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Player status updates, insightful stats and more information to fully equip you for today's Marlins game. Here are the latest Miami Marlins game notes, produced by the Marlins communications department and relayed to our loyal SuperSubs. These notes apply to the third game of Miami's home series against the New York Mets. View full article
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He has the lowest ERA in the Marlins bullpen. Will anybody trade for him?
Ely Sussman posted an article in Marlins
Why are MLB contenders lining up to bid on Tanner Scott at the upcoming trade deadline? He's a hard-throwing veteran who has been putting up zeroes in 2024. Nearing the end of his club-controlled years, Scott can presumably be obtained without sacrificing any highly coveted prospects. JT Chargois fits that description too. Rehab from a spring training neck injury cost the right-hander more than two months of the regular season. In his limited Miami Marlins reps this year, would you believe that Chargois' ERA (1.23) is lower than the 1.30 mark belonging to the great Scott?! While Scott is a pending free agent, Chargois actually has arbitration eligibility in 2025, and his current salary is a measly $1.285M. If there was any lingering doubt about Chargois' physical fitness, his fastball velocity averaged 95.4 mph on Saturday against the Mets. That was his second-highest average velo of the season and within a tick of the 33-year-old's career norm. Unfortunately for the Fish, that's where the similarities between Scott and Chargois end. The latter is a prime example of why small-sample earned run averages for relievers can be highly misleading. Teams competent enough to win the majority of their games are unlikely to be duped. A quick perusal of Chargois' 2024 game logs speaks volumes about how Miami views him internally. First off, Chargois has not made any appearances on back-to-back days. He only did so while rehabbing at the minor league level (June 5-6 with Triple-A Jacksonville). Since Chargois was reinstated from the IL, the Marlins bullpen has thrown the fourth-most innings in the majors. He would be assigned a larger share of them if there was a genuine trust in him to thrive. On Saturday, Chargois contributed in a semi-important situation. With the aid of an athletic Nick Gordon catch, he kept the Marlins within one run of the Mets heading into the bottom of the ninth inning. T1Fka1JfWGw0TUFRPT1fVndoVlVWTU1YbE1BQ0ZZQlh3QUFBMUpmQUFOWEFsWUFBbGNEQjFWVVVGVUFVMUZV.mp4 Even so, through 13 games, Chargois has never entered with a lead! Only once has he pitched in high leverage as defined by Baseball-Reference. There is not any way to sugarcoat it: Chargois has been extremely lucky. His 1.23 ERA belies a 4.53 FIP, which is on pace to be the worst of his seven-year MLB career. That 3.30-run gap in the favorable direction trails only Spencer Bivens of the San Francisco Giants among MLB pitchers with 10-plus innings of work this season. Chargois' performance when inheriting baserunners is not reflected in his ERA. He has permitted four of nine to score (44 IS%) after going 5-for-20 (25 IS%) last year. The one constant for Chargois historically has been his ability to induce ground balls. His 52.9 GB% from 2016-2023 placed him in the 90th percentile (min. 100 IP). However, he's on the opposite end of the spectrum so far in 2024 with a 31.0 GB%. Much of that discrepancy seems linked to his lack of sinker command. Too many pitches intended for the bottom third of the strike zone are winding up middle-middle. If the Marlins find a taker for Chargois, don't expect anything more than a fringy, far-away prospect who falls short of cracking our Top 30 list. He's destined for August/September regression, and the bonus year of control is not particularly enticing considering that injuries have always prevented him from spending a full-length MLB season on an active roster. Despite his uninspiring overall numbers in 2024 and similarly sketchy history of durability, look for A.J. Puk to fetch a more sizable haul. -
JT Chargois has been getting outs since returning from injury last month, but can he be trusted to sustain this? Why are MLB contenders lining up to bid on Tanner Scott at the upcoming trade deadline? He's a hard-throwing veteran who has been putting up zeroes in 2024. Nearing the end of his club-controlled years, Scott can presumably be obtained without sacrificing any highly coveted prospects. JT Chargois fits that description too. Rehab from a spring training neck injury cost the right-hander more than two months of the regular season. In his limited Miami Marlins reps this year, would you believe that Chargois' ERA (1.23) is lower than the 1.30 mark belonging to the great Scott?! While Scott is a pending free agent, Chargois actually has arbitration eligibility in 2025, and his current salary is a measly $1.285M. If there was any lingering doubt about Chargois' physical fitness, his fastball velocity averaged 95.4 mph on Saturday against the Mets. That was his second-highest average velo of the season and within a tick of the 33-year-old's career norm. Unfortunately for the Fish, that's where the similarities between Scott and Chargois end. The latter is a prime example of why small-sample earned run averages for relievers can be highly misleading. Teams competent enough to win the majority of their games are unlikely to be duped. A quick perusal of Chargois' 2024 game logs speaks volumes about how Miami views him internally. First off, Chargois has not made any appearances on back-to-back days. He only did so while rehabbing at the minor league level (June 5-6 with Triple-A Jacksonville). Since Chargois was reinstated from the IL, the Marlins bullpen has thrown the fourth-most innings in the majors. He would be assigned a larger share of them if there was a genuine trust in him to thrive. On Saturday, Chargois contributed in a semi-important situation. With the aid of an athletic Nick Gordon catch, he kept the Marlins within one run of the Mets heading into the bottom of the ninth inning. T1Fka1JfWGw0TUFRPT1fVndoVlVWTU1YbE1BQ0ZZQlh3QUFBMUpmQUFOWEFsWUFBbGNEQjFWVVVGVUFVMUZV.mp4 Even so, through 13 games, Chargois has never entered with a lead! Only once has he pitched in high leverage as defined by Baseball-Reference. There is not any way to sugarcoat it: Chargois has been extremely lucky. His 1.23 ERA belies a 4.53 FIP, which is on pace to be the worst of his seven-year MLB career. That 3.30-run gap in the favorable direction trails only Spencer Bivens of the San Francisco Giants among MLB pitchers with 10-plus innings of work this season. Chargois' performance when inheriting baserunners is not reflected in his ERA. He has permitted four of nine to score (44 IS%) after going 5-for-20 (25 IS%) last year. The one constant for Chargois historically has been his ability to induce ground balls. His 52.9 GB% from 2016-2023 placed him in the 90th percentile (min. 100 IP). However, he's on the opposite end of the spectrum so far in 2024 with a 31.0 GB%. Much of that discrepancy seems linked to his lack of sinker command. Too many pitches intended for the bottom third of the strike zone are winding up middle-middle. If the Marlins find a taker for Chargois, don't expect anything more than a fringy, far-away prospect who falls short of cracking our Top 30 list. He's destined for August/September regression, and the bonus year of control is not particularly enticing considering that injuries have always prevented him from spending a full-length MLB season on an active roster. Despite his uninspiring overall numbers in 2024 and similarly sketchy history of durability, look for A.J. Puk to fetch a more sizable haul. View full article
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Player status updates, insightful stats and more information to fully equip you for today's Marlins game. Here are the latest Miami Marlins game notes, produced by the Marlins communications department and relayed to our loyal SuperSubs. These notes apply to the second game of Miami's home series against the New York Mets. View full article
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Miami Marlins outfielder Dane Myers posted the following message to his social media accounts on Friday regarding the left ankle fracture he suffered last weekend in Cincinnati: Read if you want to Just a quick PSA. Last week I embarrassed the Marlins, my family, and myself. I lost my composure in the heat of battle. I made a mistake on the field and an even bigger mistake off the field. I don't expect someone on the outside looking in to understand me and what was going on in my head in that moment. There's no excuse for what happened but it did and I can't change that. My love for the game translated into something it shouldn't have. The entire situation does not reflect who I am as a person/player or my character. I spoke to the media hours after find out out my foot was fractured. I was completely broken and running off no sleep, so I didn't really get to say how I felt entirely. After reflecting, I'm saying it now. I want to apologize to any kids that are fans of mine, learn from my mistake and handle similar moments the right way. I also want to apologize to my family and the entire Miami Marlins organization. Thank you to my support system for building me up in a time like this. And as far as the hatred I'm receiving from others, it's just motivation for me. While I heal physically I am going to work on my mental and come back better than ever in a few weeks. I guarantee it. God did!
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Player status updates, insightful stats and more information to fully equip you for today's Marlins game. Here are the latest Miami Marlins game notes, produced by the Marlins communications department and relayed to our loyal SuperSubs. These notes apply to the first game of Miami's home series against the New York Mets. View full article
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Updating the dollars spent by the Marlins on their 2024 MLB Draft class. The Miami Marlins made 21 selections in the 2024 MLB Draft and signed 20 of them by the August 1 deadline. In the vast majority of cases, negotiations are done ahead of time—the team knows what the player's "number" is before picking him. However, particularly for prep prospects, signability can be more complicated. Ultimately, they have leverage to play college ball if they aren't fully comfortable with the circumstances. This year, the Marlins had a bonus pool of $10,438,500. The pool applies to players selected during the first 10 rounds and those in the 11th round or later who cost more than $150k. The Marlins were allowed to spend up to 105% of their pool ($10,960,425) without losing future picks. Dollar amounts in bold counted toward the Marlins' bonus pool. The Marlins spent $10,425,000 (99.9% of their bonus pool). Round 1: OF PJ Morlando signed for $3,400,000 (slot value $4,704,700) Round 2: SS Carter Johnson signed for $2,800,000 (slot value $1,603,400) Competitive Balance Round B: RHP Aiden May signed for $900,000 (slot value $1,139,100) Round 3: 2B Gage Miller signed for $800,800 (slot value $800,800) Round 4: OF Fenwick Trimble signed for $550,000 (slot value $589,000) Round 5: RHP Grant Shepardson signed for $897,500 (slot value $427,000) Round 6: SS Payton Green signed for $328,800 (slot value $331,300) Round 7: RHP Nick Brink signed for $195,000 (slot value $259,600) Round 8: OF Jacob Jenkins-Cowart signed for $211,600 (slot value $211,600) Round 9: 3B Dub Gleed signed for $188,800 (slot value $191,300) Round 10: 3B Michael Snyder signed for $17,500 (slot value $180,700) Round 11: RHP Jake Faherty signed for $200,000 ($50,000 goes toward bonus pool) Round 12: C Connor Caskenette signed for $100,000 Round 13: SS Cody Schrier signed for $150,000 Round 14: SS Cam Clayton signed for $150,000 Round 15: C Coen Niclai did not sign Round 16: 1B Eric Rataczak signed for $75,000 Round 17: OF Micah McDowell signed for 100,000 Round 18: LHP Nate Payne signed for $235,000 ($85,000 goes toward bonus pool) Round 19: RHP Luke Lashutka signed for $10,000 Round 20: RHP Chase Centala signed for 50,000 View full article
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The Miami Marlins front office is under significant pressure entering the MLB trade deadline, writes Jim Bowden of The Athletic. Hard to disagree with that—they are thin on tradeable assets and must find a way to flip them into impactful prospects, especially Jazz Chisholm Jr. "Chisholm probably won’t get traded to the Yankees or Phillies," Bowden reports, "because many evaluators question how he would perform in those markets and fit in their clubhouses. Instead, most execs think he’ll end up being moved to the Pirates, Mariners or Giants." I frankly had not given much thought to San Francisco until now, but maybe! Thairo Estrada has had a disappointing year as their second baseman, posting the lowest walk rate among qualified MLB hitters and riding a 5-for-50 slump entering the All-Star break. Like Chisholm, Estrada is under club control through 2026. However, he could be non-tendered this offseason if he continues on his current trajectory. Coming out of the break with a 47-50 record, I suspect the Giants need to get on a hot streak before proceeding with a Chisholm acquisition or any other "buying" move.
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The Miami Marlins front office is under significant pressure entering the MLB trade deadline, writes Jim Bowden of The Athletic. Hard to disagree with that—they are thin on tradeable assets and must find a way to flip them into impactful prospects, especially Jazz Chisholm Jr. "Chisholm probably won’t get traded to the Yankees or Phillies," Bowden reports, "because many evaluators question how he would perform in those markets and fit in their clubhouses. Instead, most execs think he’ll end up being moved to the Pirates, Mariners or Giants." I frankly had not given much thought to San Francisco until now, but maybe! Thairo Estrada has had a disappointing year as their second baseman, posting the lowest walk rate among qualified MLB hitters and riding a 5-for-50 slump entering the All-Star break. Like Chisholm, Estrada is under club control through 2026. However, he could be non-tendered this offseason if he continues on his current trajectory. Coming out of the break with a 47-50 record, I suspect the Giants need to get on a hot streak before proceeding with a Chisholm acquisition or any other "buying" move. View full rumor
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Back from the break, let the Marlins trade rumors intensify
Ely Sussman posted an article in Marlins
On Thursday down on the farm, the Marlins finalized their agreement with first-round draft pick OF PJ Morlando, as first reported by Craig Mish of SportsGrid. Morlando receives a $3.4M signing bonus, far below the 16th overall pick's slot value of $4.7M. I confirmed that RHP Yohanfer Santana underwent Tommy John surgery. You likely haven't heard of Santana, but the 18-year-old was poised for a breakout season in the Dominican Summer League before his elbow blew out. The FCL Marlins game was suspended in the second inning due to rain. DSL Marlins won, 4-3, and lost, 10-9. INF Joseph Tailor combined to go 2-for-2 with a home run, a walk and two hit by pitches in the second game. He's been selected to the DSL All-Star Game. DSL Miami won, 7-5. Here's more Marlins news and content: 🔷 Including the rest of their bonus pool and a 5% overage, the Morlando deal leaves Miami with $7,560,425 left to spend on other draft pick signings. I will be updating these capsules on each player as we find out their bonuses. I'll also be using that section to feature undrafted free agent pickups like UC Santa Barbara OF Jessada Brown. 🔷 Check out the latest Fish On First Top 30 prospect rankings. LHP Thomas White, RHP Noble Meyer, RHP Max Meyer and OF Victor Mesa Jr. remain in the first four spots, but there has been lots of movement outside of that, including the additions of Morlando (No. 8) and four other new draftees. 🔷 Dane Myers (left ankle fracture) was placed on the 10-day injured list retroactive to July 15. Don't be surprised if he eventually gets transferred to the 60-day IL to free up a temporary 40-man roster spot. In that case, he'd be eligible for reinstatement on September 13. For the time being, some combination of Nick Gordon, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Vidal Bruján will split up center field duties. 🔷 In 2025, the Pirates will once again visit the Marlins to kick off the regular season schedule. 🔷 Available on Homage, MLB and Guy Fieri's Flavortown have collaborated on a collection of t-shirts featuring fan-favorite ballpark concessions. For the Marlins, they selected the Cubano Gigante. The t-shirts are 20% off for a limited time. 🔷 Kevin Barral previews what to expect from the rest of this Marlins season (aside from a lot of losing). 🔷 Skip Schumaker discussed his coaching philosophy with Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald and what he admires about longtime Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra. 🔷 MLB.com's Christina De Nicola picks Jesús Luzardo as her "key player" and Max Meyer as the "prospect to watch" for the second half. She also spoke with Tanner Scott about his All-Star appearance and the support he received from his family. 🔷 Steve Adams of MLB Trade Rumors explains what makes A.J. Puk an "appealing target" at the trade deadline. In case you missed it earlier in the week, I compared him to Hunter Harvey. 🔷 Elsewhere around baseball, St. Petersburg City Council voted to approve the Rays' $1.3B ballpark and mixed-use development project. The new stadium is expected to open in 2028 and the Rays are signing a 30-year lease. Barely a year after drafting him, the Athletics are calling up infield prospect Jacob Wilson. Wilson has posted an incredible 180 wRC+ in 72 career minor league games. 🔷 Today's MLB game: the Marlins (probable starter RHP Edward Cabrera) open up a four-game series against the Mets (LHP Sean Manaea). Prior to the game, expect Otto Lopez (lower back inflammation) to be reinstated from the 10-day IL to fill Dane Myers' roster spot. PJ Morlando will be at loanDepot park to address the media as his professional career officially begins. The Marlins have a 48.5% chance to win, per FanGraphs. First pitch at 7:10 p.m. ET. 🔷 Join us for a new episode of Fish On First LIVE tonight from 6:00-7:00 p.m. ET on YouTube/Twitter/Facebook. Special guest: Jeremiah Geiger. 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 MiLB schedule: Triple-A Jacksonville vs. Durham, 7:05 p.m. ET Double-A Pensacola vs. Mississippi, 7:05 p.m. ET High-A Beloit at Peoria, 8:05 p.m. ET Low-A Jupiter vs. St. Lucie, 6:30 p.m. ET DSL Marlins vs. DSL Phillies Red, 11:00 a.m. ET DSL Miami at DSL Nationals, 11:00 a.m. ET Marlins podcast episodes- 6 comments
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Offishial News for 7/19/24 On Thursday down on the farm, the Marlins finalized their agreement with first-round draft pick OF PJ Morlando, as first reported by Craig Mish of SportsGrid. Morlando receives a $3.4M signing bonus, far below the 16th overall pick's slot value of $4.7M. I confirmed that RHP Yohanfer Santana underwent Tommy John surgery. You likely haven't heard of Santana, but the 18-year-old was poised for a breakout season in the Dominican Summer League before his elbow blew out. The FCL Marlins game was suspended in the second inning due to rain. DSL Marlins won, 4-3, and lost, 10-9. INF Joseph Tailor combined to go 2-for-2 with a home run, a walk and two hit by pitches in the second game. He's been selected to the DSL All-Star Game. DSL Miami won, 7-5. Here's more Marlins news and content: 🔷 Including the rest of their bonus pool and a 5% overage, the Morlando deal leaves Miami with $7,560,425 left to spend on other draft pick signings. I will be updating these capsules on each player as we find out their bonuses. I'll also be using that section to feature undrafted free agent pickups like UC Santa Barbara OF Jessada Brown. 🔷 Check out the latest Fish On First Top 30 prospect rankings. LHP Thomas White, RHP Noble Meyer, RHP Max Meyer and OF Victor Mesa Jr. remain in the first four spots, but there has been lots of movement outside of that, including the additions of Morlando (No. 8) and four other new draftees. 🔷 Dane Myers (left ankle fracture) was placed on the 10-day injured list retroactive to July 15. Don't be surprised if he eventually gets transferred to the 60-day IL to free up a temporary 40-man roster spot. In that case, he'd be eligible for reinstatement on September 13. For the time being, some combination of Nick Gordon, Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Vidal Bruján will split up center field duties. 🔷 In 2025, the Pirates will once again visit the Marlins to kick off the regular season schedule. 🔷 Available on Homage, MLB and Guy Fieri's Flavortown have collaborated on a collection of t-shirts featuring fan-favorite ballpark concessions. For the Marlins, they selected the Cubano Gigante. The t-shirts are 20% off for a limited time. 🔷 Kevin Barral previews what to expect from the rest of this Marlins season (aside from a lot of losing). 🔷 Skip Schumaker discussed his coaching philosophy with Barry Jackson of the Miami Herald and what he admires about longtime Miami Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra. 🔷 MLB.com's Christina De Nicola picks Jesús Luzardo as her "key player" and Max Meyer as the "prospect to watch" for the second half. She also spoke with Tanner Scott about his All-Star appearance and the support he received from his family. 🔷 Steve Adams of MLB Trade Rumors explains what makes A.J. Puk an "appealing target" at the trade deadline. In case you missed it earlier in the week, I compared him to Hunter Harvey. 🔷 Elsewhere around baseball, St. Petersburg City Council voted to approve the Rays' $1.3B ballpark and mixed-use development project. The new stadium is expected to open in 2028 and the Rays are signing a 30-year lease. Barely a year after drafting him, the Athletics are calling up infield prospect Jacob Wilson. Wilson has posted an incredible 180 wRC+ in 72 career minor league games. 🔷 Today's MLB game: the Marlins (probable starter RHP Edward Cabrera) open up a four-game series against the Mets (LHP Sean Manaea). Prior to the game, expect Otto Lopez (lower back inflammation) to be reinstated from the 10-day IL to fill Dane Myers' roster spot. PJ Morlando will be at loanDepot park to address the media as his professional career officially begins. The Marlins have a 48.5% chance to win, per FanGraphs. First pitch at 7:10 p.m. ET. 🔷 Join us for a new episode of Fish On First LIVE tonight from 6:00-7:00 p.m. ET on YouTube/Twitter/Facebook. Special guest: Jeremiah Geiger. 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 MiLB schedule: Triple-A Jacksonville vs. Durham, 7:05 p.m. ET Double-A Pensacola vs. Mississippi, 7:05 p.m. ET High-A Beloit at Peoria, 8:05 p.m. ET Low-A Jupiter vs. St. Lucie, 6:30 p.m. ET DSL Marlins vs. DSL Phillies Red, 11:00 a.m. ET DSL Miami at DSL Nationals, 11:00 a.m. ET Marlins podcast episodes View full article
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He has a strong case. His control is farther behind than the other young SPs on here, but then again, he is the very youngest of the bunch. And his changeup is impressive. I'm going to quietly slide him into the honorable mentions category.
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If you're a Miami Marlins fan, it took only a week or two into the 2024 season for you to start looking ahead to 2025. There is nowhere to go but up from this historically bad campaign. Some aspects of the Marlins regular season schedule were known in advance: Matchups against each of the other 29 teams Home and away series against each National League opponent 13 games against each NL East rival On Thursday afternoon, we got more of the specifics. Run it back vs. the Bucs Just like in 2024, the Marlins will begin next season by hosting the Pittsburgh Pirates for a four-game set. It's only the second time in franchise history that the Marlins are hosting the same opponent on Opening Day in back-to-back years (previously vs. the Chicago Cubs in 1997 and 1998). MLB is giving Miami Opening Day baseball for the ninth time in a 12-year span. The 2024 season-opening starting pitchers were Jesús Luzardo and Mitch Keller. Health permitting, 2025 should feature two legitimate NL Cy Young award candidates: Sandy Alcantara and Paul Skenes. Juiced up Citrus Series From 2022-2024, the Marlins and Tampa Bay Rays were limited to four head-to-head meetings (two each at loanDepot park and Tropicana Field). The Fish have been grateful for that because they've been dominated, winning only one Citrus Series game during that period (an Alcantara complete game). These series will be expanded to three games apiece in 2025. The Rays visit the Marlins from May 16-18 as part of MLB's new "Rivalry Week" initiative, then the Fish return the favor from June 6-8. Extended stay in Chicago Shoutout to Fish On First staffer Alex Krutchik for bringing this to my attention. The Marlins visit the Chicago White Sox (May 9-11) and Chicago Cubs (May 12-14) for consecutive series. Assuming they hit the road for that trip immediately after completing their prior homestand on May 7, they could be spending seven straight nights in the same hotel! That is a team travel director's dream. I suppose it's also a dream for any Illinois-based Fish fans. Yankees attendance boost The Marlins perennially have the lowest home attendance in the National League. That was the case in 2023 despite selling 100,001 tickets for their August 11-13 series against the New York Yankees. Next year, it's their turn to host the Bronx Bombers again. Conveniently, the series falls on a weekend during the summer. The August 1-3 dates do not overlap with any significant South Florida basketball, hockey and football events. Even if the Marlins prove to be completely non-competitive, expect an influx of Yankee fans to make it the best-attended series of the season. Scheduled start times for 2025 regular season games won't be confirmed until much later. For reference, in 2024, Marlins Monday-Thursday home night games have been at 6:40 p.m., Fridays have been at 7:10 p.m., Saturdays have typically been at 4:10 p.m. and Sundays have typically been at 1:40 p.m. Also, a reminder that due to humidity, the loanDepot park retractable roof stays closed with the exception of some March/April and September games.
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Miami Marlins right-handed pitcher Yohanfer Santana recently underwent Tommy John surgery, Fish On First has learned. A native of San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic, Santana signed an international free agent deal with the Marlins in 2023. His production in the Dominican Summer League over the last two seasons has been unremarkable on the surface: 31.1 IP, 7.76 ERA, 7.63 FIP, 1.95 WHIP in 13 G/10 GS. He was not included in our recent Fish On First Top 30 update. However, Eric Longenhagen explained on FanGraphs in June why the 18-year-old has immense upside: He’s built like an NBA small forward prospect at a broad-shouldered and skinny 6-foot-7, and he shows feel for three pitches. Santana’s low-90s fastball of 2023 had promising vertical ride, while his upper-70s curveball flashed the sort of depth that should play nicely with that kind of fastball, though it needed more power. At the end of the season, it felt very likely that Santana would develop immense arm strength as he matured. He has so much room for mass on his frame and his arm action is so clean and fluid — this seemed like the type of pitcher who could end up throwing 100 one day. All of that was projection, of course, based purely on visual assessment. In his first DSL start of 2024, Santana sat 93-98, debuted a slider/cutter in the 88-90 mph range and was working with a 91-94 mph changeup. Were he in the draft, he’d probably go in the mid-to-late first round and get a bonus approaching $3 million. This is a very exciting, uber-projectable 18-year-old who is in the midst of a velocity surge. The DSL start that Longenhagen references took place on June 4. Santana pitched again on June 11 and dominated (3.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 7 K). The following outing on June 18 was a rough one, though (2.0 IP, 3 H, 5 ER, 2 BB, 2 K). The Marlins placed Santana on the 60-day injured list on June 25, ending his 2024 season. Soon after, he traveled to the United States to undergo surgery. He's currently rehabbing in South Florida. Barring setbacks, it takes most pitchers 12-18 months from their TJ surgery date to return to game action. MLB prospects are understandably handled cautiously and usually fall on the high end of that range. Santana is not expected to appear in another minor league game until 2026. The FOF injury/rehab tracker will provide regular updates on Santana's progress.
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The Dominican right-hander may have been on the verge of a breakout season prior to this injury setback. Miami Marlins right-handed pitcher Yohanfer Santana recently underwent Tommy John surgery, Fish On First has learned. A native of San Pedro de Macoris, Dominican Republic, Santana signed an international free agent deal with the Marlins in 2023. His production in the Dominican Summer League over the last two seasons has been unremarkable on the surface: 31.1 IP, 7.76 ERA, 7.63 FIP, 1.95 WHIP in 13 G/10 GS. He was not included in our recent Fish On First Top 30 update. However, Eric Longenhagen explained on FanGraphs in June why the 18-year-old has immense upside: He’s built like an NBA small forward prospect at a broad-shouldered and skinny 6-foot-7, and he shows feel for three pitches. Santana’s low-90s fastball of 2023 had promising vertical ride, while his upper-70s curveball flashed the sort of depth that should play nicely with that kind of fastball, though it needed more power. At the end of the season, it felt very likely that Santana would develop immense arm strength as he matured. He has so much room for mass on his frame and his arm action is so clean and fluid — this seemed like the type of pitcher who could end up throwing 100 one day. All of that was projection, of course, based purely on visual assessment. In his first DSL start of 2024, Santana sat 93-98, debuted a slider/cutter in the 88-90 mph range and was working with a 91-94 mph changeup. Were he in the draft, he’d probably go in the mid-to-late first round and get a bonus approaching $3 million. This is a very exciting, uber-projectable 18-year-old who is in the midst of a velocity surge. The DSL start that Longenhagen references took place on June 4. Santana pitched again on June 11 and dominated (3.0 IP, 0 H, 0 R, 1 BB, 7 K). The following outing on June 18 was a rough one, though (2.0 IP, 3 H, 5 ER, 2 BB, 2 K). The Marlins placed Santana on the 60-day injured list on June 25, ending his 2024 season. Soon after, he traveled to the United States to undergo surgery. He's currently rehabbing in South Florida. Barring setbacks, it takes most pitchers 12-18 months from their TJ surgery date to return to game action. MLB prospects are understandably handled cautiously and usually fall on the high end of that range. Santana is not expected to appear in another minor league game until 2026. The FOF injury/rehab tracker will provide regular updates on Santana's progress. View full article
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Drafted by the Marlins in 2023 (Round 15, $150k) September 2025 update: Belgrave possesses perhaps the nastiest slider in the Marlins organization. He allowed only one extra-base hit to right-handed batters during his first full minor league season. The slender righty averages 94 mph on his fastball. Belgrave became the first member of the 2023 Marlins draft class to reach the Double-A level. He spent the entire 2025 season in Pensacola. FOF Top 30 history July 2024: #30 August 2024: honorable mention May 2025: honorable mention June 2025: #30 August 2025: #28 September 2025: #27
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Drafted by the Marlins in 2023 (Round 20, $75k signing bonus) October 2024 update: Ignoffo shattered expectations last season. He never struck out more than twice in a single game and drove balls to the gaps with authority. Ignoffo began his conversion to full-time catcher during the 2024 season. He's already a competent pitch framer and thrower. Injury history Hamstring strain (2025) Professional awards/accolades 2024 Low-A Jupiter MVP 2024 Florida State League All-Star 2026 Spring Breakout participant FOF Top 30 history July 2024: #27 August 2024: #28 October 2024: #29 December 2024: honorable mention
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Drafted by the Marlins in 2024 (Round 5, $897.5k signing bonus) April 2026 update: Shepardson's fastball velocity tops out at 98 mph and his slider is his best secondary offering. Right before the start of the 2026 regular season, Shepardson suffered a UCL injury that will require Tommy John surgery. He'll be sidelined until late in the 2027 season as a result. Professional awards/accolades 2026 Spring Breakout participant Injury history Tommy John surgery (2026) FOF Top 30 history July 2024: #22 August 2024: #27 October 2024: #28 December 2024: #28 January 2025: honorable mention May 2025: #27 June 2025: #26 August 2025: #29 September 2025: #28
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Signed by the Marlins via international free agency in 2022 June 2025 update: There have been exciting flashes from Dishmey, who leans heavily on his sinker. Sitting 92-96 mph, it's a versatile weapon with tons of armside run that can get him ahead of batters with called strikes, induce pop-ups and collect strikeouts. Dishmey's most-used secondary pitch is his curveball. There is also the potential for an above-average changeup. His slider is still very much a work in progress, currently lacking the late movement to get whiffs. Sinker i6slrw.mp4 Changeup mshmn6.mp4 Slider s2m1y6.mp4 Curveball ysg2b5.mp4 FOF Top 30 history July 2024: #18 August 2024: #24 October 2024: #25 December 2024: #26 January 2025: #29 March 2025: #28 August 2025: #21 September 2025: #20 October 2025: #15 January 2026: #18
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Drafted by the Marlins in 2024 (Comp Round B, $900k signing bonus) September 2025 update: May spent his college career at three different schools, putting it all together for Oregon State. He was the final member of Miami's 2024 draft class to make his professional debut, nearly a full year after being selected. He limited opponents to a .147 batting average during his abbreviated 2025 minor league season, but located barely 60% of his pitches for strikes. May throws with a bit of effort from a low three-quarters slot. His sinker sits 93-95 mph with a low-80s sweeper that has plus-plus potential thanks to its tremendous amount of horizontal movement. He's also developing a changeup and occasional cutter. There’s reliever risk with May thanks to his delivery and pitch usage, but if the Marlins can work their changeup development magic on him, he has the potential to start. He should begin next season with High-A Beloit. Sinker bmJiWXZfV0ZRVkV3dEdEUT09X0FsQlRBUVlBVndzQVhBQlFVZ0FIVWdSZUFBQlhVbElBVVFaVEFRRUJDRkZTQWdSVw==.mp4 Sweeper bmJiWXZfV0ZRVkV3dEdEUT09X1VBaFZVQUlFVlZRQURGcFdWd0FIQUE0Q0FBTlVXMVFBQlFBSEJ3cFVBUVZYQWdRSA==.mp4 Cutter bmJiWXZfV0ZRVkV3dEdEUT09X0RnRlZBbFpXWGdVQURsVUJWUUFIQUZjSEFGaFVVbEFBVXdNSEFWRlFBUXRjVVFjSA==.mp4 Changeup bmJiWXZfV0ZRVkV3dEdEUT09X1VBSUFCZ0lIVXdBQUNsQlhBZ0FIVTFWVEFBQURBbElBQlZGVUNBc0ZWRkFCQXdRRQ==.mp4 Injury history Tommy John surgery in 2020 Right elbow arthroscopic surgery in 2025 Professional awards/accolades 2026 Spring Breakout participant FOF Top 30 history July 2024: #15 August 2024: #22 October 2024: #22 December 2024: #23 January 2025: #26 March 2025: #27 May 2025: #29 June 2025: #28
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Drafted by the Marlins in 2024 (Round 1, $3.4M signing bonus) October 2025 update: The South Carolina Gatorade Player of the Year, Morlando was named Most Valuable Player at the 2023 High School All-American Game and was crowned the High School Home Run Derby champion. Morlando is powerfully built with easy plus raw power thanks to well above-average bat speed. He has continued to bulk up since being drafted, going from a listed weight of 198 pounds to 220 pounds. During his senior year, he used an extremely wide stance with no leg kick or stride that was detrimental to his game power. He has since gone back to using a toe tap. Despite being announced as a center fielder, Morlando is all but certain to move to the outfield corners as he progresses through the minor leagues. He mostly played left field at Low-A. Various injuries have unfortunately limited Morlando to only 59 professional games. Arizona Fall League participation will get him some much-needed reps. Injury history Lumbar stress reaction in 2024 Left elbow ulnar nerve transposition and left hamstring strain in 2025 FOF Top 30 history July 2024: #8 August 2024: #13 October 2024: #13 December 2024: #13 January 2025: #16 March 2025: #19 May 2025: #18 June 2025: #17 August 2025: #19 September 2025: #18 October 2025: #16 January 2026: #26

