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Happy 2/5/25 to all.
Out in the bay, the Giants are celebrating "Barry Bonds Day" to honor the greatest player ever to play the game as Bonds rocked the number 25 throughout his otherworldly 15-year tenure in the orange and black.
All the way across the country in Miami, though, the number has been stigmatized. That's a shame considering how well things started.
Al Leiter contributed to the Marlins' first World Series title in 1997 while donning #25. Derrek Lee wore it for most of his tenure with the team, culminating in the 2003 championship. During his lone, memorable season with the Fish, Carlos Delgado crushed 33 homers, drove in 115 and OPS'ed .981 in 2005.
Delgado was shipped to the division rival Mets the following November. Since then, between Miami Gardens and Little Havana, the Marlins have tried over and over and over again (18 different wearers) to put the #25 in capable hands. Instead, it has come to represent disappointment, plenty of failed expectations and downright bad baseball.
Let's reflect on a few notable names from this list.
Brett Carroll, 2007-2010
Carroll had the honor of being the first to wear the number post-Delgado, and while the homegrown outfielder did manage to stick around in Miami for four years, lackluster numbers were a constant. The righty slashed .205/.284/.325 through 283 at-bats.
Carroll's calling card was in the outfield. In 2009, Carroll led the NL with 15 Total Zone Runs, a stat that tracks "the number of runs above or below average the player was worth based on the number of plays made."
Junichi Tazawa, 2017-2018
A key piece of the 2013 World Series champion Red Sox bullpen, Tazawa came to Miami with the assumption he would do the same for a contending Marlins squad. Tazawa left Boston with a career 3.58 ERA, a number that immediately inflated as a Marlin. Three blown saves in 2017 and a 9.00 ERA in 2018 got Tazawa chased out of town pretty quickly, as his Marlins tenure ended with a 60 ERA+ and zero saves.
Lewis Brinson, 2020-2021
The most infamous name on this list, "Sweet Lew" called an audible to #25 after his first two years in Miami with #9 went sideways. Unfortunately for the ex-top prospect and potential face of the franchise, the issues turned out to be deeper than just a number change.
Brinson did perform better, but when the standard is set at a .189/.238/.294 slash line, that's not too difficult. In 25, Brinson elevated to .226/.264/.374, still facing the same issues as before when it came to poor swing decisions and high strikeout numbers.
In 2021, Brinson gave Marlins fans one of the best hot streaks in recent history with the infamous "Brinsanity" run. From August 2-15, he put on full display what Marlins fans had been begging to see since he was the headliner in the Christian Yelich deal. The South Florida native OPS'd an astounding 1.192 with four long balls in 13 games. The peak of Brinsanity was a series finale in San Diego, where Brinson enjoyed a three-hit, two-homer day (both coming off future Marlin Ryan Weathers).
Christian Bethancourt, 2024
Finally, we arrive at Christian Bethancourt, the first of two players to wear the number a season ago. Bethancourt came to Miami with a solid track record and hopes of making an impact in a department that was in need—the bar was set so low by how much other Marlins catchers had struggled in recent years.
Notoriously, though, Bethancourt got off on the wrong foot. Through 12 games, Bethancourt did not record a single hit in 27 at-bats.
After the slump, Bethancourt was serviceable, slashing .232/.271/.393 while splitting time with Nick Fortes. On July 21, Bethancourt was DFA'd and signed by the Cubs, where, of course, he found his swing again. In 24 games on the Northside, Bethancourt OPS'd .814.
The cursed number has temporarily been taken out of circulation for Marlins players as new bench coach Carson Vitale took it for the 2025 season. It's anyone's guess how long Vitale will stick around or keep #25, but by the time another player tries it on, fans will have waited at least two full decades to see it restored to glory.
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