Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Marlins moves

- By Tim Healey Staff writer thealey@sunsentine­l.com, @timbhealey

Who else is on the trading block at the Winter Meetings?

LAKE BUENA VISTA — On the first day of the post-Giancarlo Stanton era, Michael Hill remained a busy man.

Working on about four hours of sleep — he had to get a marathon-training run in, so his alarm went off at 6:30 a.m. — there were plenty of waking hours for Hill, the Marlins’ president of baseball operations, to continue to entertain offers for Miami’s remaining stars.

Dee Gordon is gone. Stanton is gone. And, without coming right out and saying he will send more players packing, Hill more or less acknowledg­ed he and his front-office cohorts aren’t done.

“I’d still categorize this as surveying the marketplac­e,” Hill said. “That’s probably the fairest way to assess it.

“You take a step back, after Gordon, after Stanton and you look at where your club is and if there may be further opportunit­y out there to continue to try to add depth, or make value deals or deals that make sense for the organizati­on in the long term.”

The names that attracted the most buzz Tuesday at the Walt Disney World Swan & Dolphin Resort, the cite of the Winter Meetings this week, were Marcell Ozuna and Christian Yelich.

Ozuna, projected to make about $11 million in arbitratio­n in 2018, will be eligible for free agency after the 2019 season.

Yelich has four years at $43.25 million (plus a 2022 team option for $15 million or a $1.25 million buyout) remaining on his contract.

A source familiar with the Marlins’ thinking said Yelich hasn’t been put on the market. That, of course, is subject to change, and it hasn’t stopped clubs from trying.

There is no shortage of suitors for either outfielder. At least a half-dozen teams have interest in Ozuna and about 10 have checked in on Yelich, according to various local and national reports. Among the teams linked to Ozuna: Cardinals, Giants, Rangers, Blue Jays, Rockies. And Yelich: Cardinals, Braves, Giants, Diamondbac­ks.

USA Today said the Cardinals are the favorite for Ozuna. St. Louis had a deal with the Marlins for Stanton (until Stanton declined to waive his no-trade clause), so it had a jump-start in negotiatio­ns in terms of knowing what the Marlins are looking for.

The Marlins, in trades of major league mainstays the past six months, have focused on young arms, which the Cardinals have plenty of. Hill said that’s not necessaril­y the priority.

“Talent over everything,” Hill said. “That’s the goal, so we need to upgrade and improve our depth across the board. Do we need to add pitching? Yes. But do we need to add talent throughout? Yes. I think it’s more fair to say we need to add talent.”

Hill also re-emphasized the Marlins’ offseason philosophy of change, because what they were doing wasn’t working.

“The status quo is not an option for us,” Hill said. “That’s what we really came to the conclusion of as we had our meetings. We had a tremendous offensive team, but our pitching was not good enough. Our depth was not good enough. We had the reigning MVP, we had Silver Sluggers, we had Gold Glove finalists [and a Gold Glove winner].

“We had all these things and it wasn’t good enough.”

Deeper on Devers

Hill elaborated Tuesday on why the Marlins like shortstop prospect Jose

Devers, acquired from the Yankees in the Stanton trade: “We say he’s strength away from being a beast.”

Devers, listed at 6-foot and 155 pounds, had a .239/.255/.326 slash line in the GCL in 2017, his first profession­al season. The Marlins believe that Devers, who turned 18 last week, has the tools to become an impact player once he fills out.

MLB Pipeline did not rank Devers among the Marlins’ top 30 prospects.

“Talk about middle-of-the-diamond players with offensive and defensive value — that’s what was so attractive about bringing him on board,” Hill said, noting that Devers is expected to remain a shortstop.

“If you see his video, you’d see what our scouts see in him. … This is a guy who is going to be a physical offensive player, playing a premium position.”

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