January 2009
Continuing My Marlins History Lesson
So in anticipation of Spring Training I’m counting down the 16 seasons of Florida Marlins baseball. Unfortunately I counting backwards, from worst season for the franchise to the best. My first post was on the 1998 squad and boy that was hard to stomach. It was hard to believe that whole summer we were technically “defending the trophy.” HA!
So my next ranking will actually be the 14/15 rankings. Thankfully we’ve only past the century mark in the loss column once. Our divisional rivals to the North, The Phillies had hundred loss seasons for five straight years, a baseball record from ’38 to ’42. The Braves and Mets were not far behind with four consecutive seasons granted the Bravos did it was a hundred years ago when they were the Boston Doves and the Mets entered their first four years of pro ball with a hundred losses a year. Other franchises remarkably have stayed competitive enough to stay above that Mendoza line: Houston Astros, Colorado Rockies, and the California/Anaheim/LA Angels…of Anaheim.
But two years the Marlins came awfully close, the inaugural 1993 season and the 1999 team. Please let me bash the ’99 season first. Ha.
So the largest firesale of a World Series Champion, esentially trading a world champion for minor league players, took a couple years for rebuilding. In ’99 the theme was the same, no expectations of making a playoff push let alone a .500 push. The 3 million fans that showed up in ’93 was less than half in ’99.
But those that made it to Pro Player Stadium welcomed back skipper John Boles, who replaced Rene Lachman in 1996 for 75 games. No…he did not live under a rock and realized he was coaching an entirely different team.
The offense was starting to look good with the rise of Luis Castillo, Mike Lowell, Preston Wilson, and Alex Gonzalez. Mark Kotsay and Kevin Millar were solid bats. Surprisingly the lineup was pretty well rounded with a .263 team batting average. The pitching staff…however…was rough.
Only one pitcher had double digit wins (Brian Meadows), and Dennis Springer’s career high 16 losses. The rotation saw a young Ryan Dempster and AJ Burnett, so we defintely had promise. The pitching staff was loaded in closers: Dempster, Matt Mantei, Branden Looper, and Antonio Alfonseca. However with an aging Alex Fernzadez, a tailing Livan Hernandez and Brian Edmonson, Vic Darensbrough and Vladmir Nunez, the entire NL East must have had a .100 point bump in their batting average. No wonder Chipper Jones won the MVP Award.
The lasting legacy of this 98 loss team were the transactions this team were able to make. The solid core of a World Series champions were built by the moves made in ’99. The Fish traded three virtual unknowns to the Yankees for Mike Lowell. A solid first round pick in Josh Beckett. Signing a 16 year old Venezuelan named Miguel Cabrera. And sending a promising closer Matt Mantei for a 6’4 righty named Brad Penny. 14 future World Series Champions were due to the comings and goings of the ’99 season.
Not to let the front office go completely scott free. Forget Dan Uggla, the Marlins could have made the best Rule 5 pickup if we held onto a young pitcher named Johan Santana who was traded to the Minnesota Twins. The rest as they say…is history.
Ranting and Raving on Arbitration
Arbitration to me has some pretty stupid points.
The common purpose for it, correct me if I’m wrong, is for players that are due a raise after their third year in the league. I’m a Marlins, fan and I completely agree some players (Dan Uggla) are incredibly underpaid from others. Hence why arbitration is a positive.
As far as my understanding, arbitration should be for three year veterans whose output has far surpassed the league minimum they are getting. Ok. No problems with that…..
But then there’s the Ryan Howards…..the Erik Bedards…and the Adam LaRoches.
Please let me start with the latter. LaRoche puts up decent numbers for an everyday first baseman. But the keyword is decent! LaRoche had THE SAME EXACT NUMBERS in 2008 as 2007 and….get this: gets a raise up to 7.05 (up two mill). Why? Am I the only baseball fan that heard the news and looked up if he were deserving? Let me say I’m aware of not being a major leaguer, but business is business. Competiveness drives my career. If I produce the same 2009 as 2008, the last thing I’m deserving of is a raise.
LaRoche, like most arbitration clients, benefit from the Mark Teixara signings that other teams make. But I’d like to pose the question, if he gives you the same output, why should his salary increase? It should be about what LaRoche brings to the table more so than what the market value for him is.
Ryan Howard is smart to avoid a multiyear contract. No need to compete and better your numbers, just keep the same numbers and you’ll get a raise…every year. Don’t agree? Erik Bedard of the Seattle Mariners won just six games last season and failed to reach 100 innings pitched, but the offseason dealt him a 750,000 raise. Wonder if he called CC and AJ and thanked them for putting a new porch in his house.
Maybe I’m being too critcal. Maybe it isn’t that big a deal and I’m trying to blow it out of proportion. That’s what I’d like the baseball world to decide. Is this just part of the business…or bad business? I would like to say, Can’t wait for the umpire to say “Play Ball” so we can forget about all this. Haha.
Countdown to Spring Training
Welcome to the hardest-working Blog covering the Florida
Marlins. New to the business of Major League Blogging, Fish Baits
will be an excellent site for fans to get an opinionated view of the Marlins
Front Office.
Throughout the summer, Fish Baits will be providing you with a year-by-year
recap of the most unique franchise in the big leagues.
Soooooooooooo…. let’s begin my countdown at number 17. And what an easy and uncontroversial season to pick: 52 games behind first place. Winners of 10 games in a month just twice and playing 56 games under .500.
When the topic of worst
baseball teams ever came up. Of course the obligatory ’62 Mets and ’03 Tigers
come up, as it should.
The 1962 New York Mets were an expansion team that brought baseball back to America’s
largest city after the Brooklyn Dodgers and New York Giants left for the West
Coast in 1957. In 1962 the Mets failed to have a player drive in 100 runs (The two
franchises that left New York
had the top two leaders in RBI that year), batted .240 as a team, and lost 120
games (the single most loses in MLB History).
The 2003 Tigers didn’t have much to brag about. The Mets had to choose from a
list of castoffs to start their franchise, the ’03 Tigers dug themselves into a
43-119 season. Starting Pitcher Mike Maroth lost 21 games while teammate Jeremy
Bonderman missed the mark with 19 losses. Most college graduates (including
myself) weren’t even alive the last time a major league pitcher lost 20
games in a season, when Brian Kingman lost that many in 32 starts for the A’s
in 1980. It was a common occurrence during an era when starting pitchers closed
games (The Tigers had just 3 complete games during their unremarkable 2003 tear; which is unfathomable. To put it in perspective Walter
Johnson completed 531 starts; In 1904 Jack Taylor completed 39 consecutive
starts, yet the Tigers had 3). Back to my point, many pitchers lost 20 games in season.
1950s 11 1960s 16, 1970s 14, 1980s 1, but 1990s 0 and 2000s 1
So Maroth did something no pitcher had done in 23 years. Impressive.
Back to the All-time worst. If you look at worst winning percentage, the 1899 Cleveland
Spiders take the cake with a 20-134 record (.130 percentage), 1916 Philadelphia A's
(36-117 .235 percentage), and the 1935 Boston Braves (38-115 .248) all have a worse
winning percentage than both the Mets and Tigers.
Ok so now you're saying, "Where the hell is this kid going with this." Well....it's a perfect
segway to describe the 1998 Florida Marlins team that won just 12 more games than the
all-time worst. To add insult to injury, the Marlins won the World Series months before
the '98 team tried to defend the crown. Laughable.
14 of the 25 1997 team were traded in what had to be the largest fire sale of a World
Series winner in baseball history. Left field would no longer be manned by Moises Alou
who drove in 115 runs...his replacement? A 25 year old Cliff Floyd, who at the time,
never hit more than 6 home runs in a season despite a 16 year career of 233 homeruns.
Greg Zaun took over for one of the greatest defensive catchers in Charles Johnson. Devon
White and Gary Sheffield had a combined 24 years of major league experience by
1998...and they were replaced by Todd Dunwoody and Mark Kotsay, who weren't even
on Earth for 24 years.
Needless to say it was a sad off-season for Marlin fans. The highest of highs turned into the
lowest of lows. The 1998 squad fielded future All-Stars Derek Lee, Edgar Renteria, Cliff
Floyd, Luis Castillo, Alex Gonzalez, Preston Wilson, Ryan Dempster and Livan Hernandez.
Hernandez and Brian Meadows combined for 40 percent of the 54 wins. The runner up for
Rookie of the Year in 1997 went 10-12 the following season, while Meadows had his
career mark of 11 wins in a season. Outside of that, names like Donn Pall, Andy Larkin,
Rafael Medina, Eric Ludwick and Gabe Gonzalez will make you scratch your head. The
Marlins bullpen combined for just 24 saves that year. An ex-Marlin (Trevor Hoffman) led
the league with 53 saves BY HIMSELF.
The '98 Marlins had two players with more strikeouts than hits. Three players with over
100 strikeouts, no one drove in 100 runs, and no one watched it. Why? Because ticket
prices increased 12%. What a year!

But the lasting legacy of the worst season in franchise year will be the opportunity to acquire
pivotal players such as Derek Lee, AJ Burnett, Preston Wilson, and Mike Lowell. Heck,
we even housed a future Hall of Famer (Mike Piazza) for five games; although he never hit a
home run during his stint.
Compare the '98 squad to the '03 Tigers with a 20 game loser, the '62 Mets with 120
losses, or the 1899 Spiders (if given 100 games would win 13) and realize they were in the
neighborhood but weren't the kings. However, the pain and agony of dismantling the
champs will always live in the hearts and minds of South Floridians and some have never
been back.
Nolasco, Amezaga, Ross Come to Terms…Uggla a Different Story
Just hours before the Tuesday noon arbitration deadline, the Florida Marlins did come to terms with three players, but interesting was the one they didn’t sign.
Ricky Nolasco, Alfredo Amezaga, and Cody Ross, all agreeing to one year contracts meant the Marlins have either signed or traded 16 or their 17 arbitration elgible players.
Thanks to a healthy 2008 campaign, Nolasco was the ace last season with a 15-8 record and threw over 200 innings. Nolasco agreed to a 2.4 million dollar deal with roughly 50,000 extra if he puts up as good of numbers as last season.
Ross gets
$2.25 million next season with a chance for $25,000 in performance
bonuses, and Amezaga agreed to a deal worth $1.3 million plus $100,000
in available bonuses.
Ross was an every day player (145 games) for the first time in his career and proved his bat would help a lineup, setting career highs in hits, homers, and RBI. Ross will be making the switch in 2009 from centerfield to possibly leftfield with the addition of Cameron Maybin.
As for “The Amazing Amezaga”, he plays wherever the Marlins asking him to. Anywhere from centerfield to short to second and third. Amezaga somehow manages to dig and scrap his way into the lineup (132 games in ’06, 133 in ’07, and 125 in ’08); so keeping him on the roster will prove benefital to the Marlins.
So you would wager before the off-season, of the 17 arbitration eligible players on the Marlins roster, a two All-Star whose brief three year career already has 90 homer runs would be top on your to-do list?
Mike Berardino of the Sun-Sentinel is reporting the Marlins couldn’t be further away from coming to terms on the greatest Rule V, well EVER. Having already passed the Tuesday noon deadline, both the Marlins and Dan Uggla will take this case to an abritrator who most likely will side with Uggla.
Per club policy, the Marlins will cease nogitiations with Uggla and await the February hearing, which will be a three-person panel. If the panel sides with Uggla, the Marlins then could trade the second baseman.
Which in my opinon, is horrible for a man that deserves more than 5.35 million. All-Star teammate Chase Utley puts up near numbers as Uggla, and he signed a seven-year, 85 million dollar deal which puts him annually at 6.5 million.