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Miami Marlins spring training game notes for March 13, 2024
Ely Sussman posted an article in SuperSubs
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This article was originally published early Wednesday morning under the assumption that JT Chargois (neck spasms) should be ready for Opening Day. It has since been updated with the news that he's not fully healthy yet. Ideally, you hope to see players on the roster bubble demonstrate tangible improvements during spring training to earn their place on the big league team. The Miami Marlins have had some of that. Unfortunately, the outcomes of spring competitions are more often dictated by injuries and the amount of control that the club can exert over particular guys. A clearer picture of the Marlins' initial 26-man squad is coming into focus mainly because of those factors. Look out for one more roster projection update before Opening Day. Position Players Catchers (2): Christian Bethancourt, Nick Fortes Infielders (6): Tim Anderson, Luis Arraez, Josh Bell, Jon Berti, Jake Burger, Vidal Bruján Outfielders (5): Jazz Chisholm Jr., Bryan De La Cruz, Avisaíl García, Nick Gordon, Jesús Sánchez Just missed: Xavier Edwards, Dane Myers Projected MLB IL: none These 13 selections are unchanged from my previous projection. Entering Wednesday, García has recorded only one extra-base hit in 30 plate appearances while striking out one-third of the time. I still doubt that the Marlins cut their losses until assessing him in regular season contests. An outstanding spring for Edwards—both offensively and defensively—could have potentially propelled him back to Miami. However, his OPS was only .462 through five Grapefruit League games, handling shortstop still looks like a pipe dream, and his playing time has been limited by a minor foot injury. Among Miami's non-roster invitees, Trey Mancini was best-positioned to make the team. He simply hasn't performed. Pitchers Starters (5): Jesús Luzardo, Eury Pérez, A.J. Puk, Ryan Weathers, Trevor Rogers Relievers (8): Anthony Bender, Declan Cronin, Bryan Hoeing, Anthony Maldonado, Sixto Sánchez, Andrew Nardi, Tanner Scott, George Soriano Just missed: Vladimir Gutierrez, Max Meyer Projected MLB IL: Edward Cabrera, JT Chargois, Braxton Garrett The Marlins rotation is set. These are the only five pitchers remaining in big league camp who are on the 40-man, injury-free and on track to be stretched out by Opening Day. A fascinating wrinkle: the arms occupying the final three spots combined to make only six starts for the 2023 Fish. Meyer would be the next man up while Garrett and Cabrera recover from their respective shoulder problems. Miami's relief situation is still very much in flux beyond the highest-leverage arms of Scott, Nardi, Bender and Soriano. I believed that Josh Simpson was well-suited for the role of third lefty 'pen weapon, but he has been betrayed by his elbow (last game appearance was Feb. 27). Huascar Brazoban (visa issues) remains unable to report to camp and we're past the point of him being able to make up for lost time. Hoeing gets the multi-inning mop-up man role and Maldonado has nothing left to prove in the minor leagues. Chargois looked very rusty during Tuesday's relief appearance. I originally did this projection under the assumption that he'd get things straightened out in the coming weeks, but instead, he's meeting with a specialist to evaluate his neck/spine issue. Sixto Sánchez's revival has been a fun development! As explained here, he's still far away from being a viable MLB reliever. But given the lack of fully healthy alternatives and Sánchez's out-of-options status, this opportunity has fallen in his lap.
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Marlins news roundup for 3/13/24 Fish On First is providing extensive coverage on location throughout Marlins spring training. Click here to keep up with our latest updates. 🔷 On Tuesday, Nick Gordon went 2-for-3 with a stolen base and a great defensive play. Jesús Luzardo had a solid start despite a mediocre final pitching line (skewed because two of his inherited runners scored). The Marlins lost to the Astros, 9-1. 🔷 JT Chargois (neck spasms) made his 2024 Grapefruit League debut, but frankly looked awful doing it. Beyond just subpar fastball velocity, his slider wasn't breaking normally or being located well. Not particularly surprising that he is now going to see a specialist. A season-opening injured list stint seems inevitable. 🔷 Edward Cabrera has been diagnosed with a right shoulder impingement. Same injury that sidelined him for five weeks last season. My Marlins roster projection has been updated accordingly. 🔷 The Marlins made their third round of spring training cuts, most notably including Max Meyer (FOF's #3 prospect). He'll headline their Triple-A Jacksonville rotation. Troy Johnston (FOF #10) also got reassigned to minor league camp. 🔷 It was the Marlins' turn to be featured on MLB Network's 30 Clubs in 15 Days series. Here are all of the interviews they did with Tim Anderson, Luis Arraez, Peter Bendix, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Skip Schumaker. I found this TA quote to be the most notable: "(The Marlins) invested in me. Not just money, but teaching me things, offensively and defensively. I'm soaking it all up." 🔷 In advance of Spring Breakout, OF Victor Mesa Jr. reflects on the remarkable year he had, on and off the field (via Christina De Nicola, MLB.com). 🔷 Today's game: Nationals (RHP Jake Irvin) vs. Marlins (RHP Eury Pérez) at 1:10 p.m. Out of the bullpen, Sixto Sánchez is scheduled to make his third spring appearance (and first multi-inning appearance). No television coverage. 🔷 Join us tonight at 7:00 p.m. ET for a new episode of Fish On First LIVE streaming on YouTube/Twitter/Facebook. FOF LIVE is presented by Berger & Hicks! If you’ve been injured as a result of somebody else’s negligence, give them a call at (305) 670-7050. Marlins podcast episodes View full article
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Fish On First is providing extensive coverage on location throughout Marlins spring training. Click here to keep up with our latest updates. 🔷 On Tuesday, Nick Gordon went 2-for-3 with a stolen base and a great defensive play. Jesús Luzardo had a solid start despite a mediocre final pitching line (skewed because two of his inherited runners scored). The Marlins lost to the Astros, 9-1. 🔷 JT Chargois (neck spasms) made his 2024 Grapefruit League debut, but frankly looked awful doing it. Beyond just subpar fastball velocity, his slider wasn't breaking normally or being located well. Not particularly surprising that he is now going to see a specialist. A season-opening injured list stint seems inevitable. 🔷 Edward Cabrera has been diagnosed with a right shoulder impingement. Same injury that sidelined him for five weeks last season. My Marlins roster projection has been updated accordingly. 🔷 The Marlins made their third round of spring training cuts, most notably including Max Meyer (FOF's #3 prospect). He'll headline their Triple-A Jacksonville rotation. Troy Johnston (FOF #10) also got reassigned to minor league camp. 🔷 It was the Marlins' turn to be featured on MLB Network's 30 Clubs in 15 Days series. Here are all of the interviews they did with Tim Anderson, Luis Arraez, Peter Bendix, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Skip Schumaker. I found this TA quote to be the most notable: "(The Marlins) invested in me. Not just money, but teaching me things, offensively and defensively. I'm soaking it all up." 🔷 In advance of Spring Breakout, OF Victor Mesa Jr. reflects on the remarkable year he had, on and off the field (via Christina De Nicola, MLB.com). 🔷 Today's game: Nationals (RHP Jake Irvin) vs. Marlins (RHP Eury Pérez) at 1:10 p.m. Out of the bullpen, Sixto Sánchez is scheduled to make his third spring appearance (and first multi-inning appearance). No television coverage. 🔷 Join us tonight at 7:00 p.m. ET for a new episode of Fish On First LIVE streaming on YouTube/Twitter/Facebook. FOF LIVE is presented by Berger & Hicks! If you’ve been injured as a result of somebody else’s negligence, give them a call at (305) 670-7050. Marlins podcast episodes
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A couple weeks away from the Marlins' season opener, I'm projecting which 26 players are best positioned to make the Opening Day roster. This article was originally published early Wednesday morning under the assumption that JT Chargois (neck spasms) should be ready for Opening Day. It has since been updated with the news that he's not fully healthy yet. Ideally, you hope to see players on the roster bubble demonstrate tangible improvements during spring training to earn their place on the big league team. The Miami Marlins have had some of that. Unfortunately, the outcomes of spring competitions are more often dictated by injuries and the amount of control that the club can exert over particular guys. A clearer picture of the Marlins' initial 26-man squad is coming into focus mainly because of those factors. Look out for one more roster projection update before Opening Day. Position Players Catchers (2): Christian Bethancourt, Nick Fortes Infielders (6): Tim Anderson, Luis Arraez, Josh Bell, Jon Berti, Jake Burger, Vidal Bruján Outfielders (5): Jazz Chisholm Jr., Bryan De La Cruz, Avisaíl García, Nick Gordon, Jesús Sánchez Just missed: Xavier Edwards, Dane Myers Projected MLB IL: none These 13 selections are unchanged from my previous projection. Entering Wednesday, García has recorded only one extra-base hit in 30 plate appearances while striking out one-third of the time. I still doubt that the Marlins cut their losses until assessing him in regular season contests. An outstanding spring for Edwards—both offensively and defensively—could have potentially propelled him back to Miami. However, his OPS was only .462 through five Grapefruit League games, handling shortstop still looks like a pipe dream, and his playing time has been limited by a minor foot injury. Among Miami's non-roster invitees, Trey Mancini was best-positioned to make the team. He simply hasn't performed. Pitchers Starters (5): Jesús Luzardo, Eury Pérez, A.J. Puk, Ryan Weathers, Trevor Rogers Relievers (8): Anthony Bender, Declan Cronin, Bryan Hoeing, Anthony Maldonado, Sixto Sánchez, Andrew Nardi, Tanner Scott, George Soriano Just missed: Vladimir Gutierrez, Max Meyer Projected MLB IL: Edward Cabrera, JT Chargois, Braxton Garrett The Marlins rotation is set. These are the only five pitchers remaining in big league camp who are on the 40-man, injury-free and on track to be stretched out by Opening Day. A fascinating wrinkle: the arms occupying the final three spots combined to make only six starts for the 2023 Fish. Meyer would be the next man up while Garrett and Cabrera recover from their respective shoulder problems. Miami's relief situation is still very much in flux beyond the highest-leverage arms of Scott, Nardi, Bender and Soriano. I believed that Josh Simpson was well-suited for the role of third lefty 'pen weapon, but he has been betrayed by his elbow (last game appearance was Feb. 27). Huascar Brazoban (visa issues) remains unable to report to camp and we're past the point of him being able to make up for lost time. Hoeing gets the multi-inning mop-up man role and Maldonado has nothing left to prove in the minor leagues. Chargois looked very rusty during Tuesday's relief appearance. I originally did this projection under the assumption that he'd get things straightened out in the coming weeks, but instead, he's meeting with a specialist to evaluate his neck/spine issue. Sixto Sánchez's revival has been a fun development! As explained here, he's still far away from being a viable MLB reliever. But given the lack of fully healthy alternatives and Sánchez's out-of-options status, this opportunity has fallen in his lap. View full article
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Miami Marlins spring training game notes for March 12, 2024
Ely Sussman posted an article in SuperSubs
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A.J. Puk, Ryan Weathers trades were Kim Ng heists
Ely Sussman replied to Ely Sussman's topic in Miami Marlins Talk
He was performing great in his first few real games with the A's last season as well. Didn't last. I do believe he will have a lengthy professional career as a part-time/platoon guy.- 6 replies
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The Offishial Show—Episode #215 The Marlins could potentially have an elite starting rotation in 2024, thanks in part to a pair of under-the-radar trades made the previous year by the previous GM. With A.J. Puk and Ryan Weathers excelling this spring in the competition for Miami Marlins rotation spots, Ely Sussman revisits the trades that brought them here in the first place. Former Marlins general manager Kim Ng gave up very little for the talented lefties who could wind up having a massive impact on the team in the post-Ng era. Days prior to the beginning of 2023 spring training, Ng acquired Puk from the Oakland Athletics in exchange for outfielder JJ Bleday. Weathers arrived from the San Diego Padres on trade deadline day, with the Fish sending away pending free agent Garrett Cooper and reliever Sean Reynolds. Thanks to SuperSub Stanley J Makowski for inspiring this episode. Find The Offishial Show on the Fish On First YouTube channel, our new-look Apple Podcasts channel and wherever else you get your pods. FOF's audio programming also includes Fish Unfiltered, Big Fish Small Pod, Swimming Upstream and more. The Fish On First podcast is now being presented by MPT College Consulting! They pride themselves on helping clients navigate the college application process. This includes preparation for standardized testing, guidance through high school, assistance with essays and applications, and choosing the right college. Visit them today at mptcollegeconsulting.com to learn more about their services and schedule a free consultation. Follow Ely (@RealEly) and Fish On First (@FishOnFirst) on Twitter. Join the Marlins Discord server! Complete Miami Marlins coverage here at FishOnFirst.com. View full article
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With A.J. Puk and Ryan Weathers excelling this spring in the competition for Miami Marlins rotation spots, Ely Sussman revisits the trades that brought them here in the first place. Former Marlins general manager Kim Ng gave up very little for the talented lefties who could wind up having a massive impact on the team in the post-Ng era. Days prior to the beginning of 2023 spring training, Ng acquired Puk from the Oakland Athletics in exchange for outfielder JJ Bleday. Weathers arrived from the San Diego Padres on trade deadline day, with the Fish sending away pending free agent Garrett Cooper and reliever Sean Reynolds. Thanks to SuperSub Stanley J Makowski for inspiring this episode. Find The Offishial Show on the Fish On First YouTube channel, our new-look Apple Podcasts channel and wherever else you get your pods. FOF's audio programming also includes Fish Unfiltered, Big Fish Small Pod, Swimming Upstream and more. The Fish On First podcast is now being presented by MPT College Consulting! They pride themselves on helping clients navigate the college application process. This includes preparation for standardized testing, guidance through high school, assistance with essays and applications, and choosing the right college. Visit them today at mptcollegeconsulting.com to learn more about their services and schedule a free consultation. Follow Ely (@RealEly) and Fish On First (@FishOnFirst) on Twitter. Join the Marlins Discord server! Complete Miami Marlins coverage here at FishOnFirst.com.
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Miami Marlins spring training game notes for March 11, 2024
Ely Sussman posted an article in SuperSubs
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Marlins news roundup for 3/11/24 Leading off this article, I'd like to share that I'm flying down to Florida today and spending the next week in and around Jupiter. Reach out if you want to meet in person! 🔷 It was an active Sunday for the Marlins. Facing the Astros in West Palm Beach, Ryan Weathers shoved five scoreless innings. Moments before facing the Cardinals in Jupiter, Edward Cabrera was removed due to right shoulder tightness. The relievers who followed him (and the defense behind them) were horrible, including Tanner Scott, who has stunningly allowed 14 baserunners this spring while completing only 1 ⅔ innings. Josh Bell homered. The Marlins won on the road, 3-0, and lost at home, 12-8. 🔷 To be clear, Cabrera's shoulder tightness episode puts his availability for the start of the season in serious doubt. Even the most minor shoulder-related issues typically require pitchers to refrain from throwing until all discomfort goes away. For the latest updates on Cabrera and other Marlins players with health concerns, check out our injury/rehab tracker. 🔷 The Marlins agreed to terms with veteran reliever Mychal Givens on a minor league deal. Givens enters his age-34 season with a 3.47 ERA and 3.76 FIP in 425 career MLB appearances. Knee and shoulder injuries wiped out practically his entire 2023 campaign. Expect Givens to be initially assigned to Triple-A Jacksonville. 🔷 Marlins OF/1B Norel González retired. The Cuban defector posted a .260/.344/.447 slash line in 253 career minor league games (all at the Double-A and Triple-A levels), but never got a taste of The Show. 🔷 The uniform No. 7 holds a special significance to Tim Anderson. Jesús Sánchez had been wearing it for the Marlins prior to Anderson's signing, but gave it to him without expecting anything in return. TA says he's going to eventually get Sánchez something to show his appreciation (Christina De Nicola, MLB.com). 🔷 Today's game: Marlins (LHP Trevor Rogers) vs. Mets (RHP Tylor Megill) at 6:10 p.m. Max Meyer is slated to pitch most of the innings in relief of Rogers. It's being televised by the Mets on SNY (available to stream via MLB.TV). 🔷 Elsewhere around baseball, the Dodgers announced that Mookie Betts will primarily play shortstop in 2024. Ryne Stanek (1/$4M) signed with the Mariners. 🔷 Happy 44th birthday to Dan Uggla. The bulky second baseman joined the Marlins via the Rule 5 Draft and went on to have one of the best MLB careers of any former Rule 5 selection. A great run producer for the Fish from 2006-2010, he ranks second only to Giancarlo Stanton on the franchise's all-time home run list. Marlins podcast episodes View full article
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Offishial News: Edward Cabrera removed with shoulder tightness
Ely Sussman posted an article in Marlins
Leading off this article, I'd like to share that I'm flying down to Florida today and spending the next week in and around Jupiter. Reach out if you want to meet in person! 🔷 It was an active Sunday for the Marlins. Facing the Astros in West Palm Beach, Ryan Weathers shoved five scoreless innings. Moments before facing the Cardinals in Jupiter, Edward Cabrera was removed due to right shoulder tightness. The relievers who followed him (and the defense behind them) were horrible, including Tanner Scott, who has stunningly allowed 14 baserunners this spring while completing only 1 ⅔ innings. Josh Bell homered. The Marlins won on the road, 3-0, and lost at home, 12-8. 🔷 To be clear, Cabrera's shoulder tightness episode puts his availability for the start of the season in serious doubt. Even the most minor shoulder-related issues typically require pitchers to refrain from throwing until all discomfort goes away. For the latest updates on Cabrera and other Marlins players with health concerns, check out our injury/rehab tracker. 🔷 The Marlins agreed to terms with veteran reliever Mychal Givens on a minor league deal. Givens enters his age-34 season with a 3.47 ERA and 3.76 FIP in 425 career MLB appearances. Knee and shoulder injuries wiped out practically his entire 2023 campaign. Expect Givens to be initially assigned to Triple-A Jacksonville. 🔷 Marlins OF/1B Norel González retired. The Cuban defector posted a .260/.344/.447 slash line in 253 career minor league games (all at the Double-A and Triple-A levels), but never got a taste of The Show. 🔷 The uniform No. 7 holds a special significance to Tim Anderson. Jesús Sánchez had been wearing it for the Marlins prior to Anderson's signing, but gave it to him without expecting anything in return. TA says he's going to eventually get Sánchez something to show his appreciation (Christina De Nicola, MLB.com). 🔷 Today's game: Marlins (LHP Trevor Rogers) vs. Mets (RHP Tylor Megill) at 6:10 p.m. Max Meyer is slated to pitch most of the innings in relief of Rogers. It's being televised by the Mets on SNY (available to stream via MLB.TV). 🔷 Elsewhere around baseball, the Dodgers announced that Mookie Betts will primarily play shortstop in 2024. Ryne Stanek (1/$4M) signed with the Mariners. 🔷 Happy 44th birthday to Dan Uggla. The bulky second baseman joined the Marlins via the Rule 5 Draft and went on to have one of the best MLB careers of any former Rule 5 selection. A great run producer for the Fish from 2006-2010, he ranks second only to Giancarlo Stanton on the franchise's all-time home run list. Marlins podcast episodes-
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How close is Sixto Sánchez to regaining his old stuff?
Ely Sussman replied to Ely Sussman's topic in Miami Marlins Talk
Well, that's because you are rational. In my observation, there are plenty of fans excited about the potential for Sixto to become some kind of high-leverage weapon who can still deliver dominance in small spurts. I wanted to make it clear that he is still a complete wild card (and that's being generous). -
Miami Marlins spring training game notes for March 10, 2024
Ely Sussman posted an article in SuperSubs
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The last time (and the only time) we saw Sixto Sánchez pitch in 2023, he was unrecognizable. On September 12 of that season, he threw one inning for the Miami Marlins' Double-A Pensacola affiliate. Sánchez finessed his way through a scoreless frame on 18 pitches. None of them topped 88 miles per hour. He was scratched from his next scheduled appearance and written off as a viable member of the Marlins pitching staff moving forward. Prior to his shoulder injury, I was bullish on Sánchez's long-term outlook. Beyond the elite fastball velocity, he flaunted a deep pitch mix, plus command and a knack for earning outs early in a plate appearance. That version of Sixto—the one who elicited Pedro Martínez comps, posted a 3.46 ERA/3.50 FIP as a rookie starter and was instrumental to the Marlins snapping their 17-year postseason drought—is never coming back. However, the portly right-hander who reported to this year's spring training with zero expectations has made substantial strides since last summer's ugly cameo. During his first live batting practice session of 2024, Sánchez sat 92-94 mph with his fastball. In his first Grapefruit League appearance, he topped out at 95. Then on Friday, 96. "He feels good, which is probably the biggest thing for him obviously and for us," manager Skip Schumaker said postgame on Friday. "For him to come back and feel like he's ready to go is good. The next step is, is it multiple innings? What do back-to-backs look like? All that stuff. He has to check some boxes still, but overall, pretty good." There isn't an apples-to-apples comparison to make between the old Sixto and the new Sixto due to his role switch. After multiple surgeries and countless setbacks, he's becoming a reliever to limit his workload. His attack plan will likely look different without having to prioritize efficiency to the same extent or worry about facing the same batters multiple times. That being said, via Statcast, we can analyze how Sánchez's quality of stuff has changed from his final 2021 pre-injury outing to his ongoing audition for a 2024 Opening Day roster spot. Here is Sánchez's Baseball Savant "pitcher report" from March 25, 2021. He encountered a close-to-full-strength Washington Nationals lineup at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium and threw 61 total pitches. He was relatively effective (3.1 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 3 K) despite only inducing three swinging strikes. Sánchez's max velocity that day was 100.5 mph, more than four ticks above his fastest post-injury heater. He averaged 97.6 mph on sinkers/four-seamers with 16.8 inches of horizontal break on the sinker. Sánchez made heavy use of his cutter (37.7% usage) and changeup (27.9%). Both pitches averaged a shade below 91 mph. Fast-forward to the current spring training, Sánchez had 32 total pitches recorded by Statcast during his March 2 and March 8 appearances (both at Roger Dean vs. the New York Mets). His pitch types are being classified much differently as the system tries to recalibrate to his diminished stuff. Statcast does not know what to do with Sánchez's fastballs so far in 2024. Most of them are showing up as four-seamers (10 thrown)—on average, those are breaking only 7.2 inches horizontally at 94.5 mph. Two other pitches (91.0 mph and 92.2 mph) have been labeled "cutters" despite behaving nothing like his old cutter. There's also one "changeup" at 92.4 mph that is clearly out of place. Combining all of these, his fastball average dips below 94. Sánchez's slider, which was absent from the Nats game, was the fifth pitch in his repertoire during the 2020 season. That is now tracking as a curveball because its average velo has plummeted from 85.8 mph to 80.5 mph. This spring, Statcast has detected one "slider" from Sánchez at 88.7 mph, which I've embedded below. That is not a slider—it looks like a lousy cutter. It earned the desired result (a called strike), but Sánchez meant to throw it to the other side of the plate. See for yourself: vs0yeb.mp4 The signature Sixto changeup hasn't gone anywhere. He's at 40.7% usage with it once you manually omit the mislabeled fastball mentioned earlier and add a "curveball" that had obvious changeup spin. He has solid command of it and the armside run is still there. x0lvm1.mp4 What worries me about Sánchez is how little spin he's generating on his four-seamer and curveball. That was never a strength of his game to begin with and now he'll have even more trouble missing bats with them. Aided by Braxton Garrett's shoulder issues and Huascar Brazoban's unavailability, it is plausible that Sixto Sánchez cracks the initial Marlins active roster. I don't think he is a top-13 pitcher in Marlins camp, but he's out of minor league options, so the alternative is designating him for assignment. It's understandable to be curious about how much more velo he could potentially conjure as he continues shaking off the cobwebs. Like Schumaker said, Sánchez needs to show his ability to adapt to multi-inning and/or back-to-back situations. It's not practical to hold onto a single-inning reliever who operates on a starter's schedule, only contributing once every five days. Fish On First will closely monitor Sánchez's remaining Grapefruit League outings for further signs of improvement. As things currently stand, I'd advise you to continue holding off on placing any expectations on him.
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Sánchez has come a long way over the last six months, but there are still clear differences between what we're seeing this spring and the pitch characteristics that made him the Marlins' top prospect prior to his health issues. The last time (and the only time) we saw Sixto Sánchez pitch in 2023, he was unrecognizable. On September 12 of that season, he threw one inning for the Miami Marlins' Double-A Pensacola affiliate. Sánchez finessed his way through a scoreless frame on 18 pitches. None of them topped 88 miles per hour. He was scratched from his next scheduled appearance and written off as a viable member of the Marlins pitching staff moving forward. Prior to his shoulder injury, I was bullish on Sánchez's long-term outlook. Beyond the elite fastball velocity, he flaunted a deep pitch mix, plus command and a knack for earning outs early in a plate appearance. That version of Sixto—the one who elicited Pedro Martínez comps, posted a 3.46 ERA/3.50 FIP as a rookie starter and was instrumental to the Marlins snapping their 17-year postseason drought—is never coming back. However, the portly right-hander who reported to this year's spring training with zero expectations has made substantial strides since last summer's ugly cameo. During his first live batting practice session of 2024, Sánchez sat 92-94 mph with his fastball. In his first Grapefruit League appearance, he topped out at 95. Then on Friday, 96. "He feels good, which is probably the biggest thing for him obviously and for us," manager Skip Schumaker said postgame on Friday. "For him to come back and feel like he's ready to go is good. The next step is, is it multiple innings? What do back-to-backs look like? All that stuff. He has to check some boxes still, but overall, pretty good." There isn't an apples-to-apples comparison to make between the old Sixto and the new Sixto due to his role switch. After multiple surgeries and countless setbacks, he's becoming a reliever to limit his workload. His attack plan will likely look different without having to prioritize efficiency to the same extent or worry about facing the same batters multiple times. That being said, via Statcast, we can analyze how Sánchez's quality of stuff has changed from his final 2021 pre-injury outing to his ongoing audition for a 2024 Opening Day roster spot. Here is Sánchez's Baseball Savant "pitcher report" from March 25, 2021. He encountered a close-to-full-strength Washington Nationals lineup at Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium and threw 61 total pitches. He was relatively effective (3.1 IP, 3 H, 1 ER, 1 BB, 3 K) despite only inducing three swinging strikes. Sánchez's max velocity that day was 100.5 mph, more than four ticks above his fastest post-injury heater. He averaged 97.6 mph on sinkers/four-seamers with 16.8 inches of horizontal break on the sinker. Sánchez made heavy use of his cutter (37.7% usage) and changeup (27.9%). Both pitches averaged a shade below 91 mph. Fast-forward to the current spring training, Sánchez had 32 total pitches recorded by Statcast during his March 2 and March 8 appearances (both at Roger Dean vs. the New York Mets). His pitch types are being classified much differently as the system tries to recalibrate to his diminished stuff. Statcast does not know what to do with Sánchez's fastballs so far in 2024. Most of them are showing up as four-seamers (10 thrown)—on average, those are breaking only 7.2 inches horizontally at 94.5 mph. Two other pitches (91.0 mph and 92.2 mph) have been labeled "cutters" despite behaving nothing like his old cutter. There's also one "changeup" at 92.4 mph that is clearly out of place. Combining all of these, his fastball average dips below 94. Sánchez's slider, which was absent from the Nats game, was the fifth pitch in his repertoire during the 2020 season. That is now tracking as a curveball because its average velo has plummeted from 85.8 mph to 80.5 mph. This spring, Statcast has detected one "slider" from Sánchez at 88.7 mph, which I've embedded below. That is not a slider—it looks like a lousy cutter. It earned the desired result (a called strike), but Sánchez meant to throw it to the other side of the plate. See for yourself: vs0yeb.mp4 The signature Sixto changeup hasn't gone anywhere. He's at 40.7% usage with it once you manually omit the mislabeled fastball mentioned earlier and add a "curveball" that had obvious changeup spin. He has solid command of it and the armside run is still there. x0lvm1.mp4 What worries me about Sánchez is how little spin he's generating on his four-seamer and curveball. That was never a strength of his game to begin with and now he'll have even more trouble missing bats with them. Aided by Braxton Garrett's shoulder issues and Huascar Brazoban's unavailability, it is plausible that Sixto Sánchez cracks the initial Marlins active roster. I don't think he is a top-13 pitcher in Marlins camp, but he's out of minor league options, so the alternative is designating him for assignment. It's understandable to be curious about how much more velo he could potentially conjure as he continues shaking off the cobwebs. Like Schumaker said, Sánchez needs to show his ability to adapt to multi-inning and/or back-to-back situations. It's not practical to hold onto a single-inning reliever who operates on a starter's schedule, only contributing once every five days. Fish On First will closely monitor Sánchez's remaining Grapefruit League outings for further signs of improvement. As things currently stand, I'd advise you to continue holding off on placing any expectations on him. View full article
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The veteran corner infielder is available on the waiver wire and could add considerable value in a part-time role. The Miami Marlins aren't quite done shopping for bats to bolster their 2024 offense. Although their interest level in newly waived San Francisco Giants infielder J.D. Davis is unknown, you better believe they are at least analyzing how he'd potentially fit. Davis slashed .248/.325/.413 last season with a 104 wRC+, producing 2.2 fWAR in 144 games played at age 30. Throughout his career, his rate stats have been practically identical against right-handed and left-handed pitching. His batted ball profile has generally lended itself to a very high batting average on balls in play, though that wasn't the case following the All-Star break (.264 BABIP compared to his lifetime .337 BABIP). In six Cactus League games with the Giants this spring, Davis slashed .400/.471/.800 with two home runs. He also registered an eye-popping exit velocity of 112.2 mph on a base hit (a number he's only touched twice in MLB regular season contests). Defensive metrics had mixed interpretations on Davis' work as a third baseman in 2023. He accrued minus-11 defensive runs saved, which explains the major discrepancy between his fWAR and 0.9 bWAR. Meanwhile, he provided plus-4 run value there according to Statcast. e14adf6f-90b9b747-6305fe8a-csvm-diamondx64-asset_1280x720_59_16000K.mp4 San Francisco's signings of free agents Matt Chapman and Jorge Soler made Davis expendable entering his final year of club control. He's due $6.9M in 2024—by placing him on waivers, the Giants are conceding he doesn't carry any surplus value at that price. They also appear to be gambling that some team will claim him and take full responsibility for Davis' salary, otherwise you figure they would've eaten a percentage of the money to facilitate a trade already. If the Marlins were to claim Davis, he could find semi-regular at-bats at third base, first base and designated hitter. There is redundancy between his skill set and Jake Burger's, but they could co-exist to lengthen the lineup. In emergency situations, Davis could also play the corner outfield spots. The hang-up here—the same one that applies to the club's pursuit of free agent J.D. Martinez—is determining which hitter currently projected to make the Opening Day roster is being replaced by Davis. Avisaíl García is the weakest link, but the Marlins are reluctant to swallow the $29M remaining on his contract. All of the other hitters in the mix have some kind of trade value and little else to prove in the minors. I'm actually predicting Davis to clear waivers. We have seen somewhat comparable players like Garrett Cooper and Eddie Rosario sign minor league free agent deals that don't come close to reaching $6.9M even if performance bonuses are achieved. If that happens, the Giants would be on the hook for nearly 90% of his salary, with whoever signs him paying the league minimum of $740k. Davis' market would be robust in free agency as a league-minimum player. Would he select the Marlins' offer over others that may come from teams with more hitter-friendly home ballparks and higher postseason odds? Although inefficient financially, claiming Davis off waivers takes that choice away from him. To reiterate, it is a moot point unless the Marlins have a plan to trade/option/release one of their position players to accommodate him. View full article
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The Miami Marlins aren't quite done shopping for bats to bolster their 2024 offense. Although their interest level in newly waived San Francisco Giants infielder J.D. Davis is unknown, you better believe they are at least analyzing how he'd potentially fit. Davis slashed .248/.325/.413 last season with a 104 wRC+, producing 2.2 fWAR in 144 games played at age 30. Throughout his career, his rate stats have been practically identical against right-handed and left-handed pitching. His batted ball profile has generally lended itself to a very high batting average on balls in play, though that wasn't the case following the All-Star break (.264 BABIP compared to his lifetime .337 BABIP). In six Cactus League games with the Giants this spring, Davis slashed .400/.471/.800 with two home runs. He also registered an eye-popping exit velocity of 112.2 mph on a base hit (a number he's only touched twice in MLB regular season contests). Defensive metrics had mixed interpretations on Davis' work as a third baseman in 2023. He accrued minus-11 defensive runs saved, which explains the major discrepancy between his fWAR and 0.9 bWAR. Meanwhile, he provided plus-4 run value there according to Statcast. e14adf6f-90b9b747-6305fe8a-csvm-diamondx64-asset_1280x720_59_16000K.mp4 San Francisco's signings of free agents Matt Chapman and Jorge Soler made Davis expendable entering his final year of club control. He's due $6.9M in 2024—by placing him on waivers, the Giants are conceding he doesn't carry any surplus value at that price. They also appear to be gambling that some team will claim him and take full responsibility for Davis' salary, otherwise you figure they would've eaten a percentage of the money to facilitate a trade already. If the Marlins were to claim Davis, he could find semi-regular at-bats at third base, first base and designated hitter. There is redundancy between his skill set and Jake Burger's, but they could co-exist to lengthen the lineup. In emergency situations, Davis could also play the corner outfield spots. The hang-up here—the same one that applies to the club's pursuit of free agent J.D. Martinez—is determining which hitter currently projected to make the Opening Day roster is being replaced by Davis. Avisaíl García is the weakest link, but the Marlins are reluctant to swallow the $29M remaining on his contract. All of the other hitters in the mix have some kind of trade value and little else to prove in the minors. I'm actually predicting Davis to clear waivers. We have seen somewhat comparable players like Garrett Cooper and Eddie Rosario sign minor league free agent deals that don't come close to reaching $6.9M even if performance bonuses are achieved. If that happens, the Giants would be on the hook for nearly 90% of his salary, with whoever signs him paying the league minimum of $740k. Davis' market would be robust in free agency as a league-minimum player. Would he select the Marlins' offer over others that may come from teams with more hitter-friendly home ballparks and higher postseason odds? Although inefficient financially, claiming Davis off waivers takes that choice away from him. To reiterate, it is a moot point unless the Marlins have a plan to trade/option/release one of their position players to accommodate him.
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Miami Marlins spring training game notes for March 9, 2024
Ely Sussman posted an article in SuperSubs

