The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Progress for Marlins: Considered ‘not just a rollover team’

- By Steven Wine

MIAMI » By one reading of the Derek Jeter meter, not much has changed with the Miami Marlins since he took over.

They have by far the worst run differenti­al in the National League. Their record has been the NL’s worst for much of the season. They’re a distant last in the majors in attendance.

But within the franchise, optimism is the highest it has been since unpopular owner Jeffrey Loria put the Marlins up for sale in early 2017. Evidence suggests the new ownership group, including CEO Jeter, has the organizati­on headed in the right direction.

Just look at the standings: Thanks to a recent surge, the young Marlins (41-57) are not even last in the NL East. And opponents rave.

“They’re better than their record shows,” Milwaukee Brewers third baseman Travis Shaw said. “Their lineup is not bad. They’ve got a couple of guys who can throw a little bit. Their bullpen guys are pretty good — guys who will probably get traded here in the next couple of weeks. They’re not just a rollover team.”

OK, so maybe that’s not a rave. But the Marlins started the season 20-39, so not being a rollover represents progress. By beginning to win, they’re beginning to win over skeptics who doubted new ownership’s pledge to turn things around.

“Jeter addressed it in a speech in spring training,” veteran third baseman Martin Prado says. “Nobody believed it.”

After the Marlins traded Giancarlo Stanton, Christian

Yelich, Marcell Ozuna and Dee Gordon last offseason, there were prediction­s the team might be historical­ly bad.

Instead, despite a patchwork rotation and lineup, the Marlins have gone 21-18 since June 5. They won their final two series before the All-Star break against firstplace teams Milwaukee and Philadelph­ia. Lately, they’ve showed a knack for comebacks and fared well in close games.

Attendance remains awful, but Saturday’s crowd of 14,793 was the largest at Marlins Park since April 14. Perhaps word is spreading the Marlins are surprising­ly entertaini­ng.

“We’ve created an identity as to who we are, how we play, what kind of games we’re in,” manager Don Mattingly said. “I like our spirit. Our guys play hard every day, and when we’re in tight games we seem to be getting better and better. The only thing not to like is our record.”

And the record is largely beside the point. For Miami, this season is about finding and developing young players to build around.

“We’re getting better and better every single day, I feel like,” right-hander Dan Straily said. “You start to see guys relaxing and kind of become themselves as players. Younger guys start to realize, ‘Man, I really can play here. I really do belong here.’ And that’s when you start to see more wins.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? In this file photo, Miami Marlins’ Starlin Castro is mobbed by teammates after he hit a walk-off single in the 12th inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers, in Miami. The Marlins won 5-4. Just look at the standings: Thanks to a recent surge, the young Marlins (41-57) are not even last in the NL East. And opponents rave.
WILFREDO LEE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE In this file photo, Miami Marlins’ Starlin Castro is mobbed by teammates after he hit a walk-off single in the 12th inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers, in Miami. The Marlins won 5-4. Just look at the standings: Thanks to a recent surge, the young Marlins (41-57) are not even last in the NL East. And opponents rave.

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