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During his five years with the Miami Marlins, shortstop Adeiny Hechavarría homered just 13 times. There were some big ones along the way, however, including on this day 10 years ago. On June 7, 2015, it came against the Colorado Rockies in the 10th inning at Coors Field. His solo shot lifted the Marlins to a 3-2 victory in the rubber game of a three-game set. Prior to Hechavarría’s heroics, both Miami runs had come in the first inning. Marcell Ozuna laced a two-run single off starter Kyle Kendrick to get the scoring started. Kendrick would allow just the two runs on five hits and a walk in seven innings for Colorado. Miami starter José Ureña yielded a run on three hits and two walks in six innings. Colorado got on the board in the fourth with a sacrifice fly from Nolan Arenado. The Rockies drew even in the bottom of the seventh on Carlos González’s solo home run off Carter Capps. Hechavarría stepped to the plate with two outs and the bases empty in the top of the 10th inning to face Boone Logan. Logan had retired Christian Yelich and J.T. Realmuto, but had fallen behind both batters, hinting that we was not especially sharp. Against Hech, Logan fell behind in the count 2-1 before trying to come inside with the breaking ball. Logan’s pitch hung and got too much of the plate. Hechavarría knew exactly what to do with it as he lifted the pitch out of the deepest part of the ballpark to center field. That would be all that Miami would need. Marlins’ closer AJ Ramos retired the Rockies in order in the bottom of the 10th to earn the save. Sam Dyson worked a scoreless ninth to earn the win. Dee Strange-Gordon was 3-for-4 with a run scored, while star shortstop Troy Tulowitzki had two of the five hits for Colorado in the loss. In 2015, the Marlins went 5-2 in seven games against the Rockies. Among those seven contests, there was only a single one-run game. That had plenty of drama and occurred on this day a decade ago.
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Over the years, the Florida/Miami Marlins have had some forgettable years. Bad seasons tend to lead to high draft picks, but only once, however, have the Marlins had the top overall pick. That pick was made on this day 25 years ago. The Florida Marlins selected a power-hitting left-handed first baseman in California native Adrián González on June 5, 2000. The first round featured a fair number of recognizable names to baseball fans, including Rocco Baldelli, Chase Utley and Adam Wainwright. Other notables included future Marlins like Justin Wayne and Joe Borchard. González would go on to have a stellar career, batting .287 with 317 home runs. A five-time All-Star and four-time Gold Glove winner, González, however, never played in the majors for the Marlins. While the organization has been chided for its moves over the years, it can be debated whether the return for González was adequate. The Marlins were in the middle of a pennant race in 2003 when they sent the former No. 1 overall pick to the Texas Rangers along with prospect Will Smith (not the big-league pitcher or catcher) for closer Ugueth Urbina. Urbina joined Braden Looper at the back end of the bullpen and appeared in just 33 regular season games for the Marlins -- all in 2003. The native of the Venezuela, however, was nails, posting a 3-0 record and six saves to go with a 1.41 ERA. Urbina spent 11 seasons in Major League Baseball with six teams and earned trips to the All-Star Game with the Montreal Expos in 1998 and Boston Red Sox in 2002. His only trip to the postseason, however, came with Florida and culminated in a world championship. Urbina appeared in 10 of the Marlins' 16 games that postseason. He posted a 1-0 record, 3.46 ERA and was 4-for-6 in save opportunities. Urbina picked up the saves to close out both the San Francisco Giants and Chicago Cubs in the National League Division and Championship Series, respectively, before picking up two saves in the World Series as Florida took down the New York Yankees in six games. As for González, he would spend time with Texas, the San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets. He led the league in walks in 2009 for the Padres, hits for Boston in 2011 and RBIs for the Dodgers in 2014. Although he never played for the Marlins at the Major League level, González continues to hold the distinction of being the club's only No. 1 overall pick. He was selected on this day a quarter-century ago. View full article
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Over the years, the Florida/Miami Marlins have had some forgettable years. Bad seasons tend to lead to high draft picks, but only once, however, have the Marlins had the top overall pick. That pick was made on this day 25 years ago. The Florida Marlins selected a power-hitting left-handed first baseman in California native Adrián González on June 5, 2000. The first round featured a fair number of recognizable names to baseball fans, including Rocco Baldelli, Chase Utley and Adam Wainwright. Other notables included future Marlins like Justin Wayne and Joe Borchard. González would go on to have a stellar career, batting .287 with 317 home runs. A five-time All-Star and four-time Gold Glove winner, González, however, never played in the majors for the Marlins. While the organization has been chided for its moves over the years, it can be debated whether the return for González was adequate. The Marlins were in the middle of a pennant race in 2003 when they sent the former No. 1 overall pick to the Texas Rangers along with prospect Will Smith (not the big-league pitcher or catcher) for closer Ugueth Urbina. Urbina joined Braden Looper at the back end of the bullpen and appeared in just 33 regular season games for the Marlins -- all in 2003. The native of the Venezuela, however, was nails, posting a 3-0 record and six saves to go with a 1.41 ERA. Urbina spent 11 seasons in Major League Baseball with six teams and earned trips to the All-Star Game with the Montreal Expos in 1998 and Boston Red Sox in 2002. His only trip to the postseason, however, came with Florida and culminated in a world championship. Urbina appeared in 10 of the Marlins' 16 games that postseason. He posted a 1-0 record, 3.46 ERA and was 4-for-6 in save opportunities. Urbina picked up the saves to close out both the San Francisco Giants and Chicago Cubs in the National League Division and Championship Series, respectively, before picking up two saves in the World Series as Florida took down the New York Yankees in six games. As for González, he would spend time with Texas, the San Diego Padres, Boston Red Sox, Los Angeles Dodgers and New York Mets. He led the league in walks in 2009 for the Padres, hits for Boston in 2011 and RBIs for the Dodgers in 2014. Although he never played for the Marlins at the Major League level, González continues to hold the distinction of being the club's only No. 1 overall pick. He was selected on this day a quarter-century ago.
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Ah, the dramatic home run. Like most teams, the Florida/Miami Marlins have seen plenty of those over the years. On this day 25 years ago, the Marlins used not one but two of them to rally past the Toronto Blue Jays, 2-1. The blasts by Mike Lowell and Kevin Millar even came on consecutive pitches. At Pro Player Stadium on June 3, 2000, the Marlins were unable to figure out Toronto starter Chris Carpenter. Luis Castillo was 3-for-4 with a double, but as a team, they had been kept off the scoreboard and had managed just five hits through seven innings. Florida loaded the bases with no one out in the fifth, only to squander that golden opportunity. After starting pitcher Ryan Dempster grounded into a fielder’s choice at the plate, Castillo followed suit. Mark Kotsay ultimately grounded out to end the threat. Until the back-to-back jacks, the only run of the game had come in the second inning on a solo homer by José Cruz Jr. Cruz finished with two of the five Toronto hits in the loss. Like Carpenter, Dempster was outstanding through seven. Dempster yielded just the run on four hits and a walk while striking out five. After 121 pitches, Carpenter gave way to usually dependable closer Billy Koch in the bottom of the eighth. Facing the heart of the order, things started well for Koch, who got Cliff Floyd to fly out on the first pitch before fanning Preston Wilson looking. With two outs, Lowell stepped to the plate. A disciplined hitter, Lowell managed to work the count in his favor at 3-1. Then he got a Koch fastball and knew exactly what to do with it. Lowell evened the game and broke up the shutout with a blast over the left-field wall. It was a tie game, but not for long. On the very next pitch, Millar also turned on a Koch fastball. It landed not far from Lowell’s blast as Millar touched them all to give Florida a 2-1 lead. In the top of the ninth, Marlins’ closer Antonio Alfonseca was able to do what Koch couldn’t. After allowing a two-out single to catcher Darrin Fletcher, Alfonseca struck Cruz out swinging to end the contest. After winning 11-10 the night before, the victory clinched the three-game series for the Marlins. They were unable to complete the sweep the next day as the Blue Jays won 7-2 in the finale. That would be Toronto’s last victory at Pro Player Stadium. It followed a heartbreaking loss that happened on this day a quarter-century ago. View full article
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Ah, the dramatic home run. Like most teams, the Florida/Miami Marlins have seen plenty of those over the years. On this day 25 years ago, the Marlins used not one but two of them to rally past the Toronto Blue Jays, 2-1. The blasts by Mike Lowell and Kevin Millar even came on consecutive pitches. At Pro Player Stadium on June 3, 2000, the Marlins were unable to figure out Toronto starter Chris Carpenter. Luis Castillo was 3-for-4 with a double, but as a team, they had been kept off the scoreboard and had managed just five hits through seven innings. Florida loaded the bases with no one out in the fifth, only to squander that golden opportunity. After starting pitcher Ryan Dempster grounded into a fielder’s choice at the plate, Castillo followed suit. Mark Kotsay ultimately grounded out to end the threat. Until the back-to-back jacks, the only run of the game had come in the second inning on a solo homer by José Cruz Jr. Cruz finished with two of the five Toronto hits in the loss. Like Carpenter, Dempster was outstanding through seven. Dempster yielded just the run on four hits and a walk while striking out five. After 121 pitches, Carpenter gave way to usually dependable closer Billy Koch in the bottom of the eighth. Facing the heart of the order, things started well for Koch, who got Cliff Floyd to fly out on the first pitch before fanning Preston Wilson looking. With two outs, Lowell stepped to the plate. A disciplined hitter, Lowell managed to work the count in his favor at 3-1. Then he got a Koch fastball and knew exactly what to do with it. Lowell evened the game and broke up the shutout with a blast over the left-field wall. It was a tie game, but not for long. On the very next pitch, Millar also turned on a Koch fastball. It landed not far from Lowell’s blast as Millar touched them all to give Florida a 2-1 lead. In the top of the ninth, Marlins’ closer Antonio Alfonseca was able to do what Koch couldn’t. After allowing a two-out single to catcher Darrin Fletcher, Alfonseca struck Cruz out swinging to end the contest. After winning 11-10 the night before, the victory clinched the three-game series for the Marlins. They were unable to complete the sweep the next day as the Blue Jays won 7-2 in the finale. That would be Toronto’s last victory at Pro Player Stadium. It followed a heartbreaking loss that happened on this day a quarter-century ago.
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Cameron Maybin was in the middle of one of the greatest rallies in Marlins history. There’s nothing quite like holiday baseball during a three-day weekend. On Memorial Day 15 years ago, the Florida Marlins used a big sixth inning to erase an early deficit and send the South Florida fans home happy. At 25-26, the Marlins were looking to get back to .500 as they opened a four-game series at Sun Life Stadium against the Milwaukee Brewers on May 31, 2010. Through five innings, Florida had been shut out and managed just two hits. When all was said and done, the Marlins were 13-5 winners. In the top of the sixth, Milwaukee had added an insurance run to go up 4-0. To that point, Brewers starting pitcher Chris Narveson had blown away the Florida bats. In the bottom of the sixth, the Marlins broke up the shutout on an RBI ground out by Jorge Cantú, but with two outs, Narveson still seemed in control. Before the inning was over, Milwaukee was down 7-4. After a walk to Dan Uggla brought the tying run to the plate, Cody Ross emptied the bases with a three-run home run to knot the game at four. Narveson proceeded to allow a double to catcher Ronny Paulino and just like that, his day was done. The Marlins’ sixth, however, was just getting started. After reliever Carlos Villanueva walked Cameron Maybin, pinch hitter Mike Lamb’s RBI single to center gave Florida its first lead, 5-4. That brought up Chris Coghlan. The 2009 NL Rookie of the Year, Coghlan had started the inning by singling and scoring Florida’s first run. His second hit of the inning was a two-run triple. Villanueva was able to strike out Gaby Sánchez to prevent any further damage, but in the bottom of the seventh, the Marlins put together another two-out rally. Following a two-out walk to Uggla, Ross again came through with an RBI double before coming home on Paulino’s second double in as many innings. The big blow of the inning and the highlight of the day then came from Cameron Maybin, whose liner got past center fielder Carlos Gómez and to the wall. Maybin came all the way home on a two-run inside-the-park home run. With the lead now 11-4, Florida wasn’t done. The Marlins added a pair of runs in the bottom of the eighth on a two-run single by Cantú. When the day was over, every position player for Florida had at least one hit. Coghlan and Paulino each tallied three hits for the Marlins. Ross recorded two to go with four RBIs. Cantú plated three runs in the win. Coghlan, Uggla, Paulino, Ross and Maybin each scored twice. For Milwaukee, Corey Hart homered and plated two runs. Rickie Weeks had two hits and two RBIs for the Brewers in the loss. Narveson ultimately took the loss for the Brewers, but it was the bullpen that allowed seven runs in just 2 ⅓ innings of relief. Jorge Sosa, who threw just one pitch resulting in a line drive double play, earned the win for the Marlins. Florida would go on to win three of the four games to take the series. The only one of those victories in which the Marlins trailed came on this day 15 years ago. View full article
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There’s nothing quite like holiday baseball during a three-day weekend. On Memorial Day 15 years ago, the Florida Marlins used a big sixth inning to erase an early deficit and send the South Florida fans home happy. At 25-26, the Marlins were looking to get back to .500 as they opened a four-game series at Sun Life Stadium against the Milwaukee Brewers on May 31, 2010. Through five innings, Florida had been shut out and managed just two hits. When all was said and done, the Marlins were 13-5 winners. In the top of the sixth, Milwaukee had added an insurance run to go up 4-0. To that point, Brewers starting pitcher Chris Narveson had blown away the Florida bats. In the bottom of the sixth, the Marlins broke up the shutout on an RBI ground out by Jorge Cantú, but with two outs, Narveson still seemed in control. Before the inning was over, Milwaukee was down 7-4. After a walk to Dan Uggla brought the tying run to the plate, Cody Ross emptied the bases with a three-run home run to knot the game at four. Narveson proceeded to allow a double to catcher Ronny Paulino and just like that, his day was done. The Marlins’ sixth, however, was just getting started. After reliever Carlos Villanueva walked Cameron Maybin, pinch hitter Mike Lamb’s RBI single to center gave Florida its first lead, 5-4. That brought up Chris Coghlan. The 2009 NL Rookie of the Year, Coghlan had started the inning by singling and scoring Florida’s first run. His second hit of the inning was a two-run triple. Villanueva was able to strike out Gaby Sánchez to prevent any further damage, but in the bottom of the seventh, the Marlins put together another two-out rally. Following a two-out walk to Uggla, Ross again came through with an RBI double before coming home on Paulino’s second double in as many innings. The big blow of the inning and the highlight of the day then came from Cameron Maybin, whose liner got past center fielder Carlos Gómez and to the wall. Maybin came all the way home on a two-run inside-the-park home run. With the lead now 11-4, Florida wasn’t done. The Marlins added a pair of runs in the bottom of the eighth on a two-run single by Cantú. When the day was over, every position player for Florida had at least one hit. Coghlan and Paulino each tallied three hits for the Marlins. Ross recorded two to go with four RBIs. Cantú plated three runs in the win. Coghlan, Uggla, Paulino, Ross and Maybin each scored twice. For Milwaukee, Corey Hart homered and plated two runs. Rickie Weeks had two hits and two RBIs for the Brewers in the loss. Narveson ultimately took the loss for the Brewers, but it was the bullpen that allowed seven runs in just 2 ⅓ innings of relief. Jorge Sosa, who threw just one pitch resulting in a line drive double play, earned the win for the Marlins. Florida would go on to win three of the four games to take the series. The only one of those victories in which the Marlins trailed came on this day 15 years ago.
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Both former All-Stars in the American League, neither Damion Easley nor Carlos Delgado were members of the Florida Marlins for very long. The two combined to play just three seasons in teal, but on this day 20 years ago, their presence was felt in South Florida. After trailing 3-0 late, Easley and Delgado provided the heroics. Following a game-tying home run from Easley in the ninth, Delgado sent the home crowd away happy with a walk-off double in the 10th as Florida defeated the Philadelphia Phillies in extras, 4-3. Entering the bottom of the eighth at Dolphins Stadium on May 24, 2005, the Marlins were on the short end of a 3-0 score. Thanks to a balk by Philadelphia's Ryan Madson and an RBI groundout from Florida catcher Paul Lo Duca, the Marlins were able to push a pair of runs across in the inning. In the bottom of the ninth, however, the Phillies were an out away from securing the victory. Against now Hall of Fame closer Billy Wagner, Easley was able to get ahead in the count against the hard-throwing lefty. Wagner's 3-1 fastball was left out over the middle of the plate and Easley pulled a no-doubter over the "teal tower" in left field to draw the Marlins even at 3-3. After Florida reliever John Riedling was able to strand Jimmy Rollins at second in the top of the 10th, Joe Dillion started the Marlins' half of the inning by drawing a six-pitch walk from Amaury Telemaco. Telemaco bounced back to strike out Jeff Conine before getting Lo Duca to line out, but with Delgado coming to the plate, Phillies manager Charlie Manuel went to the left-hander in the bullpen. Aaron Fultz threw just one pitch for the Phillies, but it was tomahawked by Delgado into the right-center field gap and rolled all the way to the wall. Dillon scored from first without a throw to complete the Marlins' comeback. Rollins finished with three hits, a run scored and an RBI for the Phillies. Chase Utley and David Bell each went 2-for-4 with an RBI in the loss. Easley had two of the six hits for Florida, but none were bigger than his game-tying blast in the ninth. It came in a thrilling Marlins victory on this day two decades ago.
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The walk-off hit is one of the more exciting moments in baseball. It’s rare, however, that those account for all of a game’s offense. That was the case on this day 10 years ago for the Miami Marlins. Off to an 0-8 start on a 10-game homestand, they hosted the Baltimore Orioles for the second game of a three-game set at Marlins Park on May 23, 2015. The evening would be dominated by pitching, but after 12 1/2 innings of scoreless baseball, Martín Prado finally delivered with a walk-off single in a 1-0 victory. Both starting pitchers were solid, but neither came to close to factoring in the decision. Dan Haren pitched around seven hits in three walks while striking out six in six shutout innings for Miami. Baltimore’s Mike Wright allowed three hits and three walks in seven scoreless frames. The Fish and O’s each left 10 men on base and were a combined 2-for-16 with runners in scoring position. Throughout the course of the contest, both teams were thrown out at home trying to score the go-ahead run. In the top of the sixth inning, Baltimore’s Travis Snider was gunned out at home by Marcell Ozuna on a Wright single that ultimately ended Haren’s night. In the bottom of the 10th, Adeiny Hechavarria was thrown out trying to advance home on a pitch that scooted slightly past the catcher Caleb Joseph. Miami reliever Carter Capps retired nine of the 10 batters he faced and six by way of strikeout as he kept Baltimore off the scoreboard for three innings heading into the bottom of the 13th. Hechavarría got the inning started on the right foot for Miami as he drew a four-pitch walk from Baltimore’s T.J. McFarland. But McFarland settled in to strike out Capps and Dee Gordon, and a 14th inning seemed inevitable. That was before Ozuna lined a single to right to move Hechavarría to third. With two outs, Giancarlo Stanton was intentionally walked to load the bases. That set the stage for Prado. With the count even 1-1, Prado lined a McFarland pitch into the right-center field gap for the walk-off single. Hechavarría scored to end a contest that lasted nearly four hours. Capps earned the win for Miami while McFarland took the loss for the Orioles. McFarland entered the contest in the 12th after lefty Brian Matusz was ejected for having a substance on his arm. Manny Machado, Jimmy Paredes and Snider all had two hits for the Orioles, who finished with nine as a team. Miami had just seven hits. No player had a multi-hit game for the Marlins, but Hechavarría reached base three times. The victory served as the third walk-off win of the season for the Marlins. Miami won 5-2 the next day to take the series. Prado’s single to break up a scoreless tie was the first Miami walk-off of that nature since May 7, 2014. It happened on this day a decade ago.
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In 2015, Martín Prado ended a lengthy Marlins losing streak with his clutch hit against the Orioles. The walk-off hit is one of the more exciting moments in baseball. It’s rare, however, that those account for all of a game’s offense. That was the case on this day 10 years ago for the Miami Marlins. Off to an 0-8 start on a 10-game homestand, they hosted the Baltimore Orioles for the second game of a three-game set at Marlins Park on May 23, 2015. The evening would be dominated by pitching, but after 12 1/2 innings of scoreless baseball, Martín Prado finally delivered with a walk-off single in a 1-0 victory. Both starting pitchers were solid, but neither came to close to factoring in the decision. Dan Haren pitched around seven hits in three walks while striking out six in six shutout innings for Miami. Baltimore’s Mike Wright allowed three hits and three walks in seven scoreless frames. The Fish and O’s each left 10 men on base and were a combined 2-for-16 with runners in scoring position. Throughout the course of the contest, both teams were thrown out at home trying to score the go-ahead run. In the top of the sixth inning, Baltimore’s Travis Snider was gunned out at home by Marcell Ozuna on a Wright single that ultimately ended Haren’s night. In the bottom of the 10th, Adeiny Hechavarria was thrown out trying to advance home on a pitch that scooted slightly past the catcher Caleb Joseph. Miami reliever Carter Capps retired nine of the 10 batters he faced and six by way of strikeout as he kept Baltimore off the scoreboard for three innings heading into the bottom of the 13th. Hechavarría got the inning started on the right foot for Miami as he drew a four-pitch walk from Baltimore’s T.J. McFarland. But McFarland settled in to strike out Capps and Dee Gordon, and a 14th inning seemed inevitable. That was before Ozuna lined a single to right to move Hechavarría to third. With two outs, Giancarlo Stanton was intentionally walked to load the bases. That set the stage for Prado. With the count even 1-1, Prado lined a McFarland pitch into the right-center field gap for the walk-off single. Hechavarría scored to end a contest that lasted nearly four hours. Capps earned the win for Miami while McFarland took the loss for the Orioles. McFarland entered the contest in the 12th after lefty Brian Matusz was ejected for having a substance on his arm. Manny Machado, Jimmy Paredes and Snider all had two hits for the Orioles, who finished with nine as a team. Miami had just seven hits. No player had a multi-hit game for the Marlins, but Hechavarría reached base three times. The victory served as the third walk-off win of the season for the Marlins. Miami won 5-2 the next day to take the series. Prado’s single to break up a scoreless tie was the first Miami walk-off of that nature since May 7, 2014. It happened on this day a decade ago. View full article
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After years of excellence in the minor leagues, the recent call-up made an impact in The Show with a game-winning home run. Joe Dillon probably isn’t a name that fans of the Florida/Miami Marlins will remember fondly (if at all). On this day 20 years ago, however, fans from South Florida were happy to learn it. A journeyman in the minor leagues, Dillon appeared in just 137 games over four years at the big-league level. He hit just three home runs and only one as a member of the Marlins. That one served as the game-winner on May 21, 2005. After holding off the Tampa Bay Devil Rays in the first game of the “Citrus Series” the night prior, the Florida Marlins aimed to clinch the series at Dolphins Stadium. Tampa Bay raced to a 3-0 lead early against Marlins starter A.J. Burnett. The Devil Rays pushed across two runs in the first inning on an RBI single by Aubrey Huff and an RBI groundout by future Marlin Jorge Cantú. Catcher Toby Hall led off the second inning with a solo home run off Burnett. The 3-0 lead would hold up until the bottom of the sixth when the Marlins used two long balls to draw even against Devil Rays’ starter Mark Hendrickson. Juan Encarnación broke up the shutout with a two-run shot with one out in the inning. Two batters later, Damion Easley’s solo homer to left tied the game. Burnett settled in after the Hall home run and did not allow another hit. Burnett allowed just three hits and three walks while striking out six in six innings for Florida. With the contest knotted at 3-3, Dillon was called on to pinch hit in the bottom of the eighth against right-hander Jesús Colomé. The 29-year-old rookie had gone 1-for-4 with a single in his Major League debut three days earlier in a win over the Los Angeles Dodgers, but had not gotten a chance to swing the bat since. With two outs and the bases empty, Colomé was able to get ahead in the count, 1-2. Looking for the strikeout, Colomé threw inside to Dillon, but got too much of the plate. Dillon was able to pull the pitch over the left-field wall for the go-ahead home run. The shot that put Florida ahead for good in the 4-3 victory. g52gkr_1.mp4 Todd Jones worked a scoreless ninth to earn the save for Florida. It was Matt Perisho, however, who earned the win for the Marlins. Perisho retired both batters he faced in the eighth inning on just five total pitches. At the plate, three of Florida’s eight hits left the yard. Two others belonged to Álex González. Hall finished 3-for-3 for Tampa Bay in the loss. Julio Lugo had two hits for the Devil Rays and scored the game’s second run. Colomé took the loss on the mound. As for the night’s hero, Dillon would tally just four more hits as a member of the Marlins. But in a season of lofty expectations for the team, his first career home run decided a close contest and at the time, kept the Fish in first place. It came on this day two decades ago. View full article
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Joe Dillon probably isn’t a name that fans of the Florida/Miami Marlins will remember fondly (if at all). On this day 20 years ago, however, fans from South Florida were happy to learn it. A journeyman in the minor leagues, Dillon appeared in just 137 games over four years at the big-league level. He hit just three home runs and only one as a member of the Marlins. That one served as the game-winner on May 21, 2005. After holding off the Tampa Bay Devil Rays in the first game of the “Citrus Series” the night prior, the Florida Marlins aimed to clinch the series at Dolphins Stadium. Tampa Bay raced to a 3-0 lead early against Marlins starter A.J. Burnett. The Devil Rays pushed across two runs in the first inning on an RBI single by Aubrey Huff and an RBI groundout by future Marlin Jorge Cantú. Catcher Toby Hall led off the second inning with a solo home run off Burnett. The 3-0 lead would hold up until the bottom of the sixth when the Marlins used two long balls to draw even against Devil Rays’ starter Mark Hendrickson. Juan Encarnación broke up the shutout with a two-run shot with one out in the inning. Two batters later, Damion Easley’s solo homer to left tied the game. Burnett settled in after the Hall home run and did not allow another hit. Burnett allowed just three hits and three walks while striking out six in six innings for Florida. With the contest knotted at 3-3, Dillon was called on to pinch hit in the bottom of the eighth against right-hander Jesús Colomé. The 29-year-old rookie had gone 1-for-4 with a single in his Major League debut three days earlier in a win over the Los Angeles Dodgers, but had not gotten a chance to swing the bat since. With two outs and the bases empty, Colomé was able to get ahead in the count, 1-2. Looking for the strikeout, Colomé threw inside to Dillon, but got too much of the plate. Dillon was able to pull the pitch over the left-field wall for the go-ahead home run. The shot that put Florida ahead for good in the 4-3 victory. g52gkr_1.mp4 Todd Jones worked a scoreless ninth to earn the save for Florida. It was Matt Perisho, however, who earned the win for the Marlins. Perisho retired both batters he faced in the eighth inning on just five total pitches. At the plate, three of Florida’s eight hits left the yard. Two others belonged to Álex González. Hall finished 3-for-3 for Tampa Bay in the loss. Julio Lugo had two hits for the Devil Rays and scored the game’s second run. Colomé took the loss on the mound. As for the night’s hero, Dillon would tally just four more hits as a member of the Marlins. But in a season of lofty expectations for the team, his first career home run decided a close contest and at the time, kept the Fish in first place. It came on this day two decades ago.
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In the early 2000s, the Florida Marlins were known for their speed. In a four-year span from 2000 to 2003, the Marlins led Major League Baseball in stolen bases three times. On this day in 2000, the Marlins did something that had never been done in team history. It’s also something that hasn’t been done in Major League Baseball since: they stole 10 bases without being caught once. The Marlins suffered a 6-2 loss to the San Diego Padres on May 18, 2000, but they made it a memorable night as four different players swiped multiple bases. In the first inning alone, Florida stole four bases. After walking to open the game, Luis Castillo stole second before coming around to score on an RBI single by Cliff Floyd. On the basepaths, Floyd swiped second and third. Preston Wilson walked and stole second in the first inning. He and Floyd were left in scoring position after Brant Brown was struck out swinging to end the frame. There was only one run to show for all that effort, but at least they were able to take an early lead. The Marlins would steal three more bases in the third inning, but again, left a pair of runners in scoring position. After a one-out single, outfielder Mark Kotsay swiped second and third for Florida. Wilson again walked and stole second, but Kevin Millar grounded out to end the frame. The Marlins entered the bottom of the fifth inning, trailing 3-1, following Eric Owens’ two-run single and a Ryan Klesko solo home run. Once again, their legs kept things interesting. After a one-out single by Castillo, the Florida second baseman swiped second and third before scoring his second run of the night on an RBI single from Floyd with two outs. Floyd stole second, but was left at second when Wilson struck out looking. The Padres used a two-run single from Ruben Rivera in the eighth to push the lead to 5-2. Phil Nevin added an RBI triple in the ninth. Castillo and Floyd each swiped three bases for the Marlins in the loss. Kotsay and Wilson each stole two. Floyd drove in Castillo twice for the team’s only runs of the game. Danny Bautista’s double was the lone extra-base hit of the night for Florida. Castillo had set the individual franchise record the night prior—also versus San Diego—with four stolen bases. The big night on the bases made the Marlins the first team to steal 10 bases in a game since the Colorado Rockies four years earlier. It was one shy of the most for a National League team since 1900. It happened on this day a quarter-century ago.
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Luis Castillo, Cliff Floyd and Co. ran—and succeeded at—every chance they had. In the early 2000s, the Florida Marlins were known for their speed. In a four-year span from 2000 to 2003, the Marlins led Major League Baseball in stolen bases three times. On this day in 2000, the Marlins did something that had never been done in team history. It’s also something that hasn’t been done in Major League Baseball since: they stole 10 bases without being caught once. The Marlins suffered a 6-2 loss to the San Diego Padres on May 18, 2000, but they made it a memorable night as four different players swiped multiple bases. In the first inning alone, Florida stole four bases. After walking to open the game, Luis Castillo stole second before coming around to score on an RBI single by Cliff Floyd. On the basepaths, Floyd swiped second and third. Preston Wilson walked and stole second in the first inning. He and Floyd were left in scoring position after Brant Brown was struck out swinging to end the frame. There was only one run to show for all that effort, but at least they were able to take an early lead. The Marlins would steal three more bases in the third inning, but again, left a pair of runners in scoring position. After a one-out single, outfielder Mark Kotsay swiped second and third for Florida. Wilson again walked and stole second, but Kevin Millar grounded out to end the frame. The Marlins entered the bottom of the fifth inning, trailing 3-1, following Eric Owens’ two-run single and a Ryan Klesko solo home run. Once again, their legs kept things interesting. After a one-out single by Castillo, the Florida second baseman swiped second and third before scoring his second run of the night on an RBI single from Floyd with two outs. Floyd stole second, but was left at second when Wilson struck out looking. The Padres used a two-run single from Ruben Rivera in the eighth to push the lead to 5-2. Phil Nevin added an RBI triple in the ninth. Castillo and Floyd each swiped three bases for the Marlins in the loss. Kotsay and Wilson each stole two. Floyd drove in Castillo twice for the team’s only runs of the game. Danny Bautista’s double was the lone extra-base hit of the night for Florida. Castillo had set the individual franchise record the night prior—also versus San Diego—with four stolen bases. The big night on the bases made the Marlins the first team to steal 10 bases in a game since the Colorado Rockies four years earlier. It was one shy of the most for a National League team since 1900. It happened on this day a quarter-century ago. View full article
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The 2003 World Series MVP turns 45 today! It's been more than a decade since Josh Beckett last took a big-league mound and two decades since he last pitched for the Florida Marlins. Born May 15, 1980, Beckett turns 45 years old today. The second overall pick by the Marlins in the 1999 Major League Baseball Draft out of Spring High School in Texas, it didn't take long for Beckett to work his way to the majors. On Sept. 4, 2001, the hard-throwing right-hander shined in his big-league debut, allowing just a hit in six shutout innings to pick up the win in the Marlins' 8-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Beckett spent his first five seasons with the Marlins, compiling a 41-34 record with a 3.46 ERA. For a good portion of his time in South Florida, Beckett battled blisters. Although he never made an All-Star Game as a member of the club, Beckett unquestionably left his mark. Beckett's most memorable moments for Florida came in the 2003 postseason. Beckett went 2-2 in seven postseason games with a hold, a 2.11 ERA and 47 strikeouts in 41.2 innings. The 2003 World Series MVP, Beckett is most remembered for his Game 6 performance as he tossed a five-hit shutout in a 2-0 win over the New York Yankees to clinch the second championship in franchise history. 3gip9m.mp4 Simply getting to the World Series might not have been possible without Beckett's efforts in the National League Championship Series. Trailing three games to one to the Chicago Cubs, he helped the Marlins get the series back to Chicago with a two-hit shutout in Game 5—a 4-0 victory for the Marlins. In Game 7, Beckett allowed just a run in four innings of relief as Florida rallied to win the final three games and the National League pennant. Postseason accolades aside, Beckett's finest season in Marlins teal came in 2005 when he posted a 15-8 record, 3.38 ERA and 166 strikeouts in more than 178 innings. Beckett posted the highest totals for wins, starts (29), innings and strikeouts of his Marlins tenure that year. Packaged in a trade with Mike Lowell to the Boston Red Sox for prospects, including Hanley Ramírez and Aníbal Sánchez, Beckett would go on to be a three-time All-Star as a member of the Red Sox. He won his second World Series and led all of baseball with 20 wins in 2007. Later dealt to the Los Angeles Dodgers with Carl Crawford and Adrián González, a No. 1 overall pick by the Marlins, Beckett spent his final two and a half seasons out west. Among qualified players, Beckett is still among the Marlins' all-time leaders in several categories, including third in ERA, ninth in wins, eighth in WAR among pitchers and eighth in strikeouts (607). His 8.97 strikeouts per nine innings average remains a club record. The Marlins have returned to the postseason just twice since the magical run of 2003. Perhaps the most vivid image from that run is Beckett being hoisted while waving his championship cap high above his head following the title-clinching win. Beckett turns 45 today. View full article
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It's been more than a decade since Josh Beckett last took a big-league mound and two decades since he last pitched for the Florida Marlins. Born May 15, 1980, Beckett turns 45 years old today. The second overall pick by the Marlins in the 1999 Major League Baseball Draft out of Spring High School in Texas, it didn't take long for Beckett to work his way to the majors. On Sept. 4, 2001, the hard-throwing right-hander shined in his big-league debut, allowing just a hit in six shutout innings to pick up the win in the Marlins' 8-1 victory over the Chicago Cubs. Beckett spent his first five seasons with the Marlins, compiling a 41-34 record with a 3.46 ERA. For a good portion of his time in South Florida, Beckett battled blisters. Although he never made an All-Star Game as a member of the club, Beckett unquestionably left his mark. Beckett's most memorable moments for Florida came in the 2003 postseason. Beckett went 2-2 in seven postseason games with a hold, a 2.11 ERA and 47 strikeouts in 41.2 innings. The 2003 World Series MVP, Beckett is most remembered for his Game 6 performance as he tossed a five-hit shutout in a 2-0 win over the New York Yankees to clinch the second championship in franchise history. 3gip9m.mp4 Simply getting to the World Series might not have been possible without Beckett's efforts in the National League Championship Series. Trailing three games to one to the Chicago Cubs, he helped the Marlins get the series back to Chicago with a two-hit shutout in Game 5—a 4-0 victory for the Marlins. In Game 7, Beckett allowed just a run in four innings of relief as Florida rallied to win the final three games and the National League pennant. Postseason accolades aside, Beckett's finest season in Marlins teal came in 2005 when he posted a 15-8 record, 3.38 ERA and 166 strikeouts in more than 178 innings. Beckett posted the highest totals for wins, starts (29), innings and strikeouts of his Marlins tenure that year. Packaged in a trade with Mike Lowell to the Boston Red Sox for prospects, including Hanley Ramírez and Aníbal Sánchez, Beckett would go on to be a three-time All-Star as a member of the Red Sox. He won his second World Series and led all of baseball with 20 wins in 2007. Later dealt to the Los Angeles Dodgers with Carl Crawford and Adrián González, a No. 1 overall pick by the Marlins, Beckett spent his final two and a half seasons out west. Among qualified players, Beckett is still among the Marlins' all-time leaders in several categories, including third in ERA, ninth in wins, eighth in WAR among pitchers and eighth in strikeouts (607). His 8.97 strikeouts per nine innings average remains a club record. The Marlins have returned to the postseason just twice since the magical run of 2003. Perhaps the most vivid image from that run is Beckett being hoisted while waving his championship cap high above his head following the title-clinching win. Beckett turns 45 today.
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On this date in 2010, the winner of a great Mets-Marlins pitchers’ duel was decided by a ball in the dirt. Over the years, Major League Baseball has seen contests end in a variety of strange ways. Our last “Marliniversary” recalled the Florida Marlins beating the Atlanta Braves on a walk-off balk by Atlanta reliever John Rocker. Today’s remembers another miscue from a pitcher that allowed the Florida Marlins to score the winning run on this day 15 years ago. On May 13, 2010, the New York Mets drew first blood on an RBI single by Rod Barajas in the second inning. The Marlins drew even in the third on Chris Coghlan’s RBI single to score Gaby Sanchez. Sanchez was 3-for-3 in the win with a double (the game’s only extra-base hit). The Mets and Marlins were still tied 1-1 as the contest at Sun Life Stadium headed to the bottom of the ninth. The closer then known as Leo Núñez had worked out of trouble in the top of the ninth as the Marlins sought to end the contest against Fernando Nieve. They would do that as Cody Ross came around to score on a Nieve wild pitch in a 2-1 victory. The inning actually started well for Nieve as he got Florida third baseman Jorge Cantú to fly out on a 2-2 pitch. That would be the only out he would record. After Ross drew a six-pitch walk, catcher Ronny Paulino singled through the right side to push Ross to third and put runners on the corners with one out. Dan Uggla came to the plate, needing only a fly ball to end the game. Uggla wouldn’t even have to swing the bat as the first pitch went in the dirt and to the backstop to chase home Ross for the winning run. 59n4sb_1.mp4 Núñez earned the win for Florida while Nieves took the loss for the Mets. Both starters—New York’s Johan Santana and Florida’s Josh Johnson—threw seven stellar innings. Santana allowed just an unearned run on six hits; Johnson yielded just a run on three hits while striking out seven. The victory served as the second walk-off win of the season and started a four-game series on the right foot for Florida. The Marlins would take all four games from the Mets. The most dramatic of those came in the series opener on this day 15 years ago. View full article
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Over the years, Major League Baseball has seen contests end in a variety of strange ways. Our last “Marliniversary” recalled the Florida Marlins beating the Atlanta Braves on a walk-off balk by Atlanta reliever John Rocker. Today’s remembers another miscue from a pitcher that allowed the Florida Marlins to score the winning run on this day 15 years ago. On May 13, 2010, the New York Mets drew first blood on an RBI single by Rod Barajas in the second inning. The Marlins drew even in the third on Chris Coghlan’s RBI single to score Gaby Sanchez. Sanchez was 3-for-3 in the win with a double (the game’s only extra-base hit). The Mets and Marlins were still tied 1-1 as the contest at Sun Life Stadium headed to the bottom of the ninth. The closer then known as Leo Núñez had worked out of trouble in the top of the ninth as the Marlins sought to end the contest against Fernando Nieve. They would do that as Cody Ross came around to score on a Nieve wild pitch in a 2-1 victory. The inning actually started well for Nieve as he got Florida third baseman Jorge Cantú to fly out on a 2-2 pitch. That would be the only out he would record. After Ross drew a six-pitch walk, catcher Ronny Paulino singled through the right side to push Ross to third and put runners on the corners with one out. Dan Uggla came to the plate, needing only a fly ball to end the game. Uggla wouldn’t even have to swing the bat as the first pitch went in the dirt and to the backstop to chase home Ross for the winning run. 59n4sb_1.mp4 Núñez earned the win for Florida while Nieves took the loss for the Mets. Both starters—New York’s Johan Santana and Florida’s Josh Johnson—threw seven stellar innings. Santana allowed just an unearned run on six hits; Johnson yielded just a run on three hits while striking out seven. The victory served as the second walk-off win of the season and started a four-game series on the right foot for Florida. The Marlins would take all four games from the Mets. The most dramatic of those came in the series opener on this day 15 years ago.
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On this date in 2000, fearsome Braves closer John Rocker handed the Fish a win with his clumsiness. In more than three decades of baseball, the Florida/Miami Marlins have seen contests end in a number of thrilling ways. That includes walk-off home runs, wild pitches, grand slams, plays at the plate and much more. One of the more bizarre finishes came on this day 25 years ago. The Florida Marlins topped the Atlanta Braves on a walk-off balk by Braves closer John Rocker in the bottom of the ninth. At 16-16, the Marlins were looking to get over .500 when they hosted the National League East-leading Braves on May 8, 2000. Braves starter Greg Maddux allowed eight hits, but struck out 10 in seven innings of work. Florida starter Vladimir Núñez also had a quality start, yielding just two runs on four hits while walking five in six innings of work. The Marlins picked up two unearned runs off Maddux in the first inning. After an error by Rafael Furcal on a ground ball off the bat of Preston Wilson allowed Mark Kotsay to score the game’s first run, Wilson came around to score on an RBI groundout by Mike Lowell. The Braves cut the lead in half in the fifth inning when Maddux helped himself with an RBI single. They drew even in the sixth when Andres Galarraga grounded into a double play with the bases loaded to score Quilvio Veras. With the score tied 2-2 heading to the bottom of the ninth inning, catcher Paul Bako got things started for the Marlins with a solid single to left field off Atlanta’s Rudy Seanez. Danny Bautista—a former member of the Braves—was called on to pinch run and got caught straying too far off first base. Atlanta first baseman Galarraga was unable to make the play on the pick-off throw, however, and Bautista advanced to second. After Dave Berg popped out, Bautista advanced to third base on a groundout by Luis Castillo. With two outs, Atlanta manager Bobby Cox went to the bullpen and the left-handed Rocker. Rocker intentionally walked Mark Smith to get to lefty Cliff Floyd. Smith took second on defensive indifference as Rocker got ahead in the count, 1-2. As Rocker stepped on the rubber, the ball slipped from his hand. A balk was called and Bautista was sent home for the winning run. Rocker was unable to record an out, but it was Seanez who took the loss. Dan Miceli recorded the final four outs for Florida to pick up the win. Bako finished 3-for-4 for the Marlins in the victory and got the ninth-inning rally started. Álex González added two hits as well. It would be four years later before another Major League Baseball game ended on a balk. It marked just the second time that it happened in Marlins history. The first also came against the Braves when Florida was on the losing end, thanks to a balk by Matt Turner. Rocker’s gaffe remains the only walk-off win in Marlins history on a balk. It happened on this day a quarter-century ago. View full article
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In more than three decades of baseball, the Florida/Miami Marlins have seen contests end in a number of thrilling ways. That includes walk-off home runs, wild pitches, grand slams, plays at the plate and much more. One of the more bizarre finishes came on this day 25 years ago. The Florida Marlins topped the Atlanta Braves on a walk-off balk by Braves closer John Rocker in the bottom of the ninth. At 16-16, the Marlins were looking to get over .500 when they hosted the National League East-leading Braves on May 8, 2000. Braves starter Greg Maddux allowed eight hits, but struck out 10 in seven innings of work. Florida starter Vladimir Núñez also had a quality start, yielding just two runs on four hits while walking five in six innings of work. The Marlins picked up two unearned runs off Maddux in the first inning. After an error by Rafael Furcal on a ground ball off the bat of Preston Wilson allowed Mark Kotsay to score the game’s first run, Wilson came around to score on an RBI groundout by Mike Lowell. The Braves cut the lead in half in the fifth inning when Maddux helped himself with an RBI single. They drew even in the sixth when Andres Galarraga grounded into a double play with the bases loaded to score Quilvio Veras. With the score tied 2-2 heading to the bottom of the ninth inning, catcher Paul Bako got things started for the Marlins with a solid single to left field off Atlanta’s Rudy Seanez. Danny Bautista—a former member of the Braves—was called on to pinch run and got caught straying too far off first base. Atlanta first baseman Galarraga was unable to make the play on the pick-off throw, however, and Bautista advanced to second. After Dave Berg popped out, Bautista advanced to third base on a groundout by Luis Castillo. With two outs, Atlanta manager Bobby Cox went to the bullpen and the left-handed Rocker. Rocker intentionally walked Mark Smith to get to lefty Cliff Floyd. Smith took second on defensive indifference as Rocker got ahead in the count, 1-2. As Rocker stepped on the rubber, the ball slipped from his hand. A balk was called and Bautista was sent home for the winning run. Rocker was unable to record an out, but it was Seanez who took the loss. Dan Miceli recorded the final four outs for Florida to pick up the win. Bako finished 3-for-4 for the Marlins in the victory and got the ninth-inning rally started. Álex González added two hits as well. It would be four years later before another Major League Baseball game ended on a balk. It marked just the second time that it happened in Marlins history. The first also came against the Braves when Florida was on the losing end, thanks to a balk by Matt Turner. Rocker’s gaffe remains the only walk-off win in Marlins history on a balk. It happened on this day a quarter-century ago.
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A native of Canada, Ryan Dempster had a long, productive Major League Baseball career. Over 16 years, Dempster won at least 10 games eight times, but made the All-Star Game just twice. His first appearance came in 2000 as a member of the Florida Marlins. The best day of that All-Star season and arguably his career came on this day 25 years ago. Dempster tossed a complete-game, one-hit shutout in a 3-0 win over the New York Mets. It was the rubber game of a three-game series as the Mets arrived at Pro Player Stadium to face the host Marlins on May 7, 2000. The teams were separated by a game and a half as the Mets came in 17-15 to take on 15-16 Florida. Throughout the afternoon, Dempster retired the Mets in order in five of his nine innings. On 114 pitches, Dempster walked four Mets while striking out eight. Despite the one-hitter, Dempster was forced to work out of trouble a few times. New York put runners in scoring position in the first, fourth and sixth innings, but each time, Dempster was able to get key outs. Dempster took a no-hitter in the sixth inning before catcher Mike Piazza crushed a two-out double. Dempster was able to get Robin Ventura to ground out to end the inning. Melvin Mora was the final Met to reach base on the day when he drew a one-out walk in the top of the seventh inning. Mora didn’t stay long as shortstop Rey Ordoñez lined into a double play to end the threat. The Marlins wasted no time getting Dempster the lead. Luis Castillo, Dave Berg and Cliff Floyd came through with three straight singles to open the game. Castillo scored on Floyd’s RBI hit, but Mets starter Glendon Rusch was able to get out of the inning with no further damage. That run would be all Dempster would need and all Rusch would allow. In seven innings of work, Rusch surrendered just six hits and one walk. The Marlins were able to take advantage of the Mets’ bullpen and give Dempster some insurance with a two-out rally in the bottom of the eighth. After Cliff Floyd’s two-out double off Dennis Cook put a runner in scoring position, Preston Wilson and Mike Lowell came through with back-to-back RBI doubles off Pat Mahomes to push the lead to three. At 104 pitches entering the final frame, Dempster needed 10 pitches in the top of the ninth to seal the deal. After getting Edgardo Alfonzo and Piazza to fly out to center, Ventura popped up to second to end the contest. The performance served as the first complete game of Dempster’s career. Dempster would add another one later in the 2000 season during a 14-10 campaign in which he posted 3.66 ERA and 209 strikeouts in 226 ⅓ innings. Dempster would never throw as many innings nor record as many strikeouts as he did in 2000. His performance against the Mets would serve as the only one-hitter of his career and perhaps his best outing ever. It happened on this day a quarter-century ago.
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Dempster vaulted himself into consideration for the 2000 MLB All-Star Game with a dominant complete-game performance. A native of Canada, Ryan Dempster had a long, productive Major League Baseball career. Over 16 years, Dempster won at least 10 games eight times, but made the All-Star Game just twice. His first appearance came in 2000 as a member of the Florida Marlins. The best day of that All-Star season and arguably his career came on this day 25 years ago. Dempster tossed a complete-game, one-hit shutout in a 3-0 win over the New York Mets. It was the rubber game of a three-game series as the Mets arrived at Pro Player Stadium to face the host Marlins on May 7, 2000. The teams were separated by a game and a half as the Mets came in 17-15 to take on 15-16 Florida. Throughout the afternoon, Dempster retired the Mets in order in five of his nine innings. On 114 pitches, Dempster walked four Mets while striking out eight. Despite the one-hitter, Dempster was forced to work out of trouble a few times. New York put runners in scoring position in the first, fourth and sixth innings, but each time, Dempster was able to get key outs. Dempster took a no-hitter in the sixth inning before catcher Mike Piazza crushed a two-out double. Dempster was able to get Robin Ventura to ground out to end the inning. Melvin Mora was the final Met to reach base on the day when he drew a one-out walk in the top of the seventh inning. Mora didn’t stay long as shortstop Rey Ordoñez lined into a double play to end the threat. The Marlins wasted no time getting Dempster the lead. Luis Castillo, Dave Berg and Cliff Floyd came through with three straight singles to open the game. Castillo scored on Floyd’s RBI hit, but Mets starter Glendon Rusch was able to get out of the inning with no further damage. That run would be all Dempster would need and all Rusch would allow. In seven innings of work, Rusch surrendered just six hits and one walk. The Marlins were able to take advantage of the Mets’ bullpen and give Dempster some insurance with a two-out rally in the bottom of the eighth. After Cliff Floyd’s two-out double off Dennis Cook put a runner in scoring position, Preston Wilson and Mike Lowell came through with back-to-back RBI doubles off Pat Mahomes to push the lead to three. At 104 pitches entering the final frame, Dempster needed 10 pitches in the top of the ninth to seal the deal. After getting Edgardo Alfonzo and Piazza to fly out to center, Ventura popped up to second to end the contest. The performance served as the first complete game of Dempster’s career. Dempster would add another one later in the 2000 season during a 14-10 campaign in which he posted 3.66 ERA and 209 strikeouts in 226 ⅓ innings. Dempster would never throw as many innings nor record as many strikeouts as he did in 2000. His performance against the Mets would serve as the only one-hitter of his career and perhaps his best outing ever. It happened on this day a quarter-century ago. View full article
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In late April of 2000, South Florida was the center for major headlines. That however, had little to do with the Florida Marlins. In Miami, Cuban Americans were calling for a work stoppage in response to the case of 6-year-old Elián González. A defector from Cuba, the young Elian was taken from his great uncle’s South Florida home by the U.S. government and returned to his father in communist Cuba. In a display of solidarity with the locals, several Florida players, coaches and members of the front office elected to miss a home game against the San Francisco Giants at Pro Player Stadium on April 25, 2000. Third baseman Mike Lowell was the most notable Marlin to miss the contest, but pitchers Vladimir Núñez, Alex Fernández, Antonio Alfonseca, Jesús Sánchez and Michael Tejera elected to be absent as well. Outfielder Danny Bautista also elected to sit out. Two San Francisco Giants of Cuban heritage elected not to show, including former Florida pitcher and 1997 World Series MVP Liván Hernández. In what was the opener of a two-game set, the contest went 11 innings. The Giants ultimately prevailed, 6-4, as Florida was handicapped by a limited bench and bullpen and a schedule that had them playing their 14th game in as many days. Florida trailed 4-2 entering the bottom of the ninth, but drew even on sacrifice flies by Mark Smith and Kevin Millar. In the top of the 11th, San Francisco pushed across two runs against Marlins’ reliever Dan Miceli. After an RBI double by Armando Rios broke a 4-4 tie, the Giants added an insurance run on a sacrifice fly by Bill Mueller. With a limited bench, the Marlins had to turn to Brad Penny to pinch hit to lead off the bottom half of the inning. Smith was able to single for Florida with one out to bring the tying run to the plate, but San Francisco’s Mark Gardner retired both Preston Wilson and Millar to end the contest. The loss began a five-game losing streak for the Marlins and a 1-8 stretch, but for one night, team members were focused on something bigger than baseball. That came on this day a quarter-century ago.
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At the incredibly young age of 25, Giancarlo Stanton set the mark for most career homers by a Marlins player. Although he never made the playoffs or played for a team that had a winning record during his time in South Florida, Giancarlo Stanton provided many great memories for Miami Marlins fans. The only player in franchise history to win National League MVP, Stanton was known for his ability to hit the long ball. On this day 10 years ago, he surpassed Dan Uggla for the most in franchise history. Stanton was tied with Uggla with 154 career home runs as the Marlins opened up a four-game set against the New York Mets at Citi Field on April 16, 2015. The contest was just minutes old when Stanton cemented himself atop the club’s all-time home run list. With Christian Yelich at second base, Mets starting pitcher Dillon Gee elected not to pitch around Stanton in the top of the first inning. After working the count full, Stanton went the other way off Gee for a home run to right-center field. The blast gave Miami a 2-0 lead. Unfortunately for the Marlins, the lead would not hold up as New York won, 7-5. Martín Prado added a solo home run in the top of the fourth to push the lead to 3-0, but the Mets drew even on Wilmer Flores’ three-run homer in the bottom of the fifth. Miami added one run apiece in the tops of both the sixth and seventh innings, but New York scored two runs in the bottom half of each of those innings. With the score tied at five in the bottom of the seventh, the Mets went ahead for good on back-to-back RBI singles from Lucas Duda and Michael Cuddyer. By the time his career with the Marlins was over, Stanton left the yard 267 times, beating Uggla’s franchise record for home runs by 113. In addition to homers, Stanton remains the team’s all-time leader in wins above replacement, slugging percentage, total bases and RBIs. He is also the only Marlin ever to win the Home Run Derby (2016). Among all of Stanton’s accolades, his Marlins home run total is perhaps the best reflection of his extraordinary talent. He’s been standing alone atop the franchise list ever since this day one decade ago. View full article
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10-year Marliniversary: Stanton passes Uggla atop Marlins’ home run list
Mike Ferguson posted an article in Marlins
Although he never made the playoffs or played for a team that had a winning record during his time in South Florida, Giancarlo Stanton provided many great memories for Miami Marlins fans. The only player in franchise history to win National League MVP, Stanton was known for his ability to hit the long ball. On this day 10 years ago, he surpassed Dan Uggla for the most in franchise history. Stanton was tied with Uggla with 154 career home runs as the Marlins opened up a four-game set against the New York Mets at Citi Field on April 16, 2015. The contest was just minutes old when Stanton cemented himself atop the club’s all-time home run list. With Christian Yelich at second base, Mets starting pitcher Dillon Gee elected not to pitch around Stanton in the top of the first inning. After working the count full, Stanton went the other way off Gee for a home run to right-center field. The blast gave Miami a 2-0 lead. Unfortunately for the Marlins, the lead would not hold up as New York won, 7-5. Martín Prado added a solo home run in the top of the fourth to push the lead to 3-0, but the Mets drew even on Wilmer Flores’ three-run homer in the bottom of the fifth. Miami added one run apiece in the tops of both the sixth and seventh innings, but New York scored two runs in the bottom half of each of those innings. With the score tied at five in the bottom of the seventh, the Mets went ahead for good on back-to-back RBI singles from Lucas Duda and Michael Cuddyer. By the time his career with the Marlins was over, Stanton left the yard 267 times, beating Uggla’s franchise record for home runs by 113. In addition to homers, Stanton remains the team’s all-time leader in wins above replacement, slugging percentage, total bases and RBIs. He is also the only Marlin ever to win the Home Run Derby (2016). Among all of Stanton’s accolades, his Marlins home run total is perhaps the best reflection of his extraordinary talent. He’s been standing alone atop the franchise list ever since this day one decade ago.

