Miami Herald (Sunday)

Lopez hits IL two weeks before trade deadline

- BY DAVID WILSON dbwilson@miamiheral­d.com

PHILADELPH­IA

The blows keep coming for the Miami Marlins as they try desperatel­y to fight their way back into contention before the trade deadline.

The Marlins placed Pablo Lopez on the 10-day injured list Saturday with a right rotator cuff strain, about an hour before Miami continued a four-game series against the Philadelph­ia Phillies at Citizens Bank Park. Lopez was slated to start the series finale against the Phillies on Sunday in Philadelph­ia, but will now be out until at least July 24.

The trade deadline is July 31 and the Marlins began Saturday nine games back of the firstplace New York Mets in the National League East. Miami’s most likely course back to contention was riding its so-called “Big 3” starters — Lopez, Trevor Rogers and Sandy Alcantara — and Lopez has been one of the team’s most valuable players, with a 3.03 ERA, 111 strikeouts and only 25 walks in 101 innings. He has been worth 2.6 wins above replacemen­t, according to Baseball-Reference.com — the second most on the team.

For at least the next week, the Marlins’ “Big 3” is down to a “Big 2.”

With Lopez now on the IL, Miami is missing three starting pitchers it expected to be part of the starting rotation at the beginning of the year. Starting pitcher Sixto Sanchez, who was expected to compete for an MLB Rookie of the Year Award, has not pitched at all this year — and will not pitch — as he has battled an ultimately season-ending shoulder injury. Pitcher Elieser Hernandez has made only two appearance­s this season because of a pair of injuries and won’t be eligible to come off the 60-day IL until next month, although he did begin his bullpen progressio­n Friday.

Rogers and Alcantara are the only remaining healthy starting pitchers from the Marlins’ projected preseason rotation. Pitcher Zach Thompson has solidified one open spot, but Miami has typically had to piece together a bullpen game once through every turn of the rotation.

In Lopez’s place, the Marlins activated John Curtiss from the 10-day

IL. The pitcher had been out since July 4 because of neck stiffness and, with four starts in the past two seasons, he could be a candidate to start Sunday in Lopez’s place. Rookie pitcher Jordan Holloway, who tossed five no-hit innings in relief Friday as the 27th man for the doublehead­er, could also be a long-term option to join the rotation, although Miami will probably keep him with Triple A Jacksonvil­le until Thursday since he likely won’t be available to pitch again until then, anyway. Ross Detwiler and David Hess are the only other active pitchers with significan­t starting experience.

Lopez’s move to the IL comes a day after the

Marlins placed rookie outfielder Jesus Sanchez on the IL for undisclose­d reasons, which suggests it’s for something related to COVID-19. A day later, Don Mattingly said the team was no longer worried other players might land on the IL for COVIDrelat­ed reasons.

“Not anymore,” the manager said. “It was a lot of scrambling, I’d say, the first two days — the day of the workout and yesterday — but good now.”

UP NEXT

The Marlins wrap up their four-game series in Philadelph­ia on Sunday at 1:05 p.m. Lopez was originally slated to start against All-Star starting pitcher Zach Wheeler, but Miami will have to find a replacemen­t.

The Marlins are holding off on using Rogers, their All-Star and frontrunne­r for the NL Rookie of the Year Award, until Monday against the Washington Nationals so they can manage the 23-year-old pitcher’s innings down the stretch.

David Wilson: 305-376-3406, @DBWilson2

player.”

About two weeks earlier, Svihlik noted that there were maybe seven or eight players he thought had zero chance of falling to them in the second half of the first round. Watson was one of them.

“I spent the last week down here with my staff — and they probably got really tired of listening to me do it — but we constantly stress test our lists and our order, and constantly asked the question of the whole fair catch,” Svilhik said. “We did it again this morning [before the draft]. We went through the top of our board and we said, ‘Who are we going to fair catch?’ We know that a player is going to fall. Who’s it going to be? Is he too high? We evaluate all the way to the very end as more and more informatio­n comes in. [Watson] was not a player that we anticipate­d was going to fall.”

But he fell, and his selection set the Marlins up to have what appears to be another successful draft haul under Svihlik’s watch. ESPN’s Kiley McDaniel said the Marlins drafting Watson at No. 16 “was a case of highway robbery” while also noting “it’s borderline personnel malpractic­e for [Watson] to sail through the sevento-15 area without any team snapping him up.”

MLB.com ranked the Marlins’ collection of picks as the fourth-best among the 30 MLB teams.

“We’re very excited about the top of our board,” Marlins general manager Kim Ng said. “Actually, the entire three days, but particular­ly the top of the board.”

‘AN ELECTRIC TYPE OF PLAYER’

That starts with Watson, the dynamic high school shortstop that at one point was in discussion to be the No. 1 pick of the draft.

So what exactly are the Marlins getting in Watson?

“A winner,” Michael Joyner, Watson’s coach at Wake Forest High, told the Miami Herald a day after Watson was drafted.

The coach was asked to elaborate.

“When he comes to the field, he is definitely there to compete and to win,” Joyner continued. “An explosive player. He has all the offensive tools in the world. Really good power from the left side and hits well for average for us. And then when he gets on base, he stole 60 some bases for us. So he can really beat you on the bases as well, so when people chose not to pitch to him or whatever, they’d have to be really careful about where baserunner­s were because he can be at third in two pitches. And then defensivel­y, just a kid that has gotten a ton better since he was 14 the first time we saw him.”

The numbers behind those comments: A .477 batting average across his high school career, 16 home runs, 61 stolen bases in 66 games. As a senior, he hit .513 in 15 games with six home runs, 14

RBI, 24 runs scored, 15 stolen bases, 18 walks and just one strikeout.

MLB Pipeline gave Watson above-average grades for all five tools (hitting for average, hitting for power, running, fielding and arm strength), with his speed and baserunnin­g standing out slightly above the rest for the rising lefthanded hitter.

“Watson plays bigger than his listed 5-9 and 178 pounds at the plate,” reads his scouting report. “He has plenty of bat speed and takes a big left-handed cut, giving him plus raw pop. Though he has an aggressive power-over-hit approach that may need toning down against more advanced pitchers, he does make consistent contact and doesn’t chase pitches out of the strike zone too often. Running better than ever as a senior, Watson consistent­ly displays well-above-average speed and is a basesteali­ng threat.”

Joyner’s simplified scouting report: “Just an electric type of player.”

Joyner had that feeling about Watson ever since he saw him play as a middle-schooler before making his way to Wake Forest High. His baseball IQ far exceeded his peers.

It got to the point where opposing pitchers tried to stop pitching to Watson when he was batting in the leadoff spot, resorting to Joyner moving him down to the No. 2 spot to give him protection.

“Really what the Marlins are getting,” Joyner said, “is just an explosive player that can help them win in so many different ways.”

‘HIGH-STAKES POKER’

Back in the war room on Sunday night, the Marlins are making their calculatio­ns as each passing pick comes in and Watson remains on the board.

Watson, meanwhile, is with about 40 family members, friends, teammates and coaches in North Carolina waiting for his name to be called.

An antsy situation for both sides.

Joyner said Watson was “in and out of the room” on Sunday as picks came and went until the Marlins finally ended his slide at No. 16.

“It seemed like whatever happened with the Marlins happened pretty quickly,” Joyner said.

Watson, 18, said in an interview on MLB Network that the Marlins came out with “a great deal” after he fell to them and that he is grateful for a chance to work with Marlins CEO and Hall of Fame shortstop Derek Jeter.

He walked back into the living room where the watch party was gathered as the pick was announced.

“You just don’t know where I was at,” Watson said. “They made the best fit for me. Right when I walked in, my agent called me and said ‘OK, I have this great deal for you.’ All this time, [other teams] were trying to de-value me. I just went with my head and my gut and took it through.”

For Svihlik and the Marlins, this draft took a lot more work and a lot more patience compared to Svihlik’s first two years running the draft show in South Florida.

In 2019, Miami had the No. 4 overall pick. In 2020, they were in the No. 3 spot. This year, following a playoff run in the shortened 2020 season, Miami picked 16th. They had to wait for half the league to make their first picks before going on the clock.

“Pretty high-stakes poker stuff at the last minute,” Svihlik said. “It’s a little different. When you’re picking at three, four or five, down in that area, where you know where all the best players are going to go, it’s pretty defined. This was the first year that we’ve picked down in this area in a few years — and we hope that we keep picking down this area or lower. It becomes much, much more difficult.”

So the Marlins watched the draft unfold. Most of the anticipate­d names went off the board over the first 15 picks, even if they didn’t necessaril­y go in the order most projected. A couple selections — the Baltimore Orioles taking outfielder Colton Cowser at No. 5 and the Kansas City Royals reaching to take prep pitcher Frank Mozzicato at No. 7 — opened the door, at least in part, to Watson’s drop to Miami. The

Orioles and Royals were the main two teams projected to take Watson in mock drafts.

“Informatio­n changes instantane­ously,” Svihlik said. “There’s four minutes on the clock and you’re trying to get informatio­n and there are other players that we thought might be available to us and then literally at the last second, that player became available.

“Gotta have a low heartbeat,” Svihlik added.

WILL WATSON SIGN?

Drafting Watson, selecting what very well might be the steal of the draft, is just the first step.

Now comes the important part: Signing him to a contract.

The Marlins have a bonus pool of $9,949,800 to give to their 11 players selected in the first 10 rounds and to cover any potential bonuses for their final 10 picks should any of them exceed $125,000.

The slot value for the Marlins’ pick at No. 16 is about $3.75 million, but Watson very likely will need to be paid above that, considerin­g he was projected to be a topseven selection. For context, the slot value of the Royals’ pick at No. 7 is just over $5.4 million.

The deadline to sign draft picks is Aug. 1.

“I don’t know that it’s going to be a standard negotiatio­n,” Ng said. “It will be somewhat unpredicta­ble, but hopefully we get it done at the end of the day.”

Can the Marlins afford that extra money? They can, only if they sign some of their other picks from the first two days to bonuses lower than their pick value.

The Marlins have leverage on that front with most of their picks.

Four of those 10 remaining picks — fourthroun­d pick Brady Allen, sixth-round pick Sam Praytor, eighth-round pick Pat Monteverde and ninth-round pick Jake Schrand — were college seniors, who tend to sign for below-value bonuses because they don’t have the ability to return to school and enter the draft again.

“Every player is unique, every situation is unique,” Svihlik said. “It’s not a one-size-fits-all. You don’t watch a player fall and then all of a sudden call the adviser. A lot of times you’re asking yourself, ‘How much am I willing to spend and if I do that, what happens to my next pick?’ All of those things are being considered in the moment. A lot of times, you just let the player fall, and see what the market’s telling you.”

On Sunday, the market pointed to the Marlins drafting Kahlil Watson.

Jordan McPherson: 305-376-2129, @J_McPherson1­126

 ?? ERIC ESPADA TNS ?? Pablo Lopez — who has been one of the Marlins’ most valuable players, with a 3.03 ERA, 111 strikeouts and 25 walks in 101 innings — is out with a right rotator cuff strain.
ERIC ESPADA TNS Pablo Lopez — who has been one of the Marlins’ most valuable players, with a 3.03 ERA, 111 strikeouts and 25 walks in 101 innings — is out with a right rotator cuff strain.

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