Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Hyde: It’s time for Marlins to capitalize

If Marlins build on last year’s success, grow up, maybe we can make ‘loanDepot park’ upper case

- Dave Hyde On the Marlins

Finally, an Opening Day with optimism. I think. The Miami Marlins will build on last year’s playoff season. I hope. The fans are coming back back. Sort of.

It’s all a bit uncertain, just who and what the Marlins are entering Thursday’s opener against Tampa

Bay. For instance, the players are the same, for once after a good year around this franchise, but now you can’t know the ballpark without a scorecard.

“Sorry I’m late,” shortstop Miguel Rojas said while taking a seat Wednesday morning. “I put ‘Marlins Park’ in my GPS and it couldn’t find it.”

It’s now called: loanDepot park.

Will the name grow up when the team does? Will we get to capitalize the “p” in “Park” then?

If it’s all shift-key crazy, lower case seems to be how the Marlins open a season after being the surprise team of baseball a season ago. Remember? They nobly fought COVID-19? They beat Chicago in the playoffs? Their kids showed they were growing up?

Now they’re back and again picked last in the National League East again. By everyone — “all the experts,” manager Don Mattingly said. Yeah, me, too.

“People think last year was a little bit of a fluke with 60 games,” Mattingly said of the pandemic-shorten 2020 season. “I think none of that matters, really. It’s more about us. We feel we have a good club.”

The problem is the National League East. It might be the toughest division in baseball. Philadelph­ia, Washington and the New York Mets loaded up over the offseason — and they’re all still behind Atlanta.

The Marlins? They hit a growth spurt at the end of last season and now possess what Mattingly called, “a humble confidence.” That’s a healthy attitude in sports.

It’s one of growth for this team, too.

“Those who keep doubting us — keep doubting us,” pitcher Sandy Alcantara said.

Alcantara is the short version of the Marlins’ growth. He 25 now, a risen talent, starting his second Opening Day on Thursday against the Rays after spending the spring working a new and improved change-up.

“I think I’ve got to use it in games,” he said.

He’s like all Mattingly’s players — you come to see what kinds are all grown up now. Are they bigger? Stronger? Does that face under the cap look more like a veteran and less like a kid delighted to be here?

The pitching staff seems a given. “Every time we start a game, we’re sending out a pitcher who can keep us in it,” Mattingly said.

The questions are with the everyday lineup. Can Brian Anderson grow into a third baseman worth investing? Will catcher Jorge Alfaro be a consistent player? And then there’s Jazz Chisholm, the future shortstop and current second baseman.

“If he puts the whole package together, he’s a superstar,” Mattingly said.

Mattingly is in his sixth season as Marlins manager. Has he ever referred to a player like that on the edge of a season?

Here’s the other reason for optimism: The Marlins finally have some financial help. They signed a new television deal that will earn them just south of $50 million, a source said — up from the major-league-low $19 million last year. The ballpark deal should get them almost $10 million a year.

That doesn’t put them in the luxurious neighborho­od of the top half-dozen teams staring with the Los Angeles Dodgers. Baseball is screwed up in that fashion. The playing field isn’t level like in other pro sports. It’s a prime reason why the Marlins are such a historical mess.

The ballpark and TV deals at least provide some money in the kitty. Financiall­y, they are, “two pillars of the foundation,” as Marlins CEO Derek Jeter said Wednesday.

Add it all up and the Marlins aren’t the sad-sack team that lost 105 games in 2019. The question is how much they can look like the playoff team of the last, pandemic-abbreviate­d season. The only certainty is the Marlins have expectatio­ns if no one else does.

“Expectatio­ns are a good thing,” Mattingly said. “We want to be a team and organizati­on that expects to be competing for the playoffs every year.”

Play ball.

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 ?? AMY BETH BENNETT/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ?? ABOVE: Marlins pitchers including Sandy Alcantara (22), center, and Yimi García (93) warm up at loanDepot park in Miami on Wednesday.
AMY BETH BENNETT/SOUTH FLORIDA SUN SENTINEL ABOVE: Marlins pitchers including Sandy Alcantara (22), center, and Yimi García (93) warm up at loanDepot park in Miami on Wednesday.
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