2006 Florida Marlins Preview
2005 Overview:
Most Florida Marlins fans never expected another repeat of the
1997 season when management completely gutted the World Champion
Marlins but that is exactly what happened during the 2005 off
season. Despite finishing tied with the Mets for 3rd place with
an 83-79 record, Florida decided it needed to dramatically
reduce payroll in the hopes of focusing on a new stadium plan.
In just 12 short days between November 24-December 7 the Marlins
dumped millions off their payroll by moving six everyday
starting position players, two frontline pitchers, a closer and
a setup reliever. When the dust finally settled only superstars
Miguel Cabrera (.323 33 116) and Dontrelle Willis (22-10 2.63)
remained.
The 2005 offense was led by Cabrera who posted almost identical
numbers to his 2004 season ending totals. Cabrera was joined by
newly acquired 1st baseman Carlos Delgado (.301 33 115) and
outfielder Juan Encarnacion (.287 16 76) while pesky leadoff
hitter Juan Pierre (.276 in 162 games with 57 stolen bases), 3rd
baseman Mike Lowell (.236 8 58) and newly signed catcher Paul Lo
Duca (.283 6 57) rounded out the rest of the starting lineup.
Willis simply dominated in 2005 by starting the season off with
a 5-0 record with a 1.29 ERA. Dontrelle managed to enter the all
star break with an impressive 13-4 record and 2.39 ERA. Starters
Josh Beckett (15-8 3.37), A.J. Burnett (12-12 3.44) and newly
acquired Brian Moehler (6-12 4.55) joined reliever Todd Jones
(1-5 2.10 40 saves in 45 save opportunities) to complete the
rotation.
Off Season Moves:
New appointed manager Joe Girardi and be surrounded by fresh,
new faces in his 2006 debut. Hanley Ramirez is a top rookie
prospect who was obtained in the Beckett trade from Boston,
Ramirez has only played in two major league games and spent most
of the 2005 season at AAA, where he batted .271 with six home
runs, 52 RBI, and 26 stolen bases. Baseball America ranks
Ramirez 10th on the Top 100 prospect list and he will likely get
the starting shortstop position moving Cabrera to third base,
his natural position.
The Marlins are also excited about outfielder Jeremy Hermida,
who was the team's first-round pick in the 2002 draft as well as
Eric Reed and Chris Aguila who are expected to get consideration
in center and left field. Former New York Met Mike Jacobs (.310,
11 home runs in 30 games), obtained in the Delgado deal, and Wes
Helms (.298 4 HRS in 2005) are expected to platoon at first
base, while Josh Wilson (.257 17 82 in 143 games at Triple A
Albuquerque in 2005) will compete for the starting job at second
base.
2006 Analysis:
The Marlins will start 2006 with a bunch of fresh new faces. The
fire sale provided the team with a bunch of untested talent
which will make the 2006 roster look more like a AAA minor
league team then anything else. New Manager Girardi will need to
carefully evaluate who is ready to step into a full time role
the team. Starting pitcher Dontrelle Willis is coming off his
best year ever, so he will be expected to shoulder the load once
again with Yusmeiro Petit, Sergio Mitre, Jason Vargas, Anibel
Sanchez, Josh Johnson and Scott Olsen all getting consideration
for a slot in the starting rotation. Scouts have recognized
Johnson as a No. 2 starter and Olsen, a lefthander, is also
highly regarded.