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  • Kim Ng not returning as Marlins GM


    Ely Sussman

    Marlins Video

    In a baffling turn of events, the Miami Marlins are parting ways with general manager Kim Ng, as first reported by Craig Mish of SportsGrid. The first woman GM in MLB history leaves the organization after only three seasons.

    Here's the statement that Marlins chairman and principal owner Bruce Sherman sent out Monday morning:

    The Miami Marlins announce today that Kim Ng will not be returning as the club’s General Manager.

    Although the club exercised its team option for her to return for the 2024 season, Kim has declined her mutual option. We thank Kim for her contributions during her time with our organization and wish her and her family well.

    We will immediately begin a thorough and extensive search for new leadership as we plan to continue to invest in the Marlins organization both on and off the field. We are committed to our fans and the South Florida community and look to build off the momentum of the great progress of this year.

    And here is Ng's side of it as relayed through Tyler Kepner of The Athletic:

    Last week, Bruce (Sherman) and I discussed his plan to reshape the Baseball Operations department. In our discussions, it became apparent that we were not completely aligned on what that should look like and I felt it best to step away.

    I wish to express my sincere gratitude and appreciation to the Marlins family and its fans for my time in South Florida. This year was a great step forward for the organization, and I will miss working with Skip (Schumaker) and his coaches as well as all of the dedicated staff in baseball operations and throughout the front office. They are a very talented group and I wish them great success in the future.

    Longtime Marlins assistant GM Brian Chattin will serve as interim GM during the search progress, according to a since-deleted tweet by Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald.

    The Marlins had a .453 winning percentage (220-266 record) during the Ng era, but that includes a 15-win improvement from 2022 to 2023 and the franchise's first "normal" postseason berth in 20 years (excluding the COVID-shortened 2020 campaign). Operating with Sherman's limited payroll and a barren farm system, Ng excelled in trades to construct a tight-knit club with a knack for winning tight games.

    It was widely known as far back as spring training that Ng was entering the final guaranteed year of her contract. Even if 2023 had not been so successful, the idea of her running baseball operations without any long-term security was absurd. The Fish On First staff persistently advocated for Sherman to sign her to an extension. According to Ng's words above, they were attempting to find common ground after the Marlins were bounced from the NL Wild Card Series, but failed to do so.

    At the center of the disagreement, Jeff Passan of ESPN reports, was Sherman's desire to hire an additional Marlins executive for Ng to report to. Although her title would remain the same, it'd essentially be a demotion to no longer serve as the lead baseball operations decision-maker.

    Looking at this from Sherman's perspective, Ng was inefficient in free agency, whiffing on sub-replacement-level veterans Avisaíl García ($53M), Jean Segura ($17M) and Johnny Cueto ($8.5M), though coming out okay on Jorge Soler ($36M). Even with many prospects graduating from eligibility or being used as trade capital during her tenure, the lack of impact talent left in the pipeline is worrisome. Their existing player development approach clearly needs to be adjusted.

    Although I woke up on Monday expecting Ng to stay with the Marlins, I can't say that I'm shocked about this news. After all, she was handpicked by Derek Jeter, who left his CEO position in early 2022. Ng did not hold a formal end-of-season press conference with the media and every day that passed by without reassurance about her status made a break-up seem slightly more plausible. I'm disappointed that the organization couldn't find a way to maintain continuity at such a crucial position coming off an exhilarating year.

    Ng ought to be highly coveted by other MLB teams in free agency. The Boston Red Sox seek new baseball ops leadership and the New York Mets are in the market for a GM to report to David Stearns. Despite being repeatedly passed over for top executive jobs in the early 2000s, she now has tangible results to validate her decades of front office experience.

    Aside from Chattin, internal replacement candidates include fellow assistant GMs Dan Greenlee and Oz Ocampo.

    Photo by Jasen Vinlove/Miami Marlins

     

    Aside from Sandy Alcantara, which Marlins starting pitcher do you trust most?

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    James Click and Chaim Bloom would be the first two names I call if I'm Bruce Sherman. Both have GM experience, and 'grew up' in the Rays' front office (an organization the Marlins should be trying to emulate). Click also has some overlap with Marlins AGM Oz Ocampo which could be a plus. For Bloom - I think he got the short end of the stick in Boston, as their ownership seemed erratic on when he could spend and not spend (i.e., they basically forced him to trade Mookie Betts). Bloom built up a really great farm system with only the covid-shortened season as one where they were really bad.

    Given the long delay with no news, it was obvious this was going to happen. The ominous thing she said on her way out (quoted in the Athletic) was that Bruce had different views on how to run the baseball operations department. It's his team and he has every right to run it as he pleases but he has even less knowledge and experience that Derek Jeter had. Kim's comments are going to stick in the mind of every candidate, so look for an internal hire. My money is on Oz. And the Marlins are considered a bad GM position - Kim only took it because she needed experience as GM with one team before moving to a better team. The Fish offer little payroll, a minimal fanbase that disappears altogether during the frequent losing spells and now to top it off, a meddling no-nothing owner. Whoever we hire is going to need to restart his own rebuild - the third time in seven years - based on his style.

    My guess is that Kim is beantown bound.

    Following the previous FanPost, I was planning to make the Kim Ng extension analysis this week, but I guess there is no reason to do so anymore.

     

    It is too early to clarify what actually happened, but for sure it will come to light in the next couple of days/ weeks.

     

    I'm baffled. I wish her the best in her future endeavors.

    I concur with your "surprised by not surprised" categorization. Over the years, I have come to think of GMs in a similar view as player WAR and concluded there is a max 20 percent advantage derived from the best ones. Ng is not in that category, although I acknowledge some good moves and a strategy that produced this delightfully overachieving season (albeit by the slimmest of margins and highly unlikely repeatability). No need to delineate all the moves, but if we must rate her, I think a 7 out of 10 is fair, given the organizational limitations you noted. I simply think she opted to move on, as with players who can, at her peak value. Also, frankly, we know next season is highly unlikely to be as magical, if for no other reason than betting the Mets are once again fourth place finishers. Certainly, we must realize Cohen will not have it nor is the Marlins organizational capacity to add needle-moving players any higher. This is so because the team has sunk costs (García, Cueto buyout, Alcántara's lost year), significant arb increases, and divergent holes to plug. My long years with the Expos saw many GMs make their bones and then move on (Dave Dombrowski, Dan Duquette, Bill Stoneman, Murray Cook, and Jim Beattie). It happens, as with players, and it's usually not a wrist-cutting loss.

    Thomas Joseph

    tpjoseph@mail.com

    Two names, Thad Levine or Jon Daniels. People can complain about Sherman but looking at his business background of building companies Warren Buffett likes to buy, he might know a thing or two about what a good org structure is. Did she do okay and did we over perform this season yes, but weak draft and FA, she has strengths but maybe he wanted someone to fill gaps and let her focus on her strengths


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