Latest Marlins Stories
Posted: Nov 23rd 2009 6:31PM ET by Pat Lackey (RSS feed)
Filed under: Marlins, NL East, MLB Hot Stove

Jorge Cantu is likely to stay in a
Marlins uniform in 2010,
MLB.com's Joe Frisaro is reporting. Cantu's coming off of a couple of decent seasons in Florida after being pulled off the scrap heap by the Fish in 2008, so this sort of news should be unsurprising. Of course, when talking about the Marlins and keeping people around, one can't take anything for granted.
This move is likely made possible by the Marlins' plan to trade
Dan Uggla, who's looking at a substantial raise on his $5.35 million salary in arbitration this spring. Cantu, on the other hand, made $3.5 million last year and will probably be looking at a smaller raise in his second year of arbitration.
Posted: Nov 19th 2009 7:00AM ET by Knox Bardeen (RSS feed)
Filed under: Marlins, NL East
Footprints in the Snow is FanHouse's look at the paths to be forged by MLB teams this winter as they look ahead to 2010.
The
Florida Marlins finished second in the NL East, six games behind the
Philadelphia Phillies and were in the thick of the wild-card race up until the final weeks of the season. When you think of the bright, young pitching staff in Florida anchored by
Josh Johnson and featuring
Ricky Nolasco and
Chris Volstad, you reason that the
Marlins finished well in 2009 because of their hurlers. That notion is actually a fallacy -- only Johnson finished with an ERA under 4.00 among the starters who compiled at least 25 starts. The Marlins stayed in the race because of their hitting, plain and simple. Three hitters --
Dan Uggla,
Hanley Ramirez and
Cody Ross -- bopped 24 or more home runs, and as a team the Marlins finished fifth in the National League in runs scored.
The landscape in Miami might change a lot this offseason. Florida has already shipped under-performing
Jeremy Hermida to Boston and many expect Uggla to be exchanged soon for a multitude of cheap, young players.
Posted: Nov 16th 2009 2:01PM ET by Ed Price (RSS feed)
Filed under: Marlins, MLB Awards

The National League featured a strong class of rookies in 2009, and although Florida left fielder
Chris Coghlan didn't get called up until May 8, he impressed enough to win the Rookie of the Year award from the Baseball Writers' Association of America.
Coghlan wasn't named on seven of the 32 ballots (which included three players each) but had 17 first-place votes to 10 for Philadelphia left-hander
J.A. Happ.
Atlanta right-hander
Tommy Hanson was third in the voting, with Pittsburgh center fielder
Andrew McCutchen fourth.
Upon his promotion to the majors, Coghlan was inserted as the
Marlins' left fielder, and three weeks later he became the team's leadoff man -- two roles he had
never been asked to do. But it never stopped him from hitting, and Florida went 67-54 in his starts.
Posted: Nov 15th 2009 7:00PM ET by Frankie Piliere (RSS feed)
Filed under: Marlins, Prospects, Scout's Eye View

It can be frustrating to be a
Florida Marlins fan as star after star is sent on their way to richer organizations. One thing has remained constant, however. The talent continues to flow throughout their player development system. They draft well, coach well, and even without shelling out the big bucks, they find talent through international free agency.
Maybe they have trouble holding onto these guys once they blossom into big-league stars but there is no end in sight to their seemingly endless pipeline of young talent. So, as we continue to examine farm systems that could have an impact on 2009 and beyond, Florida has to be taken into account. No, it will not be dealing away any prospects but the outstanding minor-league depth once again will allow it to sell off its more expensive major leaguers.
Posted: Nov 9th 2009 12:49AM ET by Frankie Piliere (RSS feed)
Filed under: Angels, Brewers, Marlins, Red Sox, Twins, White Sox, MLB Transactions, Scout's Eye View
In Advanced Scouting, MLB FanHouse's professional talent evaluator breaks down offseason moves from a scouting perspective.
It hasn't taken long for the Hot Stove to get heated up as we roll past the World Series. Some key players have already been locked up and some high upside trades have already gone down. What do these moves mean for each club involved and how will the players dealt respond to their
new homes? Just as significant, how important will the prospects dealt turn out to be?
From
Mark Teahen headed to Chicago, to the
Carlos Gomez for
J.J. Hardy swap, to
Bobby Abreu's new deal with the
Angels, each move had a distinct impact. Perhaps the most interesting of these, however, was
Jeremy Hermida being shipped to Boston. For the price of a pair of young lefties, the
Red Sox took a gamble that may prove very worthy.
Posted: Nov 5th 2009 7:00PM ET by Matt Snyder (RSS feed)
Filed under: Marlins, Red Sox, MLB Transactions

With the conclusion of the World Series, it appears Major League Baseball isn't wasting any time thrusting us directly into Hot Stove season. In the midst of
Mark Teahen rumors,
we have been served our first actual trade. The Boston Red Sox have acquired 25-year-old outfielder
Jeremy Hermida from the Florida Marlins for pitchers Jose Alvarez and Hunter Jones.
Thus far in his career, Hermida has failed to live up to the lofty expectations that come for someone with his natural abilities. A former first-rounder once said to have five-tool potential, Hermida has hit .265 with a barely above average OPS through just over 3 1/2 seasons in the bigs. Of course, some circumstances should be considered.
Posted: Oct 6th 2009 1:22PM ET by Tom Fornelli (RSS feed)
Filed under: Marlins, NL East, MLB Rumors

Last February, Florida Marlins manager Fredi Gonzalez signed an extension that would keep him in Miami until 2011, and after his team finished the season in second place in the NL East you wouldn't think there'd be any reason why the team wouldn't honor that contract. Then word broke out that the Marlins were
interviewing Bobby Valentine for a position with the team, but they wouldn't say what that position was.
This fueled speculation that Gonzalez wasn't going to be back for the 2010 season, but on Tuesday sources confirmed that
Fredi has nothing to worry about.
Posted: Oct 3rd 2009 6:00AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Cardinals, Dodgers, Marlins, Rays, Rockies, Tigers, Twins, NL West, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... That the NL West race will come down to the final weekend of the regular season.
The
Rockies held on for a 4-3 win over the
Dodgers Friday night, cutting Los Angeles' lead in the division to one game behind shortstop
Troy Tulowitzki's 32nd home run of the year and 10 strikeouts from
Ubaldo Jimenez.
The Dodgers, who lost their fifth straight, have already won the season series, meaning that Colorado will have to win the final two games of the regular season in L.A. to win the division since both teams have already clinched playoff spots.
Posted: Oct 1st 2009 6:00AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Braves, Marlins, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ... That the Braves are all but done in the NL wild-card race, not that there was anything they could do about it. Atlanta, which had surged into contention over the last few weeks, ran into the Marlins' Ricky Nolasco Wednesday night.
He was on -- very on -- and now the Braves' playoff push is off.
Nolasco struck out 16, a Marlins record, including a stretch where he fanned nine in a row, one shy of the major league record of 10 straight held by Tom Seaver.
Posted: Sep 28th 2009 6:00AM ET by Andrew Johnson (RSS feed)
Filed under: Marlins, Red Sox, Rockies, Royals, Tigers, Twins, Starting Five
Starting Five is our wrapup of the previous day's baseball action with a quick nod to what is ahead.
You Oughta Know ...
That
Zack Greinke is doing everything in his power to win the American League Cy Young Award.
The
Royals ace will not get anywhere close to 20 wins, but he did pick up his 16th of the year with seven innings of one-run ball against the
Twins. He's now won five straight decisions dating back to Aug. 25 and his ERA is down to 2.06.
As pointed out by
FanHouse's Jacob Wheatley-Schaller, if Greinke pitches seven shutout innings in his final start of the year next Saturday in Minnesota, he'll finish the year with his ERA under 2.00.
Only one AL pitcher in the last 15 years --
Pedro Martinez in 2000 -- has thrown more than 200 innings in a season and finished with a sub-2.00 ERA