Miami Herald

Marlins extended Rojas: What’s next move?

- BY JORDAN MCPHERSON jmcpherson@miamiheral­d.com

They sat together Thursday on a stage at the brew hall on the concourse level of loanDepot park, the general manager and the team captain celebratin­g the first move of the Miami Marlins’ offseason.

If taken at their word, it won’t be the last.

The Marlins formally announced that Miguel Rojas signed a two-year, $10 million contract extension that will keep him with the team through the 2023 season. He will make $5 million each year.

But Kim Ng, heading into her second offseason as the Marlins’ general manager, has made it clear multiple times the Marlins plan to be aggressive this offseason as they try to rebound from a 67-95 season.

“This season did not go the way that we wanted,” Ng said. “Obviously, it was a disappoint­ment.

The staff has been very hard at work from the very first day really trying to put together what we think is a good plan.”

Here’s a guide to the offseason, which will begin shortly after the World Series.

KEY DATES TO KNOW

Five days after the World Series: Free agency begins; this is also the deadline for teams to make decisions on options in players’ contracts and to make decisions whether to give a player a qualifying offer.

Nov. 19: This is the deadline to protect prospects from the Rule 5 draft by adding them to the 40-man roster. Outfielder Griffin Conine is the only player among the Marlins’ top-30 prospects, according to MLB Pipeline, who is eligible to be selected in the Rule 5 draft who is not already on the 40-man roster.

Dec. 1: Teams have until this date to nontender arbitratio­n-eligible players, who would then become free agents. For players who are tendered contracts, money isn’t agreed to at this point, though.

The deadline for arbitratio­n salaries to be exchanged is normally mid-January with arbitratio­n hearings set for midFebruar­y if teams and players can’t agree to terms. However, the pending expiration of the collective bargaining agreement on Dec. 2 will have an impact on this.

The following 12 Marlins players are eligible for arbitratio­n (numbers in parenthesi­s are projected salary estimates for each, according to MLB Trade Rumors): First baseman Jesus Aguilar ($7.4 million), right-handed pitcher Sandy Alcantara: ($4.5 million), catcher Jorge Alfaro ($2.7 million), third baseman Brian Anderson ($4.5 million), utility infielder Jon Berti ($1.2 million), left-handed pitcher Richard Bleier ($2.5 million), outfielder Lewis Brinson ($1.3 million), first baseman/outfielder Garrett Cooper: ($3 million), right-handed pitcher Dylan Floro ($2.4 million), right-handed pitcher Elieser Hernandez ($1.4 million), right-handed pitcher Pablo Lopez ($2.5 million) and outfielder Magneuris Sierra ($700,000).

Dec. 2: The day the collective bargaining agreement expires barring an agreement between

MLB and the players associatio­n. How things go from here if no deal is in place is to be determined. League activity goes into a freeze at this point until a new CBA is in place.

THE MARLINS’ NEEDS

In simplest terms, the Marlins need to improve their offense. Miami scored the second-fewest runs in baseball this year (623), had the third-fewest home runs (158) and ranked in the bottom three in batting average (28th, .233), on-base percentage (29th, .298) and slugging (.372).

That means in addition to hoping top prospects take the next step, adding position players either through free agency or trade takes top priority.

“Multiple bats,” Ng said. “Very plural.”

COACHING STAFF UPDATE

Third-base coach and infield coordinato­r Trey Hillman as well as assistant hitting coach Robert Rodriguez are gone. Both informed the club last week they opted to pursue opportunit­ies outside the organizati­on.

Ng said she anticipate­s the rest of the coaching staff — bench coach James Rowson, pitching coach Mel Stottlemyr­e Jr., hitting coach Eric Duncan, firstbase coach Keith Johnson, catching coach Eddy Rodriguez, bullpen coach Wellington Cepeda and bullpen coordinato­r Rob Flippo — to return for next season.

The Marlins are exploring internal and external candidates for the two coaching vacancies.

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Marlins shortstop Miguel Rojas signed a two-year, $10 million contract extension that will keep him with the team through the 2023 season. He will make $5 million each year. Marlins general manager Kim Ng says more moves are on the way this offseason.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Marlins shortstop Miguel Rojas signed a two-year, $10 million contract extension that will keep him with the team through the 2023 season. He will make $5 million each year. Marlins general manager Kim Ng says more moves are on the way this offseason.

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