLB.com’s Joe Frisaro confirmed the move.

Prado is in the midst of a strong campaign, hitting .305 with seven home runs, 73 RBI and 68 runs scored.

Miami acquired the 11th-year veteran in a trade with the New York Yankees prior to the start of the 2015 season.

Prado spent the first seven years of his career with the Atlanta Braves before stints with the Arizona Diamondbacks, Yanks and Marlins. He was named to his first and only All-Star team in 2010.

While Prado has exclusively manned third base in 2016, he has played all over the diamond during his career, spending extensive time at second base and the corner outfield spots.

Prado has been a fixture in the No. 2 spot of the Marlins lineup this season behind speedster Dee Gordon and in front of power hitters such as Christian Yelich, Giancarlo Stanton and Marcell Ozuna.

He has excelled at getting on base for Miami’s top hitters, and he is a big reason why the Marlins have surprised many with a 78-78 record so far this season.

Prado is an unheralded player who doesn’t receive much league-wide recognition, but his contributions are undeniable, and the fact that the Marlins managed to keep him means they have a great chance to be competitive in the National League playoff race once again next season.

    

Follow @MikeChiari on Twitter.

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Is Max Scherzer Ready to Become MLB’s Next Elite Postseason Ace?

The term “ace” gets tossed around too liberally. There’s more to it than simply being the best pitcher on your team.

The Washington NationalsMax Scherzer, however, checks most of the ace boxes.

He’s got the gaudy strikeout totals, including an MLB-leading 267 entering play Tuesday. He’s earned the hardware—namely, a 2013 American League Cy Young Award with the Detroit Tigers. And he’s racked up the individual accomplishments, including a pair of no-hitters and a record-tying 20-strikeout game.

One thing Scherzer has never done? Taken a team on his back and carried it to World Series glory.

He’s had his share of playoff experience, and he’s logged some strong October starts. Now, after the Nats wrapped up the National League East on Saturday, Scherzer has a chance to etch his name in the alabaster of postseason lore.

The 32-year-old right-hander is having an exemplary season overall, but he’s been especially dominant in the second half, posting a 2.51 ERA in 13 starts with 103 strikeouts in 89.2 innings. He’s pitched into the seventh inning or later in each of his last seven outings and has won nine of his last 10 decisions.

“He is the epitome of a shutdown inning,” Nationals manager Dusty Baker said, per Chelsea Janes of the Washington Post. “You give him some runs, and he knows how to close the door.”

He’s at the forefront of the NL Cy Young conversation, as USA Today‘s Bob Nightengale opined:

The question now is, can he keep it up when the lights get brightest?

Scherzer last pitched in the postseason in 2014. That year, he made a single start in the American League Division Series against the Baltimore Orioles and surrendered seven hits and five runs in a 12-3 loss.

His strongest playoff start came in Game 2 of the 2013 American League Championship Series against the Boston Red Sox, when he fanned 13 in seven innings and allowed just one run and two hits.

Overall, Scherzer’s playoff resume is checkered. There are gems, and there are flame-outs. His total line—a 3.73 ERA with 80 strikeouts in 62.2 innings—is solid but not transcendent.

The Nationals don’t need him to be transcendent to make a deep run. But it sure would help.

Second baseman Daniel Murphy, who is in the mix for the NL batting title, is out with a glute strain, per Janes. Stephen Strasburg, Scherzer’s running mate atop the Nats starting corps, is working his way back from an elbow injury and has yet to throw off a mound, let alone make a rehab start.

“I’d hate to see life without Daniel and life without [Strasburg],” Baker told Janes. “Those two are big horses.”

If either or both can’t go, or if they’re at less than full strength, Washington will have to ride Scherzer that much harder. Then there are the injury whispers surrounding underachieving NL MVP Bryce Harper.

Tanner Roark makes for a capable No. 2 with his 2.86 ERA in 204.1 innings. Speedy rookie Trea Turner—who is hitting .340 with a .923 OPS and 27 stolen bases in 67 games—is an offensive catalyst. Catcher Wilson Ramos has 22 homers and a .307 average. The bullpen boasts the third-best ERA in baseball at 3.40.

It keeps rotating back to Scherzer, though. As soon as the ink dried on his seven-year, $210 million deal with Washington in January 2015, he became the Guy, capital “G.”

How has Scherzer fared against other possible NL postseason contenders? Let’s take a gander:

The Los Angeles Dodgers, who wrapped up the NL West on Sunday, are locked in as the Nats’ division series foe.

L.A. hitters have made some hay against Scherzer in their careers, as you can see. He hasn’t faced the Dodgers this season, but Los Angeles is 5-1 against the Nationals in 2016 and has Clayton Kershaw back atop its rotation.

Remember, though, Kershaw has wobbled in the playoffs, where he’s 2-6 with a 4.59 ERA. If Scherzer can outduel him in Game 1 of the NLDS (assuming that’s the matchup), it could go a long way toward derailing the resilient Dodgers’ momentum.

If the Nationals survive and advance, their likeliest NLCS opponent is the Chicago Cubs. Scherzer has good lifetime numbers against the potent Cubs lineup, but he’s had split results this year.

On May 6, Chicago tagged him for seven runs in five innings in a 6-8 defeat at Wrigley Field. On June 13, Scherzer got revenge, fanning 11 in seven frames at Nationals Park as the Nats prevailed, 4-1.

We won’t speculate on potential World Series opponents, because that would be getting way far ahead of ourselves, and because the AL postseason picture remains in flux. But Scherzer has familiarity with all the Junior Circuit contenders from his days in Detroit.

In the postseason, anything can happen. It’s a small-sample cauldron where stars sometimes fade and obscure players rise. That’s the beauty of October.

If you’re a Nats fan hoping to see Scherzer do a 2014 Madison Bumgarner impression, your hopes are legitimate.

FanGraphs puts the odds that the Nats will reach the Fall Classic at 11.6 percent, compared to 16.6 percent for the Dodgers and 18.2 percent for the Cubs. Those odds rise considerably if Mad Max goes beyond Thunderdome.

The stage is set. Now, all Scherzer has to do is step on it and throw like an ace.

   

All statistics courtesy of MLB.com and Baseball-Reference.com unless otherwise noted.

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Dee Gordon, Marlins’ Tearful Salute to Jose Fernandez Is Transcendent MLB Moment

Baseball, perhaps more than any other sport, is a game of moments. On Monday night in Miami, Dee Gordon and the Marlins gave us all an incredible one.

Playing for the first time since the death of franchise pitcher Jose Fernandez, every member of the Marlins wore Fernandez’s name and No. 16 on the back of his jersey. Before the game, the team paid touching tribute to its ace, who died Sunday in a boating accident:

Then, in the bottom of the first inning, Gordon did something that would have seemed too cliche for a melodramatic movie but was throat-clenchingly authentic in real life: He homered on the third pitch he saw from New York Mets right-hander Bartolo Colon.

It was Gordon’s first home run of the season. Tears welled in his eyes and spilled down his cheeks as he reached home plate and pointed to the sky.

Cynicism is easy. We media types fall into it all the time; it’s a crutch, a safety net, a convenient way to keep emotions at arm’s length.

Sometimes, though, the cynicism melts away. Sometimes, a thing moves you, and you let it move you, because we’re all human.

Forget the controversy and dysfunction that sometimes hovers around this Miami franchise. Not only did none of it matter on Monday—it didn’t even register.

The bittersweet memories of a rising star gone far too soon were the only thing in the air as Gordon rounded the bases.

Perhaps as Gordon touched first base, you were thinking about Fernandez’s incredible backstoryhow he was locked in a Cuban prison after an unsuccessful defection attempt at age 14, and later saved his mother from drowning when she fell off a boat en route from Cuba to Miami.

Maybe as Gordon rounded second, you were remembering Fernandez’s meteoric rise to MLB stardom, the devastating stuff that earned him a National League Rookie of the Year Award in 2013 and made him an All-Star again this year after Tommy John surgery.

By the time Gordon got to third, you might have been recalling the energy and joy Fernandez exuded on the mound, which MLB.com’s Anthony Castrovince aptly termed “an unbridled earnestness impossible to replicate but easy to appreciate.”

As Gordon crossed home plate, you were possibly thinking about all these things and, quite likely, there was a stinging sensation at the back of your eyes too.

The Marlins won, by the way, 7-3, to get back to .500 at 78-78 and keep their flickering wild-card hopes alive.

However, to trot out the bromide, this was bigger than the game. 

Gordon, MLB.com’s Joe Frisaro noted, was “visibly shaken” by the death of his friend Fernandez. Before hitting his home run, the slender second baseman took a pitch from the right side, Fernandez’s side, imitating the pitcher’s stance.

The home run came with long odds, as ESPN.com’s Darren Rovell noted:

Again, if it hadn’t happened, you wouldn’t believe it.

Gordon’s homer won’t erase the pain in the Marlins’ clubhouse and across baseball. Only time can do that, and not even time can do it completely.

But Fernandez, a fiery competitor, would surely have appreciated the effort his teammates put forth. Gordon finished with four hits and two RBI, and first baseman Justin Bour fell a home run shy of the cycle. 

“That guy would have been on the mound,” Gordon said in somber on-field postgame remarks to Fox Sports’ Craig Minervini immediately after the Marlins reverentially circled the hill and piled their hats next to the stenciled-on No. 16. “And if he wasn’t on the mound, he would have been on the top step screaming for us.”

The tragedy of Jose Fernandez is that he didn’t get enough moments to do all the things he was going to do. But on a night when his spirit was everywhere, a grieving Marlins team gave us plenty.

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