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Posted

Christopher Morel just had his best moment as a Miami Marlin. Frankly, there aren't any other nominees.

Sunday afternoon against the Washington Nationals, with one out in the bottom of the eighth inning and the game tied 2-2, Morel stepped up to the plate. His task: drive the ball deep enough to score Esteury Ruiz from third base. Morel delivered, getting just enough of Gus Varland's 0-2 slider to bloop a single into center field. His first RBI of the 2026 season was a game-winner.

The 26-year-old free agent acquisition has been limited to nine games thus far due to an oblique strain that he suffered on Opening Day. It's unreasonable to hold that against him—oblique injuries have become increasingly prevalent in baseball, impacting even the best-conditioned athletes.

That being said, Morel has blatantly failed the eye test both before and after his absence, with discouraging results to boot. In the meantime, other internal options have emerged as better candidates to fill the role that was originally envisioned for him. How much more of this are the Marlins willing to tolerate?

There are several different tiers of major league free agent signings. Morel is an example from the lowest tier—talented enough to receive guaranteed money, but so unproductive that the team had all the leverage. On the heels of back-to-back sub-replacement-level seasons, the burden of proof has been on him from the beginning to demonstrate that things would be different this time.

The only consistent aspect of Morel's game through the years has been lightning-quick bat speed. That remains intact. Since comprehensive tracking began in 2023, his career average has been approximately 76 mph; in 2026, he's averaging 75.7 mph (second-highest among Marlins players).

However, Morel is not generating any in-game power whatsoever. During spring training, he registered one measly extra-base hit in 46 plate appearances. In 47 additional opportunities across minor league rehab and MLB regular season action, he hasn't increased that total. Combining all of those reps, he is slugging .195 in 2026.

If Morel is not bringing the threat of homering to the table, he doesn't belong at the table. He has always and will always strike out in abundance, perennially ranking below the 10th percentile in whiff rate. And he is the epitome of the word "positionless." The Marlins have prepared him primarily at first base since signing him because he has proven to be a liability at every other infield and outfield spot during his career. By all accounts, that transition has gone poorly. Half of his starts since being reinstated from the IL have come as Miami's designated hitter.

Morel was supposed to have an outsized importance to the Marlins at the beginning of the season while some of their top hitting prospects incubated at Triple-A Jacksonville. But now, Joe Mack has joined the big league club. The Marlins have (appropriately) thrown him in the deep end, starting him behind the plate in six of his first seven games on the active roster. That has freed up their leading run producer, Liam Hicks, to primarily play first base. Connor Norby, who entered this year in a similar situation as Morel, has looked far more adept at his new position while tightening up his plate discipline. There is no case for either of them to sacrifice playing time in favor of Morel.

Plus, reinforcements are on the way. Griffin Conine (hamstring tear) is on track to return by month's end. He can fake it at first base at least as well as Morel, and there's no comparison between them as outfield defenders or hitters (.262/.325/.454 slash line for Conine since 2024 vs. .203/.287/.357 for Morel during that span). 

Most specifically, Kemp Alderman makes Morel expendable. The organization's reigning Minor League Player of the Year generates the exit velocities of an "elite power merchant," as Eli Ben-Porat of Baseball America explains. Alderman was striking out constantly early this season, but the 23-year-old has reduced his K rate to a manageable 22.5% in May. And yes, he is learning 1B as well, starting there three times in his last eight games.

 


Last week, the Marlins cut bait with right-hander Chris Paddack as soon as it became apparent that they had young players who were more deserving of his role. Their $4 million investment in Paddack did nothing to further their pursuit of a postseason berth, but admitting that error is preferable to subscribing to the sunk cost fallacy and sustaining more damage out of stubbornness.

Morel is not at the end of his leash quite yet. Conine has several more boxes to check in his rehab process and Alderman needs to put together a larger body of work showing he can make contact against premium stuff. It's crucial that Morel rediscovers some of his pop in the meantime.


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Posted

I knew it was over after the most awful at-bat in Marlins history. From all accounts a nice guy, but his time is up in the next two weeks. It's a shame it didn't work as the team needs the power. 

 

Good article, Ely. 

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