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Everything posted by Ely Sussman
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From the album: Marlins Introduce Top Draft Pick Aiva Arquette
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From the album: Marlins Introduce Top Draft Pick Aiva Arquette
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From the album: Marlins Introduce Top Draft Pick Aiva Arquette
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- peter bendix
- aiva arquette
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From the album: Marlins Introduce Top Draft Pick Aiva Arquette
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From the album: Marlins Introduce Top Draft Pick Aiva Arquette
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From the album: Marlins Introduce Top Draft Pick Aiva Arquette
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From the album: Marlins Introduce Top Draft Pick Aiva Arquette
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The Miami Marlins and Oregon State star Aiva Arquette have agreed to terms on a $7,149,900 signing bonus, Jim Callis of MLB Pipeline reports. That is full slot value for the seventh overall pick and 47.1% of the club's $15,187,400 bonus pool. It's the most money that the Marlins have ever committed to an amateur player. “We were exceptionally excited to get him into the organization as quickly as possible,” said Marlins president of baseball operations Peter Bendix at Arquette's introductory press conference on Saturday afternoon at loanDepot park. “We have a draft camp coming up that we think Aiva is really going to enjoy, and I’m personally just very excited to go watch him play.” The franchise record previously belonged to Max Meyer, who banked $6.7 million as the third pick of the 2020 draft. Here are the five largest bonuses that the Marlins have paid to draftees. Each of these players were top-10 overall selections: Aiva Arquette, $7.15M (2025) Max Meyer, $6.7M (2020) JJ Bleday, $6.67M (2019) Jacob Berry, $6M (2022) Tyler Kolek, $6M (2014) The signing bonus was negotiated by Arquette's representatives at Boras Corp. The Marlins’ commitment to the Hawaii native was evident long before draft day. According to Arquette’s agent, Scott Boras, Miami’s front office made more than 20 trips to Hawaii to scout the promising shortstop. One such visit took place the day after Christmas, when Marlins officials flew in to watch him hit. Arquette said the draft-day experience moved quickly, especially knowing how much interest the Marlins had shown. “Everything happened so fast, you know?” he recalled. “I was being patient with my family and friends, and then I finally got the call—I just became so grateful and pumped.” Arquette was ranked as the No. 6 overall prospect in the 2025 draft class by MLB Pipeline. Their scouting grades for him are 50 hit, 55 power, 50 run, 60 arm and 50 field. It’s still unclear which minor league affiliate Arquette will join to begin his professional career.
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The Miami Marlins and Oregon State star Aiva Arquette have agreed to terms on a $7,149,900 signing bonus, Jim Callis of MLB Pipeline reports. That is full slot value for the seventh overall pick and 47.1% of the club's $15,187,400 bonus pool. It's the most money that the Marlins have ever committed to an amateur player. “We were exceptionally excited to get him into the organization as quickly as possible,” said Marlins president of baseball operations Peter Bendix at Arquette's introductory press conference on Saturday afternoon at loanDepot park. “We have a draft camp coming up that we think Aiva is really going to enjoy, and I’m personally just very excited to go watch him play.” The franchise record previously belonged to Max Meyer, who banked $6.7 million as the third pick of the 2020 draft. Here are the five largest bonuses that the Marlins have paid to draftees. Each of these players were top-10 overall selections: Aiva Arquette, $7.15M (2025) Max Meyer, $6.7M (2020) JJ Bleday, $6.67M (2019) Jacob Berry, $6M (2022) Tyler Kolek, $6M (2014) The signing bonus was negotiated by Arquette's representatives at Boras Corp. The Marlins’ commitment to the Hawaii native was evident long before draft day. According to Arquette’s agent, Scott Boras, Miami’s front office made more than 20 trips to Hawaii to scout the promising shortstop. One such visit took place the day after Christmas, when Marlins officials flew in to watch him hit. Arquette said the draft-day experience moved quickly, especially knowing how much interest the Marlins had shown. “Everything happened so fast, you know?” he recalled. “I was being patient with my family and friends, and then I finally got the call—I just became so grateful and pumped.” Arquette was ranked as the No. 6 overall prospect in the 2025 draft class by MLB Pipeline. Their scouting grades for him are 50 hit, 55 power, 50 run, 60 arm and 50 field. It’s still unclear which minor league affiliate Arquette will join to begin his professional career. View full article
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Sal Stewart in particular makes a lot of sense to me. More natural at 3B than Norby. Depending on how the rest of the season goes for both of them, could enter next spring with Stewart and Norby in an straightforward competition for the starting job, or trade Norby and bring in a one-year free agent stopgap at the position while Stewart finishes off his development.
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Here are the latest Miami Marlins game notes, produced by the Marlins communications department and relayed to our loyal readers. These notes apply to the second game of Miami's home series against the Kansas City Royals. Starting Lineup 2B Xavier Edwards (S) RF Jesús Sánchez (L) SS Otto Lopez DH Agustín Ramírez LF Kyle Stowers (L) 1B Eric Wagaman C Liam Hicks (L) CF Dane Myers 3B Graham Pauley (L) P Cal Quantrill Click HERE to download the full game notes (preview below)
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Here are the latest Miami Marlins game notes, produced by the Marlins communications department and relayed to our loyal readers. These notes apply to the first game of Miami's home series against the Kansas City Royals. Starting Lineup 2B Xavier Edwards (S) RF Jesús Sánchez (L) SS Otto Lopez DH Agustín Ramírez LF Kyle Stowers (L) 1B Liam Hicks (L) CF Dane Myers 3B Graham Pauley (L) C Nick Fortes P Sandy Alcantara Click HERE to download the full game notes (preview below)
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And that's why we have to think about a potential deal from both sides. No pressure on the Marlins to trade him now unless they are getting a strong return. They will hold onto him into the offseason if they aren't happy with the offers currently on the table.
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Offishial News: Is this Sandy Alcantara's final Marlins homestand?
Ely Sussman posted an article in Marlins
As of this writing, the MLB trade deadline is only 13 days and 12 hours away. I maintain the belief that Sandy Alcantara will remain with the Miami Marlins after the deadline passes, but the possibility of a departure cannot be entirely ruled out—this front office is always having conversations. If a strong enough package of young talent is offered to them, Alcantara's eight-year Marlins tenure could abruptly come to a close. Alcantara will take the mound at loanDepot park tonight and he's very likely to do so again next Wednesday. After that, the Marlins don't play again in Miami until August 1, when their roster will inevitably look different. Understandably considering his poor performance, fans haven't been buying tickets specifically to see Alcantara lately. If it's feasible for you to make it to the one of these home games, maybe make an exception, just in case the former ace becomes a former Fish at the deadline. Down on the farm, Luis Arana, Diwarys Encarnación and Almen Tolentino were named Dominican Summer League All-Stars. All three have put up terrific offensive numbers, but Arana has been particularly impressive, making the majority of his appearances at shortstop and striking out only 4.5% of the time. Also, it's his first minor league season, whereas Encarnación and Tolentino are repeating the level. DSL Marlins won, 3-0. Outfielder David Shirley went 0-for-2 with two walks and a stolen base in his MiLB debut. DSL Miami won, 3-2. Kevin Defrank (4.0 IP, 2 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 5 K) made his third consecutive scoreless start. His fastball velocity topped out at 100.4 mph. This video from Josh Norris of Baseball America includes swinging strikes on his changeup and slider, too. More Marlins news and content below: 🔷 The Marlins will be without Connor Norby for most of the second half following left hamate bone surgery. "If you truly know me, you know how hard I’ll work to beat timelines and how hard I have and will continue to work to learn from this season and be better for it," he tweeted on Thursday. Graham Pauley should be the club's primary third baseman in the meantime. 🔷 Michael Petersen is back in the Marlins organization after being claimed off waivers from the Atlanta Braves. The right-handed reliever pitched out of Miami's bullpen last September. He'll report to Jacksonville this weekend. Jesús Tinoco was transferred to the 60-day injured list in a corresponding roster move. Tinoco has been on the IL for 45 days already. The Marlins are optimistic that he could be ready for reinstatement as soon as he's eligible on August 2. 🔷 In partnership with About The Fans, we made a Gus Bus t-shirt! It's available in black and heather deep teal (as pictured below). Use coupon code fof10 at checkout for 10% off your order. 🔷 On this day in 1995, the Marlins topped the Giants in 14 innings in large part thanks to Greg Colbrunn's 7 RBI. 🔷 More than 60% of Fish On First Twitter followers voted that, aside from Kyle Stowers, Eury Pérez is the likeliest player on the team to be selected as an All-Star in 2026. 🔷 Aram Leighton of Just Baseball delves into the significant progress that the Marlins have made this year and urges Bruce Sherman to provide the resources that his front office will need to continue piecing together a legitimate contender. 🔷 Per Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald, the Marlins internally view Otto Lopez and Xavier Edwards as their starting middle infielders moving forward. The prospects most impacted by that are Maximo Acosta and Jared Serna, both of whom have been used exclusively at shortstop and second base in 2025 and are already on the 40-man roster. Also on the prospect front, Jackson describes the Marlins as "inclined" to have Robby Snelling spend the rest of this season in the minors, "though that’s subject to change." 🔷 Emilio Barreras and his family were overcome with emotion after Barreras was drafted by the Marlins in the eighth round. 🔷 A pair of 2024 draftees, Grant Shepardson and Nate Payne, were ranked among Baseball America's top 25 Florida Complex League prospects. Shepardson is 14th and Payne is 21st. They're scheduled to make one more start each before the FCL season ends. 🔷 Chad Jennings and Tim Britton of The Athletic observe that corner outfield bats are in short supply on the trade market this year, which could boost Jesús Sánchez's value. 🔷 Congratulations to Matt Mervis and Sydney Leonard on their engagement. 🔷 Elsewhere around baseball, 13-year MLB veteran Kyle Gibson announced his retirement. 🔷 Today's MLB game: the Marlins host the Kansas City Royals in the opener of a three-game series. Following Alcantara, Cal Quantrill is lined up to start on Saturday and Janson Junk on Sunday. Bobby Witt Jr. was among the hottest hitters in baseball entering the break, slashing .369/.400/.631 during a 16-game on-base streak. Full organizational schedule below. 🔷 Prior to the game, Fish On First LIVE will preview the Royals series beginning at 6:00 ET. Marlins podcast episodes- 2 comments
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Marlins Organization Game Schedule - July 18, 2025
Ely Sussman posted a gallery image in Fish On First Graphics
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Connor Norby likely out until September following hamate surgery
Ely Sussman posted an article in Marlins
So many spots on the diamond were unsettled for the Miami Marlins entering the 2025 season. Third base actually looked like one of the few exceptions—Connor Norby showed a lot of upside offensively after being acquired at last year's trade deadline and had the strong work ethic to gradually improve his defense at the hot corner. Instead, the 25-year-old has been among the weakest links on Miami's roster. Norby will have limited reps to rebound from a mediocre first half. As initially reported by FanDuel Sports Network Florida's Craig Mish, he underwent surgery Wednesday on a broken left hamate bone. The procedure will keep him out for 6-8 weeks. In 72 games this season, Norby is slashing .241/.289/.364 with a 81 wRC+, six home runs and seven stolen bases. Combined with below-average defense, he's been essentially a replacement-level player (0.2 fWAR/0.1 bWAR). In particular, his production against secondary stuff has plummeted—Norby has homered only once off of breaking pitches and offspeed pitches, slugging .250 and .242 against them, respectively. On the bright side, Norby is making about as much hard, in-the-air contact as he previously did. His expected weight on-base average is practically unchanged from last season and he had recorded hits in five straight games prior to landing on the injured list. Better results were likely right around the corner. Still, Norby's long-term fit with the Marlins is hazy. Even in a best-case scenario where he is reinstated in late August, he'd have 100 plate appearances or so to impress. His natural position, second base, is occupied by Xavier Edwards. "Norby is expected to be given a chance to compete for the starting third base job next season, though the Marlins likely will bring in competition," according to Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald. Graham Pauley filled in at third for the first three weeks of the season while Norby recovered from an oblique strain. He'll get a more extended runway this time around. Pauley had a .260/.340/.496 slash line (123 wRC+) in 34 games with Triple-A Jacksonville, but a meager .200/.258/.271 slash line (47 wRC+) in 29 games for the Fish. Pauley brings better defense and plate discipline then Norby—this is his chance to show enough aptitude as a run producer to be taken seriously as a potential big league regular. Expect to see Javier Sanoja make starts at third against most left-handed pitchers. Elsewhere on Miami's active roster, Eric Wagaman and Otto Lopez can play the position in emergency situations. -
So many spots on the diamond were unsettled for the Miami Marlins entering the 2025 season. Third base actually looked like one of the few exceptions—Connor Norby showed a lot of upside offensively after being acquired at last year's trade deadline and had the strong work ethic to gradually improve his defense at the hot corner. Instead, the 25-year-old has been among the weakest links on Miami's roster. Norby will have limited reps to rebound from a mediocre first half. As initially reported by FanDuel Sports Network Florida's Craig Mish, he underwent surgery Wednesday on a broken left hamate bone. The procedure will keep him out for 6-8 weeks. In 72 games this season, Norby is slashing .241/.289/.364 with a 81 wRC+, six home runs and seven stolen bases. Combined with below-average defense, he's been essentially a replacement-level player (0.2 fWAR/0.1 bWAR). In particular, his production against secondary stuff has plummeted—Norby has homered only once off of breaking pitches and offspeed pitches, slugging .250 and .242 against them, respectively. On the bright side, Norby is making about as much hard, in-the-air contact as he previously did. His expected weight on-base average is practically unchanged from last season and he had recorded hits in five straight games prior to landing on the injured list. Better results were likely right around the corner. Still, Norby's long-term fit with the Marlins is hazy. Even in a best-case scenario where he is reinstated in late August, he'd have 100 plate appearances or so to impress. His natural position, second base, is occupied by Xavier Edwards. "Norby is expected to be given a chance to compete for the starting third base job next season, though the Marlins likely will bring in competition," according to Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald. Graham Pauley filled in at third for the first three weeks of the season while Norby recovered from an oblique strain. He'll get a more extended runway this time around. Pauley had a .260/.340/.496 slash line (123 wRC+) in 34 games with Triple-A Jacksonville, but a meager .200/.258/.271 slash line (47 wRC+) in 29 games for the Fish. Pauley brings better defense and plate discipline then Norby—this is his chance to show enough aptitude as a run producer to be taken seriously as a potential big league regular. Expect to see Javier Sanoja make starts at third against most left-handed pitchers. Elsewhere on Miami's active roster, Eric Wagaman and Otto Lopez can play the position in emergency situations. View full article
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Gus Bus t-shirt added to FOF Marlins merch collection
Ely Sussman posted an article in Fish On First
Agustín Ramírez began his Miami Marlins career with an extra-base hit binge. Three months later, nobody's been able to stop the "Gus Bus" from driving in runs. In collaboration with About The Fans, we have designed a Gus Bus t-shirt! Save 10% when you enter coupon code fof10 at checkout. The "50" above the windshield refers to Ramírez's uniform number and the "042125" license plate is for his April 21 debut date. Acquired from the New York Yankees last season as the centerpiece of the Jazz Chisholm Jr. trade package, Ramírez made his major league debut on April 21. Since then, he leads all Marlins players in extra-base hits (35), runs scored (40) and plate appearances (301). He has also recorded three of the club's top four exit velocities during that span. Gus has the potential to serve as Miami's primary designated hitter for years to come. The FOF merch collection also includes products inspired by Xavier Edwards, Ichiro Suzuki and Jeff and Griffin Conine. Feel free to comment with any additional design ideas that you believe Marlins fans would be interested in. Those submitted by our loyal SuperSubs will be prioritized. -
Agustín Ramírez began his Miami Marlins career with an extra-base hit binge. Three months later, nobody's been able to stop the "Gus Bus" from driving in runs. In collaboration with About The Fans, we have designed a Gus Bus t-shirt! Save 10% when you enter coupon code fof10 at checkout. The "50" above the windshield refers to Ramírez's uniform number and the "042125" license plate is for his April 21 debut date. Acquired from the New York Yankees last season as the centerpiece of the Jazz Chisholm Jr. trade package, Ramírez made his major league debut on April 21. Since then, he leads all Marlins players in extra-base hits (35), runs scored (40) and plate appearances (301). He has also recorded three of the club's top four exit velocities during that span. Gus has the potential to serve as Miami's primary designated hitter for years to come. The FOF merch collection also includes products inspired by Xavier Edwards, Ichiro Suzuki and Jeff and Griffin Conine. Feel free to comment with any additional design ideas that you believe Marlins fans would be interested in. Those submitted by our loyal SuperSubs will be prioritized. View full article
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The Miami Marlins were a last-place team in early June. They've been one of the best MLB teams since then. What changed? By far the biggest difference-maker has been the quality of their starting pitching. That's what has made this Houston Astros series so out of character. In getting hit hard on Monday, at least Sandy Alcantara saved the bullpen by continuing to attack the strike zone and completing seven innings. But following that up with Cal Quantrill's terrible showing the next night—lasting just 4 ⅓ frames—was deflating. By Game Score, Quantrill (16) had the worst outing by any Marlins starter since April. Trailing both the New York Mets and San Diego Padres by seven games with 50 left to play, the Marlins have barely any margin for error. Scheduled to play 28 of those games in the next 29 days, they need both run prevention and volume from their SPs to be playing meaningful games in September. Down on the farm, 2025 MLB Draft picks Aiva Arquette (Round 1 pick), Brandon Compton (2), Max Williams (3), Drew Faurot (4), Chris Arroyo (5), Carson Laws (14) and Cannon Pickell (20) played their first official games as members of the Marlins organization. Arquette and Compton debuted with High-A Beloit, while the others did so with Low-A Jupiter. Emilio Barreras (8), Wilson Weber (12) and Chase Renner (13) are likely to debut tonight. In addition to the previously mentioned Brock Vradenburg, minor leaguers Matt Mervis, Rob Brantly, Jun-Seok Shim, Jake Thompson, Harrison Spohn, Josh Zamora, Ricky DeVito, Jorge Mercedes and Wilfredo Henriquez were released, creating room for the draft picks to be activated. Their MiLB stats from this season are posted below. Also, Wilfredo Lara was suspended, presumably for his role in this benches-clearing incident last Saturday. More Marlins news and content below: 🔷 Jakob Marsee is exceeding even the most optimistic projections thus far. His 359 wRC+ since debuting on Friday is third-best in the majors (min. 10 PA), plus he's doing well defensively in center field. His 0.7 fWAR through five games this season matches Luis Arraez's output through 108 games! Marsee was part of the prospect package that the Marlins received for Arraez last year. 🔷 Alex Krutchik updates where Agustín Ramírez stands in the National League Rookie of the Year race. 🔷 Kyle Stowers was named the 2025 Miami Marlins Heart and Hustle Award winner by the MLBPAA. Previous Marlins winners include Jon Berti (2022), Luis Arraez (2023) and Jake Burger (2024). 🔷 Elsewhere around baseball, Nathan Eovaldi has been MLB's best starting pitcher this season when healthy. Eight more scoreless innings on Tuesday lowered his ERA to 1.38. Max Muncy and Teoscar Hernández each had multi-homer games for the Los Angeles Dodgers in a 12-6 win. It had been more than a month since they previously topped seven runs in a game. Shea Langeliers tied a modern era record for most total bases by a catcher in a game with 15. 🔷 Today's MLB game: the Marlins will try to salvage the finale of their series against the Astros (probable starters RHP Janson Junk and RHP Spencer Arrighetti). Jose Altuve is having another big series. He has a lifetime 1.008 OPS in 23 games against the Fish, his best vs. any opposing team. The Marlins have a 48.7% chance to win, per FanGraphs. First pitch at 4:40 p.m. ET. Marlins podcast episodes View full article
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Miami Marlins 40-Man Roster Snapshot - July 16, 2025
Ely Sussman posted a gallery image in Fish On First Graphics
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Marlins load up on college bats after decades of drafting busts
Ely Sussman posted an article in MLB Draft
Everywhere you look around Major League Baseball, you see former college position players excelling. MLB's top two hitters so far this season, Aaron Judge and Cal Raleigh, were drafted out of Fresno State and Florida State, respectively. The 2025 All-Star Game MVP, Kyle Schwarber, is an Indiana University alum. Even the Miami Marlins' All-Star representative, Kyle Stowers, attended Stanford to further his academic career. Stowers, of course, was not drafted directly by the Marlins. On the heels of the franchise's first-ever all-college draft class, I was straining to come up with examples of Miami draftees out of four-year universities who developed into productive MLB regulars. Formal research confirmed that their track record has been awful in this area. The Marlins hit a home run with their first-ever amateur draft pick, selecting University of Miami catcher Charles Johnson in 1992. CJ was an elite defender and key cog on the 1997 World Series team who is still the Marlins' all-time leader in games caught. Their 1996 first-rounder, Cal State Fullerton's Mark Kotsay, accrued 20.5 fWAR across 17 MLB seasons, the vast majority of which came with other clubs. Very good players, but far from generational talents. Decades later, those two are still the most successful college bats to come through the Marlins organization. Josh Willingham (North Alabama, 2000) was a sweet find in the 17th round—never an All-Star, but he slashed .266/.361/.472 as a Marlin and amassed nearly 200 total home runs in the majors. They didn't recognize what they had in Mark Canha (Cal State Berkeley, 2010). Plucked from the Fish via the Rule 5 Draft more than a decade ago, Canha is still bouncing around as a defensively versatile steady source of on-base percentage. Brian Anderson (Arkansas, 2014) had a few above-average seasons before shoulder issues accelerated his decline. Everybody else from this demographic had—with all due respect—inconsequential careers. The Marlins' long-running problem has been whiffing on the "safest" and most expensive college bats. Since Johnson and Kotsay, the only other times they've gone back to this approach with their first-round pick were Colin Moran in 2013, JJ Bleday in 2019 and Jacob Berry in 2022. Those mistakes are debilitating for a franchise. This season, the Marlins have used 19 position players. The only one of them to be drafted out of college and developed by them is 2018 fourth-rounder Nick Fortes. He has value, but it's marginal. Unbothered by this history, the Marlins went with back-to-back-to-back-to-back-to-back-to-back college bats atop their 2025 draft class, headlined by Oregon State's Aiva Arquette. The Marlins are operating differently under president of baseball operations Peter Bendix and director of amateur scouting Frankie Piliere. Time will tell whether or not "different" is actually better. -
Everywhere you look around Major League Baseball, you see former college position players excelling. MLB's top two hitters so far this season, Aaron Judge and Cal Raleigh, were drafted out of Fresno State and Florida State, respectively. The 2025 All-Star Game MVP, Kyle Schwarber, is an Indiana University alum. Even the Miami Marlins' All-Star representative, Kyle Stowers, attended Stanford to further his academic career. Stowers, of course, was not drafted directly by the Marlins. On the heels of the franchise's first-ever all-college draft class, I was straining to come up with examples of Miami draftees out of four-year universities who developed into productive MLB regulars. Formal research confirmed that their track record has been awful in this area. The Marlins hit a home run with their first-ever amateur draft pick, selecting University of Miami catcher Charles Johnson in 1992. CJ was an elite defender and key cog on the 1997 World Series team who is still the Marlins' all-time leader in games caught. Their 1996 first-rounder, Cal State Fullerton's Mark Kotsay, accrued 20.5 fWAR across 17 MLB seasons, the vast majority of which came with other clubs. Very good players, but far from generational talents. Decades later, those two are still the most successful college bats to come through the Marlins organization. Josh Willingham (North Alabama, 2000) was a sweet find in the 17th round—never an All-Star, but he slashed .266/.361/.472 as a Marlin and amassed nearly 200 total home runs in the majors. They didn't recognize what they had in Mark Canha (Cal State Berkeley, 2010). Plucked from the Fish via the Rule 5 Draft more than a decade ago, Canha is still bouncing around as a defensively versatile steady source of on-base percentage. Brian Anderson (Arkansas, 2014) had a few above-average seasons before shoulder issues accelerated his decline. Everybody else from this demographic had—with all due respect—inconsequential careers. The Marlins' long-running problem has been whiffing on the "safest" and most expensive college bats. Since Johnson and Kotsay, the only other times they've gone back to this approach with their first-round pick were Colin Moran in 2013, JJ Bleday in 2019 and Jacob Berry in 2022. Those mistakes are debilitating for a franchise. This season, the Marlins have used 19 position players. The only one of them to be drafted out of college and developed by them is 2018 fourth-rounder Nick Fortes. He has value, but it's marginal. Unbothered by this history, the Marlins went with back-to-back-to-back-to-back-to-back-to-back college bats atop their 2025 draft class, headlined by Oregon State's Aiva Arquette. The Marlins are operating differently under president of baseball operations Peter Bendix and director of amateur scouting Frankie Piliere. Time will tell whether or not "different" is actually better. View full article
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Even after his challenge was deemed unsuccessful, Kyle Stowers was wearing a big smile, and that's what mattered most, right? He had just taken a called third strike on the epitome of a borderline pitch to end the bottom of the eighth inning, striking out for the second straight plate appearance in his MLB All-Star Game debut, but at least he was enjoying himself. Stowers belonged on that field among baseball's best players and he wasn't letting the results damper the final moments of the experience. Little did Stowers know, there was another chapter still to be written. The National League team blew its 6-4 lead and went down quietly in the ninth. In lieu of traditional extra innings, the Midsummer Classic would be decided via a "swing-off"—a mini home run derby featuring three participants from each roster. Representing the AL, Brent Rooker, Randy Arozarena and Jonathan Aranda. Representing the NL, Pete Alonso, Kyle Schwarber and Eugenio Suárez. Earlier in the night, Suárez was hit by a pitch on the left pinky. X-Rays came back negative, but out of caution, the NL's second-leading home run hitter was understandably scratched from the swing-off. That opened up a spot for Stowers, which happened to be the leadoff spot. After Rooker gave the AL a 2-0 advantage, Stowers stepped to the plate for his round, with NL third base coach Dino Ebel throwing the balls. Allotted three swings, Stowers popped up the first, snuck the second over Truist's brick wall in right-center field and popped up the third. Although the official box score won't credit him for it, he joined Gary Sheffield (1993) and Jeff Conine (1995) as the only Marlins to ever homer in an All-Star Game. j3usuk.mp4 The real hero of the swing-off was Schwarber, who went a perfect 3-for-3 to put the AL ahead. A homerless round from Aranda ended the contest before Alonso's services were required. Schwarber received All-Star Game MVP honors. Down on the farm, FCL Marlins won, 10-3, snapping the affiliate's nine-game losing streak. They drew a season-high 14 walks. Fenwick Trimble resurfaced to begin a rehab assignment nearly two months after suffering a hamstring strain. He went 1-for-4 and played seven innings in center field. Aiden May retired all six batters he faced as he continues stretching out as a starter following arthroscopic elbow surgery. Grant Shepardson threw five scoreless innings in relief of him. DSL Marlins won, 7-4. Luis Cova homered and stole two bases. Deivis Mosquera had a career-high 4 RBI. DSL Miami won, 8-3. Pedro Montero lowered his ERA to 1.37. Opponents are slugging .185 against Montero through six career starts. More Marlins news and content below: 🔷 Vote here on which Marlin (with the exception of Stowers) has the best shot of making the 2026 All-Star Game. 🔷 SuperSub Ron Cox assessed the state of the Marlins organization on his View From Left Field blog. 🔷 Another one of our SuperSubs, @Casey Marika, created these interactive charts illustrating how each Marlins position player has accumulated wins above replacement this season.
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Even after his challenge was deemed unsuccessful, Kyle Stowers was wearing a big smile, and that's what mattered most, right? He had just taken a called third strike on the epitome of a borderline pitch to end the bottom of the eighth inning, striking out for the second straight plate appearance in his MLB All-Star Game debut, but at least he was enjoying himself. Stowers belonged on that field among baseball's best players and he wasn't letting the results damper the final moments of the experience. Little did Stowers know, there was another chapter still to be written. The National League team blew its 6-4 lead and went down quietly in the ninth. In lieu of traditional extra innings, the Midsummer Classic would be decided via a "swing-off"—a mini home run derby featuring three participants from each roster. Representing the AL, Brent Rooker, Randy Arozarena and Jonathan Aranda. Representing the NL, Pete Alonso, Kyle Schwarber and Eugenio Suárez. Earlier in the night, Suárez was hit by a pitch on the left pinky. X-Rays came back negative, but out of caution, the NL's second-leading home run hitter was understandably scratched from the swing-off. That opened up a spot for Stowers, which happened to be the leadoff spot. After Rooker gave the AL a 2-0 advantage, Stowers stepped to the plate for his round, with NL third base coach Dino Ebel throwing the balls. Allotted three swings, Stowers popped up the first, snuck the second over Truist's brick wall in right-center field and popped up the third. Although the official box score won't credit him for it, he joined Gary Sheffield (1993) and Jeff Conine (1995) as the only Marlins to ever homer in an All-Star Game. j3usuk.mp4 The real hero of the swing-off was Schwarber, who went a perfect 3-for-3 to put the AL ahead. A homerless round from Aranda ended the contest before Alonso's services were required. Schwarber received All-Star Game MVP honors. Down on the farm, FCL Marlins won, 10-3, snapping the affiliate's nine-game losing streak. They drew a season-high 14 walks. Fenwick Trimble resurfaced to begin a rehab assignment nearly two months after suffering a hamstring strain. He went 1-for-4 and played seven innings in center field. Aiden May retired all six batters he faced as he continues stretching out as a starter following arthroscopic elbow surgery. Grant Shepardson threw five scoreless innings in relief of him. DSL Marlins won, 7-4. Luis Cova homered and stole two bases. Deivis Mosquera had a career-high 4 RBI. DSL Miami won, 8-3. Pedro Montero lowered his ERA to 1.37. Opponents are slugging .185 against Montero through six career starts. More Marlins news and content below: 🔷 Vote here on which Marlin (with the exception of Stowers) has the best shot of making the 2026 All-Star Game. 🔷 SuperSub Ron Cox assessed the state of the Marlins organization on his View From Left Field blog. 🔷 Another one of our SuperSubs, @Casey Marika, created these interactive charts illustrating how each Marlins position player has accumulated wins above replacement this season. View full article

