Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

No place like home — at long last

After 23 days on the road, NL East leaders in Miami

- By Steven Wine

MIAMI — Marlins Park will have a new look for its 2020 season debut Friday, thanks to cozier dimensions and a switch to artificial turf.

Also, there will be a firstplace team in the home dugout.

And that Marlins roster looks a lot different than it did when the team was last in Miami, before departing for a season-opening threegame trip. That was more than three weeks ago.

“You feel like you’ve got a quick trip,” manager Don Mattingly said. “You pack hardly nothing, and the next thing you know, a month later, you’ve got to pay rent again.”

The Marlins’ 23-day road odyssey was necessitat­ed by a coronaviru­s outbreak that infected at least 18 of their players during the opening weekend in Philadelph­ia. Their season was suspended for a week and the schedule scrambled, including the postponeme­nt of eight games at Marlins Park.

With the revised schedule, the Marlins have played two “home” games on the road. Three weeks into Major League Baseball’s 60-game season, they will finally play in Miami on Friday against the Atlanta Braves.

“We talked going into the the season about how it was going to be different,” Mattingly said, “but I didn’t envision this. We’ve been tested early.”

And they’ve passed. Largely because of the outbreak, the Marlins have made 58 roster moves since the season began July 24. Only 13 players on the opening-day roster remain active, yet Miami is 8-4 and holds a one-game lead over second-place Atlanta in the National League East.

It’s heady stuff for a franchise that before this season had never been in first place after June 30. Now, thanks to a season shortened by the pandemic, the Marlins are in the thick of the playoff race and have a shot at their first postseason berth since 2003.

“Every win feels like it’s worth three,” closer Brandon Kintzler said.

That was especially true in the Marlins’ most recent game before an off day Thursday. They blew an 8-0 lead but became the first NL team ever to allow seven homers and still win, beating the Toronto Blue Jays 14-11.

“We’ll take them any way we can get them — 14-11 or 1-0, it doesn’t matter,” said Josh A. Smith, who pitched a scoreless 10th inning for the save.

Smith is one of 18 players added when the outbreak hit. The newcomers, mostly journeymen and second-tier prospects, have tried to bond with the holdover players in accelerate­d fashion, all while everyone observes social distancing and wears a masks.

“You see a lot of guys you played with and against along the way,” Smith said. “Now we’re teammates, and we just roll with it.”

Many of the reinforcem­ents are placeholde­rs until the infected Marlins are cleared to return, which could start to happen soon. Miami is especially thin in pitching, with three starters and eight members of the opening-day bullpen on the injured list.

“We did a nice job of surviving to this point,” Mattingly said.

Now his makeshift roster can take a bow at Marlins Park, although the stands will be even more empty than usual.

There are other changes, with the pitcher-friendly park slightly less so after an offseason reconfigur­ation.

The distances to the fence have been shortened from 407 to 400 feet in center field and from 399 to 387 in right-center. The Marlins also installed artificial turf because grass struggled to grow under the retractabl­e roof.

But then everything about this 2020 season seems different. Just ask the first-place Miami Marlins.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? The Marlins will finally play a game at Marlins Park after spending 23 days away from their home stadium because of a coronaviru­s outbreak that forced a dramatic roster makeover.
WILFREDO LEE/AP The Marlins will finally play a game at Marlins Park after spending 23 days away from their home stadium because of a coronaviru­s outbreak that forced a dramatic roster makeover.

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