Miami Herald

Trades yield pair of young catchers

OF Adam Duvall and pitcher John Curtiss were swapped for catching prospects Alex Jackson and Payton Henry.

- BY JORDAN MCPHERSON jmcpherson@miamiheral­d.com

In the hours before MLB’s trade deadline on Friday afternoon, the Miami Marlins traded away a starting position player and a middleinni­ng reliever to build depth at one of the organizati­on’s thinnest positions.

“One of our primary targets,” Marlins general manager Kim Ng said, “was creating more depth with the catching spot. I think we did that today.”

Gone are outfielder Adam Duvall and righthande­d pitcher John Curtiss.

In are prospects Alex Jackson and Payton Henry, both of whom were among their respective former organizati­on’s top prospects.

Jackson, acquired from the Braves for Duvall, was the No. 22 overall prospect in the Braves’ organizati­on, according to Baseball America.

The 25-year-old has batted .287 with 11 home runs and 36 RBI in 30 games for Triple A Gwinnett this season and has also appeared in 10

games at the Major League level this season.

Henry, acquired from the Brewers for Curtiss, was the No. 19 overall prospect in the Brewers’ organizati­on, according to MLB Pipeline. In five minor-league seasons, Henry is a .248 career hitter with 33 home runs and 185 RBI.

As of right now, Jorge Alfaro and Sandy Leon are the Marlins’ bigleague catchers. Nick Fortes, Santiago Chavez and Brian Navarreto were their top options at Triple

A Jacksonvil­le.

Will Banfield, Miami’s top-ranked catching prospect, is in Class A Advanced Beloit.

But in order to make those trades, the Marlins had to give up a pair of players who were beneficial to the club this year but might not have been in their future plans.

Duvall, who has a $7 million mutual option in his contract that includes a $3 million buyout if not picked up, was the lone position player the Marlins added this offseason, hoping his power in the middle of the team’s lineup would boost a sluggish offense. His tenure with the Marlins lasted 90 games.

In that time, he led the Marlins with 22 home runs. His 68 RBI are the 11th most in the majors.

But while the discussion normally focuses on

Duvall’s power at the plate, he was just as valuable in the field. Duvall’s 13 defensive runs saved, according to FanGraphs, are tied with Michael A. Taylor for second most among outfielder­s.

With that, the Marlins’ entire starting outfield from Opening Day has been traded away. Miami sent left fielder Corey Dickerson to the Toronto Blue Jays along with reliever Adam Cimber for infielder Joe Panik on June 29. And on Wednesday, the Marlins traded center fielder Starling Marte to the Oakland Athletics for left-handed starting pitcher Jesus Luzardo.

The Marlins are now using the next two months to give prospects and players in prove-it years a chance to get regular playing time. Brian Miller and Bryan De La Cruz (acquired in the Yimi Garcia trade Wednesday) are making their MLB debuts Friday. Magneuris Sierra, Lewis Brinson and Monte Harrison — three players who might not be on the roster in 2022 — are the top internal options to play center field.

Curtiss, acquired from the Tampa Bay Rays at the start of spring training, had a 2.48 ERA over 40 innings with 40 strikeouts against nine walks.

 ?? TERRANCE WILLIAMS AP ?? Marlins right fielder Adam Duvall, who led the team with 22 home runs and whose 68 RBI are 11th most in the majors, was traded Friday for catching prospect Alex Jackson.
TERRANCE WILLIAMS AP Marlins right fielder Adam Duvall, who led the team with 22 home runs and whose 68 RBI are 11th most in the majors, was traded Friday for catching prospect Alex Jackson.

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