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Cal Quantrill struggles in Marlins spring debut, but other arms impress
Kevin Barral posted an article in Marlins
JUPITER, FL—The Miami Marlins have gotten mixed results from their starting pitchers so far in spring training. Although Cal Quantrill began his spring on the wrong foot Thursday against the St. Louis Cardinals, the veteran right-hander wasn't concerned when discussing the performance postgame. Quantrill surrendered four runs off of two hits. He also walked two and struck out one. Out of the 28 pitches Quantrill threw, only 13 landed for strikes. "It won't go down as one of my best ones, but we'll get it all solved," he said. After falling behind 4-0 with Quantrill on the mound, the Marlins offense tied the game, but the Cardinals immediately retook the lead in the next inning and won by a final score of 8-4. Quantrill, 30, signed with the Marlins on a one-year, $3.5M deal. He lack control in this outing and repeatedly missed his spots to the arm side. "I don't see this being a long-term issue, just first time back out on the mound in a little while and I think that you'd like for that not to be part of part of the process, but I guess it is this time and it just gives us a little more to work on here in the next five days." In addition to that, Quantrill's velocity dipped. In 2024, his sinker averaged 94.0 miles per hour. On Thursday, his sinker averaged 92.3 mph and topped out at 93.5 mph. On the flip side, Valente Bellozo, who is fighting for the fifth rotation spot, made his second appearance of the spring, this time going two innings. He allowed one run off of three hits and struck out two. Bellozo's command was great, with 28 of his 37 pitches thrown landing for strikes. In his previous outing, Bellozo's fastball averaged 92.3 mph, topping out at 92.9 mph. This time, Bellozo averaged 90.9 mph, topping out at 92.2 mph. "Feel good. I think getting tired being in the bullpen throwing and throwing, then stop, throwing and throwing, then stop, but arm feels good and keep going during spring training." "Velo getting up just makes everything else play off of it," said Marlins manager Clayton McCullough. "Kind of go soft early, then he snuck a fastball up in the zone with two strikes. For him, just the different weapons and how he just can use them and somewhat slow a guy down, speed him up. He's a real pitcher." After noting in his last start that he added a sweeper to his pitch mix, Adam Mazur went two innings for the Marlins, throwing it four times as classified by Jab. He finished his outing allowing one run off of two hits and striking out three. "Very good," McCullough said. "I think he changed speeds well, used the fastball appropriately. He was striking with his breaking ball, very efficient couple of innings. Quality stuff from Mazur today." The main differences that Mazur noted between his slider and sweeper are the speed and horizontal movement. His sweeper is slower and moves more horizontally than his slider. On Thursday, Mazur's sweeper averaged 84.1 miles per hour with 13.0 inches of horizontal break. The slider on the other hand averaged 86.1 miles per hour with 2.1 inches of break. jj90h5.mp4 One position player that continues to have a strong spring is first baseman Matt Mervis. Through three games, he is 3-for-7 with one home run and three RBIs. On Thursday, Mervis went 1-for-3 with an RBI single. Mervis is on track to be the Marlins Opening Day first baseman come March 27. He will split time with Jonah Bride. "Been great," McCullough said. "I know he's really connected well with the hitting group here. He's been a performer in the minor leagues and there's a ton of hitting ability there. It's always nice when you come to a new organization and feel good about the work you're doing, then they also see some results play out in the game. It's probably a really good confidence booster for him." Notes - Xavier Edwards delivered his first RBI of the spring in the top of the second on a soft infield single. - Eric Wagaman returned to the Marlins lineup after having been under the weather the last couple of days. He had the Marlins' top exit velocity of 112.6 mph on his only base hit of the game. - Andrew Pintar, who made his second start of the spring, went 1-for-2 with an RBI single in the top of the second inning. - Agustín Ramírez, who made his first start of the spring as the designated hitter, went 0-for-2 with a walk. - Declan Cronin made his first appearance of the spring, but he was only able to record two outs. "Wasn't feeling great. Health is fine, just maybe dinner last night didn't cooperate with Declan," said McCullough postgame. - Seth Martinez was scheduled to make his organizational debut on Friday. Instead, he was designated for assignment shortly after Thursday's game to make room for waiver claim Brett de Geus. Recently DFA'd by the Pittsburgh Pirates, the 27-year-old de Geus made seven relief appearances for the Marlins last season and posted a 6.35 ERA. What's Next Sandy Alcantara will take the mound for two innings on Friday against the Atlanta Braves (1:10 pm first pitch). Grant Holmes will start for the Braves. Expect Marlins prospect Robby Snelling to follow Alcantara and toss two innings as well.- 8 comments
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Breaking down how Cal Quantrill, Valente Bellozo and Adam Mazur pitched on Thursday, plus more Marlins roster moves. JUPITER, FL—The Miami Marlins have gotten mixed results from their starting pitchers so far in spring training. Although Cal Quantrill began his spring on the wrong foot Thursday against the St. Louis Cardinals, the veteran right-hander wasn't concerned when discussing the performance postgame. Quantrill surrendered four runs off of two hits. He also walked two and struck out one. Out of the 28 pitches Quantrill threw, only 13 landed for strikes. "It won't go down as one of my best ones, but we'll get it all solved," he said. After falling behind 4-0 with Quantrill on the mound, the Marlins offense tied the game, but the Cardinals immediately retook the lead in the next inning and won by a final score of 8-4. Quantrill, 30, signed with the Marlins on a one-year, $3.5M deal. He lack control in this outing and repeatedly missed his spots to the arm side. "I don't see this being a long-term issue, just first time back out on the mound in a little while and I think that you'd like for that not to be part of part of the process, but I guess it is this time and it just gives us a little more to work on here in the next five days." In addition to that, Quantrill's velocity dipped. In 2024, his sinker averaged 94.0 miles per hour. On Thursday, his sinker averaged 92.3 mph and topped out at 93.5 mph. On the flip side, Valente Bellozo, who is fighting for the fifth rotation spot, made his second appearance of the spring, this time going two innings. He allowed one run off of three hits and struck out two. Bellozo's command was great, with 28 of his 37 pitches thrown landing for strikes. In his previous outing, Bellozo's fastball averaged 92.3 mph, topping out at 92.9 mph. This time, Bellozo averaged 90.9 mph, topping out at 92.2 mph. "Feel good. I think getting tired being in the bullpen throwing and throwing, then stop, throwing and throwing, then stop, but arm feels good and keep going during spring training." "Velo getting up just makes everything else play off of it," said Marlins manager Clayton McCullough. "Kind of go soft early, then he snuck a fastball up in the zone with two strikes. For him, just the different weapons and how he just can use them and somewhat slow a guy down, speed him up. He's a real pitcher." After noting in his last start that he added a sweeper to his pitch mix, Adam Mazur went two innings for the Marlins, throwing it four times as classified by Jab. He finished his outing allowing one run off of two hits and striking out three. "Very good," McCullough said. "I think he changed speeds well, used the fastball appropriately. He was striking with his breaking ball, very efficient couple of innings. Quality stuff from Mazur today." The main differences that Mazur noted between his slider and sweeper are the speed and horizontal movement. His sweeper is slower and moves more horizontally than his slider. On Thursday, Mazur's sweeper averaged 84.1 miles per hour with 13.0 inches of horizontal break. The slider on the other hand averaged 86.1 miles per hour with 2.1 inches of break. jj90h5.mp4 One position player that continues to have a strong spring is first baseman Matt Mervis. Through three games, he is 3-for-7 with one home run and three RBIs. On Thursday, Mervis went 1-for-3 with an RBI single. Mervis is on track to be the Marlins Opening Day first baseman come March 27. He will split time with Jonah Bride. "Been great," McCullough said. "I know he's really connected well with the hitting group here. He's been a performer in the minor leagues and there's a ton of hitting ability there. It's always nice when you come to a new organization and feel good about the work you're doing, then they also see some results play out in the game. It's probably a really good confidence booster for him." Notes - Xavier Edwards delivered his first RBI of the spring in the top of the second on a soft infield single. - Eric Wagaman returned to the Marlins lineup after having been under the weather the last couple of days. He had the Marlins' top exit velocity of 112.6 mph on his only base hit of the game. - Andrew Pintar, who made his second start of the spring, went 1-for-2 with an RBI single in the top of the second inning. - Agustín Ramírez, who made his first start of the spring as the designated hitter, went 0-for-2 with a walk. - Declan Cronin made his first appearance of the spring, but he was only able to record two outs. "Wasn't feeling great. Health is fine, just maybe dinner last night didn't cooperate with Declan," said McCullough postgame. - Seth Martinez was scheduled to make his organizational debut on Friday. Instead, he was designated for assignment shortly after Thursday's game to make room for waiver claim Brett de Geus. Recently DFA'd by the Pittsburgh Pirates, the 27-year-old de Geus made seven relief appearances for the Marlins last season and posted a 6.35 ERA. What's Next Sandy Alcantara will take the mound for two innings on Friday against the Atlanta Braves (1:10 pm first pitch). Grant Holmes will start for the Braves. Expect Marlins prospect Robby Snelling to follow Alcantara and toss two innings as well. View full article
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JUPITER, FL—The Miami Marlins and Washington Nationals were the last two MLB teams to hit home runs this spring. They made up for lost time on Tuesday by going deep three times apiece as the Nationals won by a final score of 14-7. Matt Mervis got the party started in the bottom of the second inning against veteran right-hander Trevor Williams. With an exit velocity of 108.6 mph, it was the hardest-hit ball by any Marlins player in a spring training game thus far. That's exactly what Miami had in mind when acquiring the first baseman in an offseason trade from the Chicago Cubs. Back in 2022, Mervis was one of the top home run hitters in the minor leagues. The Marlins are buying low on him coming off a down year where he was limited to 81 Triple-A games and nine MLB games due to a broken hamate bone. Splitting time at first base and DH, he should have an opportunity to get more consistent playing time to establish himself than he previously did with the Cubs. Meanwhile, the competition continues for spots in the Marlins' Opening Day outfield. In addition to returning players Dane Myers, Derek Hill, Griffin Conine and Kyle Stowers, non-roster invitees Albert Almora Jr. and Heriberto Hernández could also be in the mix depending on how camp plays out. "I'm not even thinking about that," said Hill. "I'm just going out and playing baseball. Whatever happens, happens and leave it up to the man upstairs." Hill, who played in 32 games this past season for the Marlins, hit his first home run of the spring off of reliever Colin Poche. His ability to play center field—he started there on Tuesday—and the fact that he's out of minor league options help his case. "He's got some real power and our hitting guys have been very excited with the work they've been doing with Derek," said manager Clayton McCullough. Edward Cabrera has historically done well in spring training games, entering Tuesday with a career 1.67 ERA in 27 Grapefruit League innings. It was a different story against Washington as he allowed three earned runs off of four hits and generated only two whiffs. Even so, McCullough was pleased that Cabrera landed 15 of his 21 pitches for strikes (71.4%). The right-hander's velocity was impressive as usual, topping out at 98.3 mph. "The focus here going out is just trying to get count leverage as much as you can," McCullough said. "He did that some today. Clipped one ball hard, but I think it was nice to see him be able to get some secondary pitches in the strike zone. He got his count up there, got his work in and it was good. All in all, from what he's been doing, good first step." Joe Mack has gotten off to a great start. Fish On First's number 11 prospect reached base safely in each of his first four spring training plate appearances before grounding out to end Tuesday's contest. He has yet to whiff at a single pitch. "Has had a great, great camp," said McCullough. "Joe Mack is a talented player. Big season last year. We think a lot of him. With the opportunities he's gotten, he's like looked very comfortable, he's looked calm. Swung the bat very well and he's fit in very well, too. He feels confident, like he feels comfortable in the clubhouse." Notes - Deyvison De Los Santos, who made his first start of the spring at first base, went 0-for-2 with a strikeout. - Andrew Pintar, who the Marlins acquired in the A.J. Puk trade, hit his first home run of the spring. He's a versatile outfielder who started the first spring game of the season and entered late into the game on Tuesday. - Reliever Josh Ekness made his spring debut and struck out two in his inning of work. - Andrew Nardi (lower back inflammation) went through a recovery day after beginning to play catch on Monday. He will continue his throwing progression. Up Next The Marlins will welcome the New York Mets on Wednesday for a 1:10 pm first pitch. Max Meyer will take the mound for Miami in what will be his first start of the spring. He is expected to go only one inning, just like all other Marlins starters have so far. Cal Quantrill will make his Marlins spring debut on Thursday against the St. Louis Cardinals.
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Here are the main takeaways from Tuesday's eventful Marlins spring training game. JUPITER, FL—The Miami Marlins and Washington Nationals were the last two MLB teams to hit home runs this spring. They made up for lost time on Tuesday by going deep three times apiece as the Nationals won by a final score of 14-7. Matt Mervis got the party started in the bottom of the second inning against veteran right-hander Trevor Williams. With an exit velocity of 108.6 mph, it was the hardest-hit ball by any Marlins player in a spring training game thus far. That's exactly what Miami had in mind when acquiring the first baseman in an offseason trade from the Chicago Cubs. Back in 2022, Mervis was one of the top home run hitters in the minor leagues. The Marlins are buying low on him coming off a down year where he was limited to 81 Triple-A games and nine MLB games due to a broken hamate bone. Splitting time at first base and DH, he should have an opportunity to get more consistent playing time to establish himself than he previously did with the Cubs. Meanwhile, the competition continues for spots in the Marlins' Opening Day outfield. In addition to returning players Dane Myers, Derek Hill, Griffin Conine and Kyle Stowers, non-roster invitees Albert Almora Jr. and Heriberto Hernández could also be in the mix depending on how camp plays out. "I'm not even thinking about that," said Hill. "I'm just going out and playing baseball. Whatever happens, happens and leave it up to the man upstairs." Hill, who played in 32 games this past season for the Marlins, hit his first home run of the spring off of reliever Colin Poche. His ability to play center field—he started there on Tuesday—and the fact that he's out of minor league options help his case. "He's got some real power and our hitting guys have been very excited with the work they've been doing with Derek," said manager Clayton McCullough. Edward Cabrera has historically done well in spring training games, entering Tuesday with a career 1.67 ERA in 27 Grapefruit League innings. It was a different story against Washington as he allowed three earned runs off of four hits and generated only two whiffs. Even so, McCullough was pleased that Cabrera landed 15 of his 21 pitches for strikes (71.4%). The right-hander's velocity was impressive as usual, topping out at 98.3 mph. "The focus here going out is just trying to get count leverage as much as you can," McCullough said. "He did that some today. Clipped one ball hard, but I think it was nice to see him be able to get some secondary pitches in the strike zone. He got his count up there, got his work in and it was good. All in all, from what he's been doing, good first step." Joe Mack has gotten off to a great start. Fish On First's number 11 prospect reached base safely in each of his first four spring training plate appearances before grounding out to end Tuesday's contest. He has yet to whiff at a single pitch. "Has had a great, great camp," said McCullough. "Joe Mack is a talented player. Big season last year. We think a lot of him. With the opportunities he's gotten, he's like looked very comfortable, he's looked calm. Swung the bat very well and he's fit in very well, too. He feels confident, like he feels comfortable in the clubhouse." Notes - Deyvison De Los Santos, who made his first start of the spring at first base, went 0-for-2 with a strikeout. - Andrew Pintar, who the Marlins acquired in the A.J. Puk trade, hit his first home run of the spring. He's a versatile outfielder who started the first spring game of the season and entered late into the game on Tuesday. - Reliever Josh Ekness made his spring debut and struck out two in his inning of work. - Andrew Nardi (lower back inflammation) went through a recovery day after beginning to play catch on Monday. He will continue his throwing progression. Up Next The Marlins will welcome the New York Mets on Wednesday for a 1:10 pm first pitch. Max Meyer will take the mound for Miami in what will be his first start of the spring. He is expected to go only one inning, just like all other Marlins starters have so far. Cal Quantrill will make his Marlins spring debut on Thursday against the St. Louis Cardinals. View full article
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JUPITER, FL—Before deciding to pursue a baseball career, Robby Snelling was highly regarded as a football player and received 23 offers to play in college. As the 21-year-old left-hander prepares for his third season as a pro in a different spot, he still brings a "bulldog mentality" to the mound with him and believes that contributes to his success. "Some people say sometimes you kind of have to learn to tone it back a little bit, kind of become more of a pitcher with a little more feel and finesse on the mound," Snelling told Fish On First. "But there definitely still are some times where that side can come out. I think the mental stuff that (football) taught me playing is helping me a lot more than what I can imagine if I never played." Snelling was the main piece the Marlins received in the trade that sent Tanner Scott and Bryan Hoeing to the San Diego Padres, coming to Miami with fellow prospects Adam Mazur, Graham Pauley and Jay Beshears. Prior to the Scott/Hoeing trade, they also traded Luis Arraez to the Padres in exchange for Dillon Head, Jakob Marsee, Nathan Martorella and Woo-Suk Go, all names who Snelling was familiar with. "Makes it a lot easier for sure. That being my first time being traded and hopefully my only time being traded, I can't imagine how tough it would have been if it was just me and getting thrusted into an organization that I had no idea about, but being able to kind of sift through it with guys that I had prior knowledge of and prior relationships with makes it an easier battle." One pitcher that Snelling compares himself to is New York Yankees lefty Carlos Rodón. "Physical guy on the mound and he's been a pretty successful pitcher," said Snelling. Rodón's fastball averaged 95.4 miles per hour in 2024, while Snelling saw his velocity drop into the low 90s, which may have made the Padres more willing to trade him. However, in his first spring training appearance against the New York Mets in Port St. Lucie on Sunday, Snelling's fastball averaged 95.7 mph and topped out at 96.7, a velo that he never reached last season. "It's nice to be able to come in off of a fresh offseason," Snelling told Fish On First. "It was the start of a game, so you got pretty amped up, but as this offseason has been going on, my arm's been feeling pretty good. Hopefully that's velocity that I can maintain and keep going on with throughout the season." This offseason, Snelling incorporated a slider into his arsenal. He threw it once on Sunday at 86 mph, splitting the difference between his fastball velo and curveball velo. "They said that it's moving really well, matches up with my arsenal very well, plays off the fastball great," said Fish On First's number six prospect. "As long as they keep telling me that, I'm gonna keep throwing it so it can definitely get better than what it's at right now, but for just working on it and this being my first spring training throwing it, I'm pretty happy with it." Snelling's appearance against the Mets only lasted seven pitches. He retired the side in order, getting Luis Torrens to line out, Jared Young to pop out and Donovan Walton to line out. Assuming that Snelling will pitch again five days later, his next outing would be on Friday in Jupiter against the Atlanta Braves.
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Entering his first spring training with the club, Snelling has added another pitch to his arsenal. JUPITER, FL—Before deciding to pursue a baseball career, Robby Snelling was highly regarded as a football player and received 23 offers to play in college. As the 21-year-old left-hander prepares for his third season as a pro in a different spot, he still brings a "bulldog mentality" to the mound with him and believes that contributes to his success. "Some people say sometimes you kind of have to learn to tone it back a little bit, kind of become more of a pitcher with a little more feel and finesse on the mound," Snelling told Fish On First. "But there definitely still are some times where that side can come out. I think the mental stuff that (football) taught me playing is helping me a lot more than what I can imagine if I never played." Snelling was the main piece the Marlins received in the trade that sent Tanner Scott and Bryan Hoeing to the San Diego Padres, coming to Miami with fellow prospects Adam Mazur, Graham Pauley and Jay Beshears. Prior to the Scott/Hoeing trade, they also traded Luis Arraez to the Padres in exchange for Dillon Head, Jakob Marsee, Nathan Martorella and Woo-Suk Go, all names who Snelling was familiar with. "Makes it a lot easier for sure. That being my first time being traded and hopefully my only time being traded, I can't imagine how tough it would have been if it was just me and getting thrusted into an organization that I had no idea about, but being able to kind of sift through it with guys that I had prior knowledge of and prior relationships with makes it an easier battle." One pitcher that Snelling compares himself to is New York Yankees lefty Carlos Rodón. "Physical guy on the mound and he's been a pretty successful pitcher," said Snelling. Rodón's fastball averaged 95.4 miles per hour in 2024, while Snelling saw his velocity drop into the low 90s, which may have made the Padres more willing to trade him. However, in his first spring training appearance against the New York Mets in Port St. Lucie on Sunday, Snelling's fastball averaged 95.7 mph and topped out at 96.7, a velo that he never reached last season. "It's nice to be able to come in off of a fresh offseason," Snelling told Fish On First. "It was the start of a game, so you got pretty amped up, but as this offseason has been going on, my arm's been feeling pretty good. Hopefully that's velocity that I can maintain and keep going on with throughout the season." This offseason, Snelling incorporated a slider into his arsenal. He threw it once on Sunday at 86 mph, splitting the difference between his fastball velo and curveball velo. "They said that it's moving really well, matches up with my arsenal very well, plays off the fastball great," said Fish On First's number six prospect. "As long as they keep telling me that, I'm gonna keep throwing it so it can definitely get better than what it's at right now, but for just working on it and this being my first spring training throwing it, I'm pretty happy with it." Snelling's appearance against the Mets only lasted seven pitches. He retired the side in order, getting Luis Torrens to line out, Jared Young to pop out and Donovan Walton to line out. Assuming that Snelling will pitch again five days later, his next outing would be on Friday in Jupiter against the Atlanta Braves. View full article
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Bellozo and Mazur shine as prospects lead comeback in spring opener
Kevin Barral posted an article in Marlins
JUPITER, FL—Marlins baseball returned on Saturday afternoon under first-year manager Clayton McCullough. Trailing 6-0 through six innings, young prospects drove in seven runs against the Cardinals bullpen to win by a final score of 7-6, marking back-to-back years where Miami has won its Grapefruit League opener. Making the start for the Marlins was right-handed pitcher Valente Bellozo. His outing only lasted one inning, not allowing a hit and striking out two. After his fastball only averaged 89.2 miles per hour in 2024, his average fastball velocity ticked up to 92.3 miles per hour on Saturday. He topped out at 92.9 mph. "Last year when the season finished, they told me to get stronger so I can maintain the velo," Bellozo said. "That was my goal for the offseason. I think all my breaking pitches were good, I threw strikes...The only thing was the velocity. I think velocity was good today." Catcher Nick Fortes observed that Bellozo's fastball was "a little bit sharper, which showed that he was missing some barrels. Today, guys were swinging underneath, which is a good indication that he's spinning in the ball pretty well." "Was in and around the zone with everything," said Marlins manager Clayton McCullough following the game. "Easy to mix and match and be able to alter speeds and get us going on the right foot." Following Bellozo was 23-year old Adam Mazur, who was one of four players acquired in the Tanner Scott and Bryan Hoeing trade. Mazur's biggest focus this offseason was fine-tuning his changeup and curveball. "Same [curveball] grip from last year," Mazur said. "Just getting more comfortable with it because really started using the curveball more last year, so just kind of getting a full offseason with it under my belt has been a lot of fun and has really paid off." Mazur also added a sweeper this week and threw it once on Saturday. "It's kind of funky, like the release height is higher than usual," Mazur said. "It's getting a little bit more depth, which is kind of nice because it's kind of a two-plane pitch and it's not just straight across or straight down." dnZCRzNfVlZjPV9Wd05SQVFZRFZnUUFYVnNGWHdBQUFGSlNBQU5VVlFNQUExeFVBZ0JUVlZaU0ExRUg=.mp4 Mazur debuted in the majors with the Padres in 2024, making eight starts, but struggled posting a 7.49 ERA through 33 ⅔ innings pitched. For the Minnesota native, having that experience provides some comfort. "I think to myself more and how I need to go out there and get out so it's definitely taking what I learned last year and apply it to this year and just try to get better every single day." Fish On First's number ten prospect finished the day going one inning, not allowing a hit or run. He didn't strike out or walk anyone. "Fell behind in some counts," said McCullough. "He was able to come back and pitch a clean inning. First one out of the way there, so it was good for him to have a clean 1-2-3 and I know he'll go back and say prioritizing strike one and staying ahead of people." The following pitchers also entered in relief: Anthony Veneziano, Lake Bachar, Connor Gillispie, Luarbert Arias, Zach McCambley, Christian Roa, John Rooney and Matt Pushard. Prospects were responsible for all seven Marlins runs. Brought over from minor league camp, outfielder Colby Shade drove in the first run of the spring in the bottom of the seventh inning. Non-roster invitee Heriberto Hernández hit a bases-clearing RBI double to make it a 6-4 game. Third baseman Jacob Berry grounded out to short, but still managed to drive in a run to make it a one-run game. In the bottom of the eighth inning, minor league Rule 5 selection Jack Winkler hit an RBI double to drive in the game-tying run. Fish On First number 11 prospect Joe Mack delivered the winning run. "It's credit to what's been going on here the last year-plus," said McCullough. "Acquiring and infusing talent into our system and they come over into a major league spring training game for the first time for a lot of them and just go out there and play. They looked comfortable, they looked like they were at ease and just went out there and played." The Marlins will drive about 40 minutes north on Sunday to take on the New York Mets in Port St. Lucie at 1:10 pm. Sandy Alcantara will take the mound for Miami. It will mark the first time he will pitch in an official game since September 2023. Expect a completely different group of position players from the ones who started the opener. Sunday's game will be televised on SNY.- 2 comments
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Full media availability with Miami Marlins manager Clayton McCullough following his team's 2025 Grapefruit League opener.
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Full media availability with Miami Marlins manager Clayton McCullough following his team's 2025 Grapefruit League opener. View full video
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The Miami Marlins opened the spring with a 7-6 win over the St. Louis Cardinals. JUPITER, FL—Marlins baseball returned on Saturday afternoon under first-year manager Clayton McCullough. Trailing 6-0 through six innings, young prospects drove in seven runs against the Cardinals bullpen to win by a final score of 7-6, marking back-to-back years where Miami has won its Grapefruit League opener. Making the start for the Marlins was right-handed pitcher Valente Bellozo. His outing only lasted one inning, not allowing a hit and striking out two. After his fastball only averaged 89.2 miles per hour in 2024, his average fastball velocity ticked up to 92.3 miles per hour on Saturday. He topped out at 92.9 mph. "Last year when the season finished, they told me to get stronger so I can maintain the velo," Bellozo said. "That was my goal for the offseason. I think all my breaking pitches were good, I threw strikes...The only thing was the velocity. I think velocity was good today." Catcher Nick Fortes observed that Bellozo's fastball was "a little bit sharper, which showed that he was missing some barrels. Today, guys were swinging underneath, which is a good indication that he's spinning in the ball pretty well." "Was in and around the zone with everything," said Marlins manager Clayton McCullough following the game. "Easy to mix and match and be able to alter speeds and get us going on the right foot." Following Bellozo was 23-year old Adam Mazur, who was one of four players acquired in the Tanner Scott and Bryan Hoeing trade. Mazur's biggest focus this offseason was fine-tuning his changeup and curveball. "Same [curveball] grip from last year," Mazur said. "Just getting more comfortable with it because really started using the curveball more last year, so just kind of getting a full offseason with it under my belt has been a lot of fun and has really paid off." Mazur also added a sweeper this week and threw it once on Saturday. "It's kind of funky, like the release height is higher than usual," Mazur said. "It's getting a little bit more depth, which is kind of nice because it's kind of a two-plane pitch and it's not just straight across or straight down." dnZCRzNfVlZjPV9Wd05SQVFZRFZnUUFYVnNGWHdBQUFGSlNBQU5VVlFNQUExeFVBZ0JUVlZaU0ExRUg=.mp4 Mazur debuted in the majors with the Padres in 2024, making eight starts, but struggled posting a 7.49 ERA through 33 ⅔ innings pitched. For the Minnesota native, having that experience provides some comfort. "I think to myself more and how I need to go out there and get out so it's definitely taking what I learned last year and apply it to this year and just try to get better every single day." Fish On First's number ten prospect finished the day going one inning, not allowing a hit or run. He didn't strike out or walk anyone. "Fell behind in some counts," said McCullough. "He was able to come back and pitch a clean inning. First one out of the way there, so it was good for him to have a clean 1-2-3 and I know he'll go back and say prioritizing strike one and staying ahead of people." The following pitchers also entered in relief: Anthony Veneziano, Lake Bachar, Connor Gillispie, Luarbert Arias, Zach McCambley, Christian Roa, John Rooney and Matt Pushard. Prospects were responsible for all seven Marlins runs. Brought over from minor league camp, outfielder Colby Shade drove in the first run of the spring in the bottom of the seventh inning. Non-roster invitee Heriberto Hernández hit a bases-clearing RBI double to make it a 6-4 game. Third baseman Jacob Berry grounded out to short, but still managed to drive in a run to make it a one-run game. In the bottom of the eighth inning, minor league Rule 5 selection Jack Winkler hit an RBI double to drive in the game-tying run. Fish On First number 11 prospect Joe Mack delivered the winning run. "It's credit to what's been going on here the last year-plus," said McCullough. "Acquiring and infusing talent into our system and they come over into a major league spring training game for the first time for a lot of them and just go out there and play. They looked comfortable, they looked like they were at ease and just went out there and played." The Marlins will drive about 40 minutes north on Sunday to take on the New York Mets in Port St. Lucie at 1:10 pm. Sandy Alcantara will take the mound for Miami. It will mark the first time he will pitch in an official game since September 2023. Expect a completely different group of position players from the ones who started the opener. Sunday's game will be televised on SNY. View full article
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Sandy Alcantara is 'here right now,' but future with Marlins uncertain
Kevin Barral posted an article in Marlins
JUPITER, FL—Monday marked the first full-squad workout of Miami Marlins spring training. As they have done in previous years, that meant Marlins president of baseball operations Peter Bendix and chairman & principal owner Bruce Sherman spoke to the media about the upcoming season. The status of Opening Day starter Sandy Alcantara was the final topic discussed. Alcantara, 29, is entering the fourth year of a five-year, $56M deal. He is currently making $17.3M and will make that same amount in 2026. The contract also includes a $21M club option for 2027. If healthy, it's a very team-friendly deal for an ace, but with the Marlins in the middle of a rebuild and having recently traded many other veterans, rumors have already begun to swirl that their longest-tenured player could be gone soon. "We can't really comment on what might happen in the future," said Bendix. "Sandy is here right now. Sandy looks as good as I think he's ever looked in his career. He was sitting 98 miles an hour in a side session out on the field looking like he was just playing catch." "That's unusual," added Bendix, "but really the even more unusual thing is the degree to which Sandy is that leader. He is the leader that everyone else looks to and he is helping set the tone." Sherman was then asked about whether he would to make a commitment not to trade Alcantara. "Sandy is on a contract," Sherman said. "I was the one who extended him. He's one of the better deals that we did...I'm gonna rely on the front office for all those decisions, but Sandy is our franchise right now, we get it." During the presser, both Bendix and Sherman made sure to share their excitement about potentially having Alcantara and Paul Skenes of the Pittsburgh Pirates face off on Opening Day (the Pirates have not formally announced Skenes as their starter yet). However, fans are left wondering how many more starts they'll get to see Alcantara make in a Marlins uniform after that.- 4 comments
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During Monday's joint press conference, Peter Bendix and Bruce Sherman were non-committal about the long-term status of their ace. JUPITER, FL—Monday marked the first full-squad workout of Miami Marlins spring training. As they have done in previous years, that meant Marlins president of baseball operations Peter Bendix and chairman & principal owner Bruce Sherman spoke to the media about the upcoming season. The status of Opening Day starter Sandy Alcantara was the final topic discussed. Alcantara, 29, is entering the fourth year of a five-year, $56M deal. He is currently making $17.3M and will make that same amount in 2026. The contract also includes a $21M club option for 2027. If healthy, it's a very team-friendly deal for an ace, but with the Marlins in the middle of a rebuild and having recently traded many other veterans, rumors have already begun to swirl that their longest-tenured player could be gone soon. "We can't really comment on what might happen in the future," said Bendix. "Sandy is here right now. Sandy looks as good as I think he's ever looked in his career. He was sitting 98 miles an hour in a side session out on the field looking like he was just playing catch." "That's unusual," added Bendix, "but really the even more unusual thing is the degree to which Sandy is that leader. He is the leader that everyone else looks to and he is helping set the tone." Sherman was then asked about whether he would to make a commitment not to trade Alcantara. "Sandy is on a contract," Sherman said. "I was the one who extended him. He's one of the better deals that we did...I'm gonna rely on the front office for all those decisions, but Sandy is our franchise right now, we get it." During the presser, both Bendix and Sherman made sure to share their excitement about potentially having Alcantara and Paul Skenes of the Pittsburgh Pirates face off on Opening Day (the Pirates have not formally announced Skenes as their starter yet). However, fans are left wondering how many more starts they'll get to see Alcantara make in a Marlins uniform after that. View full article
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Former Duke teammates Conine, Mervis reunite with the Marlins
Kevin Barral posted an article in Marlins
JUPITER, FL—Marlins first baseman Matt Mervis is the newest member of the Miami Blue Devils. Acquired from the Chicago Cubs this past offseason in exchange for utility man Vidal Bruján, Mervis is an alum of Duke University, just like outfielder Griffin Conine and infielder Graham Pauley. Deeper down in the Marlins organization, prospects Adam Laskey and Jay Beshears played their college ball at Duke as well. "Having some of that familiarity when you are going into a new organization just helps ease some of the angst when you're making that transition," said Marlins manager Clayton McCullough. "We do have a lot of players, whether they have a college experience together or they've seen each other playing in the minor leagues or have a chance to compete against each other at the major league level." "It's been a lot of fun so far in spring training," said Mervis. "We got a rental house, Griffin and I did with the third Duke guy, Adam Laskey, who was actually my college roommate. Jay Beshears was in the trade from San Diego, came over with Pauley, so there's five of us now. It'll be good to get a couple Duke dinners down here and just hang out." Mervis, Conine and Laskey were teammates throughout the 2017 and 2018 seasons. "We won a lot," Mervis said. In 2017, the Blue Devils posted a 30-28 record, falling to Florida State in the ACC tournament championship game. Conine received Second-Team All-ACC honors while Mervis was named to the ACC Academic Honor Roll. The 2018 season would be much better as Duke went 45-18, reaching the NCAA Super Regional. "I think it came out of nowhere," Conine said about his reaction to the Mervis trade. "No one was expecting that. (Mervis) had joked about it earlier, of just wanting that to be a possibility, but didn't think it would actually come true." Conine joined the Marlins back in 2020 when there were COVID restrictions, no minor league season and no other Duke alumni. "I was traded here and didn't have that luxury," said Conine. "I was like the first dude here. It's tough getting traded in general, whole new teammates, whole new everything. I'm happy to be able to kind of make the transition easier. Getting to know people he's already known. It's definitely made it easier for him to have so many Duke guys." For Mervis, 26, it's been a struggle at the highest level of baseball. In 2023, he debuted for the Cubs after posting a 132 wRC+ in Triple-A, but in 27 games, he slashed .167/.242/.289/.531 with three home runs and 11 RBI. In 2024, Mervis only played in nine games for the Cubs and even his AAA numbers suffered, though that was partly due to a broken hand. Mervis and Conine find themselves competing for Opening Day roster spots this spring. There is potentially room for both to make it as power threats against right-handed pitching, with Mervis getting most of his playing time at first base and Conine in the outfield corners. The Marlins' first full-squad workout will be on Monday. -
It's tough when a traded player joins a clubhouse of strangers. Marlins first baseman Matt Mervis is grateful to be surrounded by familiar faces from his college days. JUPITER, FL—Marlins first baseman Matt Mervis is the newest member of the Miami Blue Devils. Acquired from the Chicago Cubs this past offseason in exchange for utility man Vidal Bruján, Mervis is an alum of Duke University, just like outfielder Griffin Conine and infielder Graham Pauley. Deeper down in the Marlins organization, prospects Adam Laskey and Jay Beshears played their college ball at Duke as well. "Having some of that familiarity when you are going into a new organization just helps ease some of the angst when you're making that transition," said Marlins manager Clayton McCullough. "We do have a lot of players, whether they have a college experience together or they've seen each other playing in the minor leagues or have a chance to compete against each other at the major league level." "It's been a lot of fun so far in spring training," said Mervis. "We got a rental house, Griffin and I did with the third Duke guy, Adam Laskey, who was actually my college roommate. Jay Beshears was in the trade from San Diego, came over with Pauley, so there's five of us now. It'll be good to get a couple Duke dinners down here and just hang out." Mervis, Conine and Laskey were teammates throughout the 2017 and 2018 seasons. "We won a lot," Mervis said. In 2017, the Blue Devils posted a 30-28 record, falling to Florida State in the ACC tournament championship game. Conine received Second-Team All-ACC honors while Mervis was named to the ACC Academic Honor Roll. The 2018 season would be much better as Duke went 45-18, reaching the NCAA Super Regional. "I think it came out of nowhere," Conine said about his reaction to the Mervis trade. "No one was expecting that. (Mervis) had joked about it earlier, of just wanting that to be a possibility, but didn't think it would actually come true." Conine joined the Marlins back in 2020 when there were COVID restrictions, no minor league season and no other Duke alumni. "I was traded here and didn't have that luxury," said Conine. "I was like the first dude here. It's tough getting traded in general, whole new teammates, whole new everything. I'm happy to be able to kind of make the transition easier. Getting to know people he's already known. It's definitely made it easier for him to have so many Duke guys." For Mervis, 26, it's been a struggle at the highest level of baseball. In 2023, he debuted for the Cubs after posting a 132 wRC+ in Triple-A, but in 27 games, he slashed .167/.242/.289/.531 with three home runs and 11 RBI. In 2024, Mervis only played in nine games for the Cubs and even his AAA numbers suffered, though that was partly due to a broken hand. Mervis and Conine find themselves competing for Opening Day roster spots this spring. There is potentially room for both to make it as power threats against right-handed pitching, with Mervis getting most of his playing time at first base and Conine in the outfield corners. The Marlins' first full-squad workout will be on Monday. View full article
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As he prepares to pack up his life and drive down to South Florida, new Miami Marlins radio play-by-play announcer Jack McMullen sits down with Kevin Barral and Isaac Azout to discuss his new position and all of the experiences that led up to it. "Lot of people say, 'a dream come true' about things that they really wanted, but may not have been an actual dream," McMullen says. "For this dream opportunity to come true with the Miami Marlins at this stage is actually a dream come true, so I couldn't be more excited." Find Fish Unfiltered 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 The Offishial Show, Swimming Upstream, Big Fish Small Pod and more. McMullen will have a wide variety of broadcast partners in 2025, including Rod Allen, Craig Minervini, Jeff Nelson, AJ Ramos, Kelly Saco and Gaby Sanchez. As announced by the Marlins on Thursday, FOX Sports 940 AM Miami will broadcast audio from 15 of their 30 spring training games, while an additional 12 games, including Spring Breakout, can be found exclusively on the MLB app. McMullen tells Fish On First that he expects to arrive in Jupiter on Monday. Follow Jack (@jack_mcmullen11), Kevin (@kevin_barral), Isaac (@IsaacAzout) and Fish On First (@FishOnFirst) on Twitter. Join the Marlins Discord server! Complete Miami Marlins coverage here at FishOnFirst.com.

