Miami Herald

Ng’s ‘Christmas morning’ arrives as spring training gets underway

- BY JORDAN MCPHERSON jmcpherson@miamiheral­d.com

The Marlins have high expectatio­ns as spring training — the first under new general manager Kim Ng and the fourth under Bruce Sherman/Derek Jeter ownership — begins.

For the past three months, new Miami Marlins general manager Kim Ng has worked from a distance to upgrade the roster she now oversees.

The bullpen that needed vast improvemen­t is practicall­y brand new. A new slugger became the final piece of a veteran-laden trio of starting outfielder­s. The young rotation, promising infield and stacked minor-league system — viewed as one of the best in baseball — remain.

Now, for the first time, she’ll get to see how it all develops in person. The Marlins’ first pitchers and catchers workout of spring training takes place at Jupiter’s Roger Dean Chevrolet Stadium complex Thursday as the team prepares to build on a shortened 2020 season that saw it make the playoffs for the first time in 17 years.

Pitchers and catchers officially reported Wednes

day following a five-day in-house quarantine as part of MLB’s enhanced health and safety protocols for the season as the coronaviru­s pandemic still affects the United States.

“I feel like a kid on Christmas,” Ng said. “This is my Christmas morning. We’ve talked about these guys quite a bit, every day for the last three months. Finally, I get to see them live.”

And the moves kept coming Wednesday.

The Marlins acquired 27-year-old right-handed reliever John Curtiss from the Tampa Bay Rays in exchange for first baseman prospect Evan Edwards, their fourth-round pick in 2019. The team also formally announced the signing of outfielder Adam Duvall to a one-year contract with a mutual option for 2022, which completes the veteran outfielder trio along with Corey Dickerson and Starling Marte (although Garrett Cooper will split time between first base and the outfield so that Duvall, Cooper and first baseman Jesus Aguilar all get adequate playing time and rest).

The Marlins placed relief pitcher Jeff Brigham on the 60-day injured list and designated outfielder Harold Ramirez for assignment to make room for Curtiss and Duvall on the 40-man roster.

Curtiss, under team control through the 2025 season, posted a 1.80 ERA over 25 innings in 17 games for the Rays during the 2020 regular season. He held opponents to a .233 batting average and struck out 25 while walking three.

The Rays used him in a slew of roles last season. He was used as an opener three times. He was used as a closer twice, converting both save opportunit­ies. He had five outings in which he threw at least two innings. He finished seven of the 17 games in which he played.

Curtiss also made nine playoff appearance­s (one start) for the Rays as they made a run to the World Series before losing to the Dodgers in six games.

He primarily relies on a four-seam fastball that averages 94 mph and a slider that sits around 85 mph. He threw 68.8 percent of his pitches last season for strikes.

He’s the latest reliever the Marlins have acquired this offseason, with Anthony Bass, Dylan Floro, Adam Cimber, Ross Detwiler, Zach Pop and Paul Campbell to join Yimi Garcia, Richard Bleier and James Hoyt. That’s 10

players for essentiall­y eight bullpen spots and a group manager Don Mattingly is optimistic about.

“We’ve been just kind of kept putting quality guys into it,” Mattingly said. “I think kind of sneakily almost . ... We feel like almost every guy that we put into our pen can pitch late in the game.”

Bass, Floro and Curtiss, along with Garcia, all figure to be front-runners for late-inning, high-leverage roles with the Marlins. Bass, signed to a two-year deal in January, has a 3.44 ERA over the last three years and has converted 12 saves in that span. Floro, acquired in a trade with the Dodgers on Friday, has a career 3.33 ERA and had a 2.59 mark over 25 games out of the bullpen last year.

Garcia, the lone internal candidate for the closer job, posted a 0.60 ERA over 15 innings last season — all as a late-inning reliever — and has a 3.40 ERA over his six-year MLB career as he heads into his final season before free agency.

And while the primary focus is on assembling the best 26-man roster for Opening Day — the main competitio­ns will be at second base, the backup outfielder spots and the bullpen — the coaching staff and front office will get a solid look at their future as well.

“I’d love to see consistent effort, love to see what what their tools are, what they bring to the table [and] how they react in certain situations,” Ng said. “And you know I do want them to relax and be themselves and hopefully all of that will shine through. I’m sure it will. But, again, to just see them in live games is going to be great.”

The balance of present and future is a sign that Year 4 of the rebuild is underway.

“There is a level of excitement,” Marlins CEO Derek Jeter said, “and we need to continue to build on that.”

 ?? TONY GUTIERREZ AP ?? The Marlins got right-handed reliever John Curtiss from the Rays for first baseman prospect Evan Edwards.
TONY GUTIERREZ AP The Marlins got right-handed reliever John Curtiss from the Rays for first baseman prospect Evan Edwards.
 ?? JOSEPH GUZY/MIAMI MARLINS Miami ?? Miami Marlins general manager Kim Ng is ready to see the players in live games.
JOSEPH GUZY/MIAMI MARLINS Miami Miami Marlins general manager Kim Ng is ready to see the players in live games.

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