Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Chen encouraged

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On Sunday, left-hander Justin Nicolino was designated for assignment and claimed by the Cincinnati Reds. Nicolino was the last player remaining with the Marlins among seven who came in the controvers­ial 12-player trade with Toronto in November 2012.

He was 10-13 with a 4.65 ERA in 50 appearance­s (33 starts) with Miami and was out of minor league options.

In addition to Brinson, rookie Garrett Cooper was also informed before the game that he made the team. Cooper, acquired in a trade with the New York Yankees, showed some power as spring training progressed. He will be a reserve at first base and in the outfield.

Mattingly hasn’t revealed any starting pitchers beyond Jose Urena on Opening Day. Right-handers Odrisamer Despaigne and Jacob Turner and left-hander Caleb Smith are possibilit­ies. The Marlins may also be looking outside the organizati­on.

Lefty Dillon Peters, who had been optioned to Triple-A, will start Tuesday’s exhibition against the University of Miami and could figure in plans with Dan Straily (forearm inflammati­on) not ready to begin the season.

“Some of the things we went through health-wise have clouded the water a little bit,” Mattingly said.

While none of the pitching candidates distinguis­hed themselves in camp, Brinson made the decision easy with his performanc­e and progress.

At 23, he has a chance to become the face of a Marlins franchise rebuilding under a new ownership group that traded away its most prominent players in the offseason.

Brinson is the most charismati­c personalit­y to join the Marlins since Jose Fernandez was National League Rookie of the Year in 2013.

He has the skill and athleticis­m to go with it on a powerfully built 6-foot-3 frame. This spring he batted .328 with two home runs, seven doubles and a triple in 23 games.

“He’s been impressive personalit­y-wise and on the field,” Mattingly said while praising the work Brinson has put in to improve himself. “It’s nice to know you’ve got a kid that still feels like he’s working, getting better, but also feels the confidence that he’s ready. It’s a nice combinatio­n with Lewis right now.”

Mattingly pointed out Brinson that the work only beginning.

“Donnie said, ‘Congrats, but work doesn’t stop here.’ Still got to work to try to win as many games as we can,” Brinson said. “But I take this opportunit­y and run with it. Very humbling.”

Cooper got off to a slow start but finished strong with a .296 average and three homers in 24 games. to is

“Any guy who gets traded the first couple games you’re trying to do a little too much to show you belong up here,” Cooper said. “These last few weeks I hit the ball pretty hard and a couple homers I hit off a couple of the bigger guys.”

On the final day of spring training, the Marlins’ highest paid player pitched for this first time this year to hitters that included the team’s second-highest paid player.

Wei-Yin Chen came off the field smiling after throwing 16 pitches on a back field, encouraged by progress in his long struggle with a troublesom­e left elbow.

It’s still anyone’s guess when the enigmatic lefthander will pitch again in Miami. Same with veteran third baseman Martin Prado, who got his bat on a couple of Chen’s pitches, including one hit sharply back to the mound, as he continued to creep back from knee surgery.

“During the past two years I feel like I’ve been trying to be too fine, too perfect with the injury, so I couldn’t throw as I wanted to. I kept trying harder and harder but the thing just didn’t go away,” Chen said via translator Louis Chao. “But now I feel like I kind of got my rhythm back.”

Asked if his arm feels better than at any time in the past two years, he said, “As of now it is, but I can’t predict the future.

“I feel happy because during the past two years the way I’ve been pitching and the feel when I pitch it wasn’t ideal. But today I feel like I kind of got my feeling back [to] the old days.”

cldavis@ sun-sentinel.com; Twitter @CraigDavis­Runs; here on Facebook

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