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Sources tell Fish On First that Head is expected to make a full recovery in time for next spring training. The 19-year-old prospect has appeared in only five games since coming to the Marlins organization.

In a season where many eyes will be focused on the minor league system, the injury to Fish On First's fifth-ranked Marlins prospect is a tough blow. Outfielder Dillon Head was the centerpiece of the package Miami received in the Luis Arraez trade, consisting of him, Jakob Marsee, Nathan Martorella, and Woo-Suk Go. 

After missing the first ten days of minor league action following the trade, Head was finally activated to the Jupiter Hammerheads roster on May 14. In his three games with Jupiter, the speedy center fielder went 4-for-12 with a triple and two stolen bases. 

Unfortunately, a few days later, Head was placed on the 7-day injured list with what the team described as an adductor strain. Despite playing rehab games on June 4 and June 5 with the FCL Marlins, he was never reinstated and now we know why. The first-round draft pick is expected to have left hip femoral acetabular impingement surgery on Friday, per MLB.com's Christina De Nicola, and miss the remainder of the 2024 season. 

Head's hip procedure isn't considered major, but the organization preferred to get it done now so he can have an entire offseason to recover and prepare for spring training. When Marlins reliever Matt Barnes underwent the same surgery in 2023, the team estimated that he'd return to baseball activities after three months of rehab.

Head, arguably the organization's top position player prospect, was selected 25th overall in the 2023 MLB draft (15 picks after Miami selected Noble Meyer). As a 2023 pick, Head was in the midst of what should have been his first full-length professional season. Instead, injuries will limit him to 24 games at the Low-A level. 

He slashed .248/.319/.381 with a 92 wRC+, one home run and five stolen bases on the season. 

This isn't the first time the Marlins have fallen victim to San Diego Padres' GM AJ Preller's damaged goods.

In 2016, right-handed pitcher Colin Rea was part of a seven-player trade that saw him, Andrew Cashner, and Tayron Guerrero get traded to the Marlins in exchange for Carter Capps, Jarred Cosart, Josh Naylor, and Luis Castillo. 

The next day, Rea's Marlins debut was cut short as a right elbow strain landed him on the 15-day disabled list. Four days later, Rea and Castillo were returned to their original teams after Miami reported that they felt they had been sent an injured player in Rea.


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Posted

...Absolutely nothing has gone right for the Marlins this year. The team sucks, and there's no hope for the future. Only pain.

It's a good thing everyone is too busy laughing at the White Sox to notice we are just as bad.

Posted
2 hours ago, One Regend said:

It's a good thing everyone is too busy laughing at the White Sox to notice we are just as bad.

Yes, convenient for this to coincide with the worst MLB team of the last few decades.

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