Lets Go Marlins

August 27, 2008


Closer Must Be Offseason Focus

August 27th, 2008 @ 10:15:52 AM

Regardless of how the Florida Marlins finish this season, miss the playoffs, booted in the first round, or magical run; when the off-season rolls around the Marlins need to make a closing pitcher their TOP priority. Forget signing Dan Uggla long term, forget Mike Jacobs, forget Jorge Cantu, the core piece of every teams bullpen is a closer who can come out night after night and do exactly what you pay him to do, dominate.

Kevin Gregg is not that guy, and can’t be that guy for the Marlins. Not now, not in the future. Lets briefly compare him with some of the more prestigious closers in the league. Gregg is 10th in the majors with 29 saves this season, however, among the top 10 closers he has the MOST walks and the FEWEST strike outs. Kevin Gregg is effective (when he’s effective I should say) because he has a great fastball and a very good slider, his problem however is that very good slider. Gregg doesn’t have the greatest control on that slider, sometimes it makes batters look ridiculous, other times it lands in the dirt before the mound resulting in wild pitches.

Kevin Gregg is just too inconsistent, the Marlins’ loss on Tuesday night showed it. He had a 9-6 lead going into the bottom of the 9th and absolutely imploded giving up 5 hits, walking 1, and giving up 4 ER and the game. For a team needing a win to get them rolling and keep the pace, a loss instead to one of baseball’s worst teams could be the straw that breaks Florida’s back and ends their wonderful season.

Bottom line, this season’s issues, particularly in the stretch run have been the bullpen. Sure, the starting pitching hasn’t been stellar, but they’ve more often than not kept their team in the game and 7 out of 10 games the bats are hot enough to offset it. The bats and the starters can’t do anything to prevent the bullpen from imploding and losing a game.

In the end, you just never know which Kevin Gregg will grace the mound each night, thats why he’s not really a top 10 closer despite the ranking. When Fransisco Rodriguez, Joe Nathan, Jonathon Papelbon, and Mariano Rivera come on to close a game for their team, the other team is shaking, not the closer’s manager. Those teams know their closer will get it done, when he doesn’t its just the world evening out because nobody is perfect, even those men make mistakes once in a blue moon. When Gregg takes the mound we all have to hold our breath, well I’m turning purple, we need a new closer.

August 26, 2008


Now Is The Time

August 26th, 2008 @ 8:04:21 PM

There will never be a more opportune time for the Marlins to strike at the Philadelphia Phillies and New York Mets than in the next two weeks. The ease of schedule pendulum swings back in favor of the Marlins over the course of the next two weeks, giving them the perfect opportunity to get within 2-3 games of 1st place in the NL East.

Over the next two weeks the Florida Marlins have 6 games (3 home, 3 road) against the Atlanta Braves, 3 at home against the Mets, and 3 on the road against the St. Louis Cardinals. Not as easy as the Mets and Phillies had it the past two weeks, however, the Mets and Phillies now have significantly more difficult competition facing them. In the next two weeks the Mets have 1 game at home versus the Houston Astros, 3 in Miami against the Marlins, 3 games at Milwaukee, and 6 games (3 home, 3 road) against the Philadelphia Phillies. The Mets and Phillies may do enough damage to each other to assist the Marlins even if they falter a little.

The next two weeks become even more important when you look at the final 19 games for each team. The Mets by far have the biggest cake walk, with 12 of their final 19 games against the Atlanta Braves and Washington Nationals. The Phillies have 9 of their final 19 against those same two clubs. The Marlins have only 6 games, all against the Washington Nationals.

The Braves and Nationals are a combined 103-159, 56 games BELOW .500 and have terrible records against the rest of the NL East. The Marlins on the other hand have the 2nd best record in the division, against the other teams in the division, the Mets are two games better.

The window is open starting today. The Marlins get a day off to travel to Atlanta while the Phillies finish a 4 game set with the Los Angeles Dodgers and the Mets finish a 4 game set with the Houston Astros. By this time tomorrow, the Marlins (without playing a game) could be back within 4 games of 1st place, and all the chips in front of them to make their run.

August 25, 2008


Ace Takes Mound, Dominates Again

August 25th, 2008 @ 2:23:36 PM

If you didn’t believe me after last weeks outing, perhaps you’ll believe now. The Marlins took on the Arizona Diamondbacks in game 3 of their series Sunday afternoon and Ricky Nolasco mowed down another team of batters in route to a Florida victory.

Nolasco went 7 1/3 innings Sunday afternoon allowing only 2 hits, 3 ER, and struck out 10 Arizona batters. Nolasco is making himself fearsome at the plate as well as on the mound, knocking an RBI double to deep right to drive in a run in the top of the 2nd inning. Florida bats woke up and gave Nolasco all the run support he needed. Josh Willingham was 3-4 with a HR and 2 RBIs. Kevin Gregg kept his recent string of positive outings going. Though a little shaky, he still nailed down the save in the bottom of the 9th for his 29th as the Marlins won 5-2.

Nolasco is really stepping forward as the dominating ace of this staff, something every team needs in order to make a playoff run. In the month of August Nolasco has stepped up his game to help his team’s drive for the playoffs. He’s 3-1 in 5 starts with 43 Ks and only 3BBs. If the Marlins can make the postseason, Nolasco will for sure be their greatest asset.

Speaking of the Marlins’ postseason aspirations, the New York Mets lost today 6-4 to the Houston Astros. That puts the Fish 5 games out of 1st place, can you feel it? Do you believe yet?

August 24, 2008


Calling Lady Luck

August 24th, 2008 @ 6:16:48 AM

For all the mental errors, poor pitching, and lifeless batting that has at different times plagued the Florida Marlins, one thing remains a constant. Lady Luck appears to have an interest in seeing the Marlins at least make a playoff run, if not make it into the playoffs. At seasons end, if the Marlins are preparing for October baseball, they may need to send some champagne to the Houston Astros and any other club that beats the New York Mets and keeps the Marlins’ hopes alive.

After an outing Saturday evening that is best summed up as pathetic, the Marlins are still only 6 games out of first place. The Marlins got 3, yes thats right, 3 hits in their 7-1 defeat to the Arizona Diamondbacks Saturday night. Hanley Ramirez’s homerun was the only highlight for the lifeless Marlins.

Again Marlins fans find themselves breathing a collective sigh of relief. An effort to pull closer was wasted, but at the same time the Marlins refuse to go away in this chase (even if it means other teams getting the work done for them) and find themselves no further out than they were this morning. One thing is for sure, at some point the Marlins are going to have to take care of business themselves, like next weekend when they welcome the New York Mets to Miami for 3 games.

August 23, 2008


It Seems Ridiculous..

August 23rd, 2008 @ 2:02:04 PM

Friday evening a different Florida Marlins team apparently took the field, because it clearly couldn’t have been the same team that took the field the final two times in San Francisco. The Marlins were in Phoenix to take on the Arizona Diamondbacks and though they don’t have to face the D-Backs best pitchers in Dan Haren and Brandon Webb. They still had to face future Hall of Famer Randy Johnson Friday evening.

It doesn’t seem possible that a Marlins team that lost the last two games to the awful Giants, could survive the 13 strike out performance that Randy Johnson put on, but they did! Johnson pitched 7 innings, struck out 13 Marlins’ batters, and left with a 4-3 lead. The Marlins didn’t let that last as they put up 2 runs in the top of the 8th to go ahead 5-4. The Marlins hung on, Kevin Gregg pitched a perfect 9th and the Marlins snapped their current slump.

While the Marlins didn’t move forward in the standings, they didn’t fall any farther behind the Mets and Phillies. The Marlins begin play Saturday 6 games behind the Mets for first and a mountain to climb in order to get to the top of the division. Lets not fillet the Fish yet though, lots of time left in the season and PLENTY of opportunities to straighten up and take the division.


Bullpen Useless Again…

August 23rd, 2008 @ 2:01:51 PM

It is beginning to seem as though the Marlins are just not mentally into their season anymore. With the playoff window still open, albeit only a crack, the Marlins needed a win against the hapless Giants today to take 2 of 3 and try to close the gap on the New York Mets and Philadelphia Phillies. Instead they got Josh Johnson’s first poor performance of the season, were plagued by mental errors, and lost on a wild pitch.

While not as effective as his previous 6 starts this season, Josh Johnson’s worst start wasn’t a bad start. He left after 6 innings having surrendered 3 runs and his team was trailing 3-2. The Marlins would eventually tie the game and keep hope alive of winning the series against the Giants. Then of course, it was the bullpen’s turn to try and not blow a game for once. Kevin Gregg came on for the 9th and was once again shaky and in the end got tagged for the loss. Gregg walked the leadoff man in the 9th and saw him advance to 2nd on a steal and 3rd after a deep sacrifice fly. After intentionally walking Bengie Molina, Gregg uncorked a wild pitch that saw the winning run cross the plate standing up and the Giants won 4-3.

The Marlins’ efforts lately have looked more like a comedy of errors (unless of course you are a Marlins fan) than baseball at the Major League level. Nothing seems to go right for this team other than the fact that from time to time when the Mets or Phillies could really bury the Marlins by winning when the Fish lose, they don’t. Despite a terrible record over the past two weeks, the Marlins sit after tonights action 6 games out of first place, 3 1/2 games out of second.

Manager Fredi Gonzalez needs to focus this team, remind them they are not out of it yet. There is still a full month of baseball to be played, still opportunities against the teams they are chasing and opportunities against downright terrible teams (Atlanta and Washington). The Fish need to get focused on whats at stake, clean up the errors (even a little, c’mon boys, this is the Major Leagues), and come to the park every night with 100% focus on the game and task at hand.

For the Fish, it must begin anew Friday night in Phoenix. Sweeping the Diamondbacks can boost their confidence, and they have the great fortune of not having to face either Dan Haren or Brandon “Cy Young” Webb during the series. Luck may still be on their side, they just have to believe!

August 21, 2008


Comeback Wasted…Miracle Needed

August 21st, 2008 @ 7:58:00 PM

If the Marlins miss the playoffs, fans and players alike can look to Wednesday nights game against the San Francisco Giants and say “thats where it ended”. Already 4 games behind the Mets heading in, and knowing that the Mets and Phillies had won, all the Marlins needed to do was beat the San Francisco Giants. The Giants, 18 games below .500, should not have been that difficult for the Marlins to sweep, and they NEEDED to do so to stay in the race. Especially when you consider that the Phillies and Mets are playing cupcakes this week in the form of the Atlanta Braves and Washington Nationals.

And when it mattered most, the Marlins again just couldn’t put together a full game effort from all parties. Scott Olsen had another less than stellar outing, going 6 innings while giving up 9 hits and 4 ER. Olsen blew a 2-1 lead in the bottom of the 6th allowing 3 ER giving the Giants a 4-2 lead. Even still it seemed the Marlins could win, trailing 5-2 in the top of the 9th inning, John Baker hit a pinch hit 3R - HR to tie the game. It was false hope unfortunately, Lindstrom couldn’t even go one effective inning as Bengie Molina hit a sac fly in the bottom of the 9th to drive in the winning run for the Giants.

Miracles occur every once in awhile in sports, and at this point that is likely what the Marlins are going to need to overcome the Mets and Phillies to make the playoffs. The Marlins cannot afford any more slip ups, especially when they face teams nearly 20 games below .500. Their schedule still includes 12 games combined against the Mets and Phillies, they get 12 games combined as well against the lowly Braves and Nationals. They still have a chance, but they need to come together as a team and decide what they want to make of their season. Comebacks aren’t unheard of, especially in this division as the Phillies erased a 7 game Mets lead last year to steal the division and make the playoffs.

August 20, 2008


Not A Bad Start…

August 20th, 2008 @ 7:08:43 AM

Florida Marlins’ fans can breath a sigh of relief, for tonight at least. As the team embarked on its most important road trip of the season so far, the state of the Marlins’ playoff hopes was critical. The Marlins have been slumping as of late and came into Tuesday evening 3 games behind 2nd place Philadelphia and 4 games behind 1st place New York. So what do you do to bust out of a slump? Send your ace to the mound and let him start hurling heat.

Ricky Nolasco did just that for the Marlins Tuesday night against the San Francisco Giants, and then some. Nolasco pitched and batted the Marlins past the Giants, winning 6-0. Nolasco pitched a complete game shutout, allowing only 2 hits and striking out 11. Just to make sure his efforts weren’t wasted, he got in on the act offensively as well. In the top of the 5th inning, with the Marlins already ahead 3-0, Nolasco stepped to the plate and blew the game open. With runners on 1st and 3rd Nolasco knocked a double to deep left driving in both runners and effectively solidifying the win.

While the returns of Josh Johnson and Anibal Sanchez, and the emergence of Chris Volstad have strengthened the rotation and given the Marlins a fighting chance, the team would not have been in contention were it not for the efforts of Ricky Nolasco over the course of the season. He has emerged as the ace of the staff in emphatic fashion. From May 3 to July 7th Nolasco kept the Fighting Fish in the race, starting 13 games and compiling a 9-2 record in the process. He leads the rotation in all the crucial categories, innings pitched, wins, and ERA.

Make no mistake, tonights game was important. When you are 4 games out of first place and the competition isn’t showing signs of slowing down you need to keep pace. A loss tonight and you could start lowering the Marlins’ coffin into the ground. Nolasco stepped up and did what aces do, shut down the opponent and gave his team the perfect start to a crucial road trip.

August 19, 2008


Here’s A Thought?

August 19th, 2008 @ 8:22:55 PM

The Marlins just lost to the Chicago Cubs. I noticed some problems with the team tonight, and I feel there are ways to fix them going into the 2009 season. No I’m not a pessimist, already giving up on the 2008 Marlins, I’m just a fan who sees some glaring weaknesses and how we can fix them.

  1. 1. The Defense: With Jorge Cantu leaving this off season for a bigger contract than the Marlins can offer, there will be a hole at third base again. I already can hear you screaming Dallas McPherson’s name with his 40 homeruns this year in the minors, but I suggest a different approach. Hanley Ramirez has great range as a short stop, the problem is consistency. Moving him over to third base will give the Marlins their best defensive everyday 3rd baseman since Mike Lowell. But who plays short you ask? How about a platoon? Alfredo Amezaga and Robert Andino both are better defensively at short than Hanley. Alfredo can start against right handed pitchers and Robert can start against left handers.
  2. 2. Consistent hitting: For leading the league in homeruns the Marlins sure do ruin it by also leading in strikeouts and being one of the worse teams in hitting with runners in scoring position. The struggles of moving runners up and bringing a runner home with a sacrifice fly this year have driven poor Tommy Hutton insane this year.
  3. 3. Management: While I like the way Freddy manages this team, Girardi demanded more, and got it. Crack the whip Freddy, crack it! Furthermore you can get more aggressive on base. Start sending runners, forcing these kids to hit in a hit and run situation will make them focus more on making contact.

Ok, I fixed it. No worries fans were going to be good next year. By the way, did anyone notice I haven’t mentioned the pitching? Why would I, Johnson, Volstad, Nolasco, Miller, Olsen, Sanchez, with Tucker, Vandenhurk, and Badenhop waiting in the wings. The pitching is strong, and no longer a weakness. If this team can attack with a small ball mentality, like the 2003 Marlins the sky is the limit. We have better pitching than that team, Mark Redman, Carl Pavano, and let us not forget that we only had 2 arms we could rely on from the bullpen. This new Marlins team can be special, we’ve sensed it for 3 years, but pretty soon potential will become present, and were tired of waiting.


If the Marlins Miss the Playoffs…

August 19th, 2008 @ 5:09:31 PM

The blame should fall squarely on the shoulders of ownership and the front office for being either too dumb or too stubborn to fix the real problem on this team, the bullpen. It seems odd that in a year that saw the Marlins pen at one point (April & May) considered the best in baseball, we would also see it become a liability in the team’s quest for October baseball.

Among playoff contending teams only the St Louis Cardinals and New York Mets have bullpens that have blown more saves, 27 and 21 respectively. And although a blown save does not always equate to a loss in the end, its certainly not a stat worth ignoring either. Baseball gets much harder in October, if you want to beat a team, you don’t give up the lead when you have them pinned down for the loss.

The Marlins bullpen has been particularly worrisome as of late. Closer Kevin Gregg blew a 2 run lead in the 9th inning Friday night against the Cubs, his 7th blown save of the season. Then on Sunday afternoon Renyel Pinto imploded allowing 5 earned runs while striking out none and walking 3, all in 2/3 of an inning.

Ownership and management knew exactly what areas of this team needed improvement, areas that if not improved could cost this team a playoff spot, and they did what amounts to nothing. The single move the front office made was to acquire 38 year old Arthur Rhodes, slap a gold bow on him, and call the bullpen situation solved. Clearly it is not as the pen continues to cost the team games.

Clearly the players share the blame when a team fails to perform, but you can’t expect a player to perform above their abilities. The front office knew that ability was lacking in the bullpen and still did nothing, so if the Fish are golfing in October instead of competing for a World Series crown, all of us fans will have management to thank.

Next Page »
 
 

Florida Marlins News