• Services
  • Subscriptions
  • Digital Newspaper
  • Place an Ad
  • Miami.com
  • MomsMiami.com
  • Data Sleuth
  • ElNuevoHerald.com

Fish Bytes

All Miami Marlins All the Time

Miami Herald Blog Directory

  • Home
  • News
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • Business
  • Living
  • Opinion
  • Jobs
  • Cars
  • Real Estate
  • Shop
  • Classifieds
  •  

About Fish Bytes


Clark Spencer
E-mail  | |  Bio
Follow @clarkspencer


Manny Navarro
E-mail  | |  Bio
Follow @Manny_Navarro

Recent Posts

  • Data shows Giancarlo Stanton is hardest hitter in MLB
  • Another HR record for Giancarlo Stanton
  • Kevin Slowey to bullpen; Chris Coghlan improving
  • AWOL catcher Miguel Olivo begs Marlins: "Let me go"
  • MARLINS NOTES V. CARDINALS: LoMo Out, Eovaldi Returns in Arizona
  • Chris Coghlan to see Texas back specialist
  • Kevin Slowey to join list of Marlins pitching on three days' rest
  • Back injury could extend Chris Coghlan's time on DL
  • Mike Redmond: "We've been waiting for this day"
  • Giancarlo Stanton is back, Casey Kotchman to DL

Marlins News

Herald Blogs

  • News, Entertainment and More

Syndicate this site
Add to Google
Add to My Yahoo
Add me to your TypePad People list
Powered by TypePad


Mobile

Download your 2010 Florida Baseball App today!

Logan Morrison talks about his return to the Marlins' lineup; Coghlan on his calf; roster updates

NEW YORK -- Logan Morrison was all smiles Sunday morning sitting in the Marlins dugout. 

The 25-year old first baseman, who is trying to battle back from two surgeries on his right knee over the past year and a half, was happy to be back with his teammates and in a major league lineup for the first time since last July 28. Is his knee finally 100 percent?

"I don't think it's 100 percent, but it's pretty close," said Morrison, who spent all of spring training walking in an anti-gravity suit on a treadmill before finally beginning a 16-game rehab assignment last month. "I'm happy with it. Hopefully I can stay away from walls and the adrenaline doesn't get the best of me.

"When I first started sliding on it, it bothered. But the last couple days sliding on it hasn't bothered it."

After learning mid-game Saturday in Birmingham he was flying up to New York to join the Marlins Sunday, the always easy going Morrison said he sent a text message to manager Mike Redmond during the 20-inning game saying 'I guess I'm flying to New York to pitch.'

Morrison hit just .179 with two homers, 10 RBI, six walks and four strikeouts over 56 at-bats during his time in Single A Jupiter and Double A Jacksonville. But he's confident his hitting stroke will eventually come back. "It's what I do," he said. "It will come back."

What does he hope to bring a team that has a 17-44 record, worst in the majors?

"I don't have any secrets for them. I don't have any cure-alls," he said. "It's just going to be about going out and competing. Turn it around a little bit. Just because we're young doesn't mean we're not good. We have all the talent in the world. Play like you know you're going to succeed. Call it cocky, call it arrogant, fine. When you go into second base and a guy hits into a ground ball double play let him feel you. If he turns that one, he's not going to turn the second one. That's how you've got to play. That's how I play."

DISAPPOINTED COGHLAN HEADS TO DISABLED LIST

The last thing Chris Coghlan wanted just as he was beginning to turn his career around was another trip to the disabled list. But that's where the 2009 National League Rookie of the Year is headed after losing his three-week battle with numbness in his right calf.

"My muscle is not firing. It hurts. It feels like a real tight feeling that I can't push," said Coghlan, who is supposed to undergo an MRI on Monday. "The DL sucks. I've been waiting a year and a half for this opportunity I got, so that sucks even more. It's disappointing. I'm frustrated, but at the end of the day I did what I could do. I grinded through it, and this is what's just in the cards for me. I've got to turn the page, be positive and do whatever I can do to get back here as soon as possible."

A pinch-hitter and reserve for the first month and a half of the season, Coghlan found his way into the starting lineup on May 18th and hit .343 with a homer and 9 RBI over his last 18 games. With a crowded outfield full of young prospects, the Marlins have talked about moving him to third base. It's a possibility that's where he'll be when he returns.

STANTON COULD BE BACK MONDAY

> All-Star right fielder Giancarlo Stanton, rehabbing in Single A Jupiter and trying to come back from a Grade 2 hamstring strain, text messaged Redmond and trainer Sean Cunningham Saturday to tell him he's ready to go.

Although he's gone hitless in the four rehab games he's played in -- including a double header Saturday -- Redmond said just having Stanton back in the lineup will be huge. It's likely the Marlins will send first baseman Casey Kotchman, 0-for-20 this season at the plate, to the disabled list on Monday with a strained oblique to make room for Stanton on the roster.

"It's a great presence to have in our lineup," Redmond said. "Even if he takes, he's going to walk. If he's ready to go, he's ready to go."

> Right-hander Nathan Eovaldi was scheduled to make his fourth and final rehab start in Double A Jacksonville Sunday.

> Redmond said right-hander Henderson Alvarez, who threw a 55 pitch simulated game Saturday, will likely begin his rehab stint next week.

> Second baseman Donovan Solano, whose gone 6-for-10 with an RBI in three rehab game starts down in Jupiter, is available to return this week. But the Marlins haven't decided yet what they're going to do.

"Solano's available," Redmond said. "But we still have to evaluate where he's at. We got a lot of guys that are close and we've talked about having some decisions to make. We have to sit down and figure out where these guys are at. We knew we would be getting guys back. Of course it all works out you get them all back the same week. It's a good situation. We're getting the lineup we thought we'd have when we left in spring training back. That's good."

> Saturday hero Kevin Slowey, who pitched seven scoreless innings of relief, will now pitch on Wednesday. He was scheduled to make his next start on Tuesday, but Redmond has moved right-hander Jacob Turner up a day and flip-flopped their spots to allow Slowey to gain an extra day of rest. 

June 09, 2013 | Permalink | Comments (16)

After "The Catch," Stanton tweaks shoulder trying to make another one

ATLANTA -- Nobody knows how much pain Giancarlo Stanton will be in when he wakes up Thursday morning, but his left shoulder was "freaking" hurting him Wednesday.

Stanton, who made a diving grab to rob Jason Heyward of a run-scoring extra-base hit that would have tied the game in the fourth, definitely tweaked his left shoulder trying to catch a sinking line drive off he bat of pinch-hitter Eric Hinske in the seventh. His shoulder was rapped in ice after the game and Stanton admitted he was in pain.

"That freaking hurt," Stanton said of the failed attempt to catch the ball off Hinkse. "I lost it in the lights and then I picked it up probably this far away. I don't know how it hurts so bad. But they were saying it looked pretty ugly on film. [My left arm] kind of yanked over. The ground kept it from going. But it will be alright. It just was really [painful]. It really hurt."

Stanton has had some amazing catches this season and some really ugly defensive moments too. Later in the seventh, he was charged with his fifth error of the season when he booted a single to right by Martin Prado. 

"A lot of stupid, stupid mistakes this year," Stanton said of his defense. "Like that ball right there, it snaked on me a little bit. That's about all my errors -- easy plays like that. I've just got to just learn from it and keep improving."

As for his big catch, Stanton said: "I just put my head down and ran -- ran to a spot and popped [my head] back up and dove for it... This was way better than [Tuesday's vs. Pirates]. This one saved two runs and the other one was just a catch."

> Give the normally quiet Austin Kearns credit for the best quote of the night. Told that before Jose Reyes stole home Wednesday, he was the only Marlin on the team who had achieved the feat, Kearns laughed and said: "Not everybody can run like me and Reyes you know."

May 16, 2012 in Defense | Permalink | Comments (5)

Ozzie may have finally settled on keeping Omar 2nd, Boni 7th in Marlins lineup

ATLANTA -- A week after dropping Emilio Bonifacio from the No. 2 spot in the batting order to seventh, and bringing Omar Infante up to bat second, manager Ozzie Guillen sounded Wednesday like his days of juggling the Marlins lineup to find the right combination may be over.

"When I first got this job, that was my idea. How do I put Omar batting second?," Guillen said before the Marlins took on the Braves at Turner Field. "But I needed some production in the bottom of the lineup, too. Early in the season Bonifacio was doing good, and then he started struggling a little bit. 

"I think the lineup we have is a lot better now because we have speed also in the bottom of the lineup. We can steal bases late in the game. Before we couldn't, we had slow guys in the bottom. I think it makes the lineup a little bit better overall."

Bonifacio went into Wednesday's game hitting .417 (10 of 24) with a double, three triples and two RBI since being moved down to seventh in Houston. He was just .152 as the No. 2 hitter in the 17 previous games before that.

Infante, meanwhile, is hitting .381 (8 of 21) with four RBI since being moved back into the second spot. Last year, Infante hit .278 with six homers and 37 RBI in 110 starts in the two-hole.

"I think Infante is going to see more fastballs because Reyes is on base," Guillen said. "But it's all about getting on base and good at-bats. Little by little we've started getting better. Hopefully, we start to feel each other out and not wait until the ninth [inning] to score some runs."

The Marlins finally did that in their win Tuesday, scoring five runs in the fourth inning. The Marlins, though, have been infamous this season for waiting until after the sixth inning to get their offense going.

Tuesday, Infante had the ninth four-hit game of his career. He said the bunt single in the third inning, which ended an 0-for-11 string, got him going. "After that I felt better with my approach," Infante said.

Asked if his move to the seventh spot has taken some pressure off him, Bonifacio said: "I don't know. I just know I'm not swinging at bad pitches like I was before. That's really the difference. 

NO CELEBRATING FOR JJ

There was no post-game celebration for Josh Johnson after he picked up his first win in 13 months on Tuesday night. Asked Wednesday how many bottles of champagne he popped, the two-time All-Star joked: "Too many to count."

Johnson didn't even keep the game ball. "You just move onto the next one," he said.

Johnson, who was born and raised in Minnesota, will make his next start Sunday in Cleveland. He said he's been to Progressive Field just once -- as a 12-year old. "We were playing in a World Series Tournament somewhere nearby," Johnson said. "I think I saw five innings there."

> The radar gun at Marlins Park wasn't operating Tuesday. Johnson said he's not sure what his velocity was because of it. Pitching coach Randy St. Claire said the velocity of Johnson's pitches Tuesday "looked about the same as usual to me."

> Wednesday's game was a chance for Guillen to reunite with his former White Sox hitting coach Greg Walker, who is now on Fredi Gonzalez's staff with the Braves. Walker -- along with Guillen -- was fired after nine seasons in Chicago last October. 

> Guillen said he plans on using Logan Morrison, Greg Dobbs and Austin Kearns in the designated hitter spot when the Marlins play at American League parks during Interleague play. 

WEDNESDAY'S LINEUPS

> Marlins (19-17): 1. Jose Reyes SS, 2. Omar Infante 2B, 3. Hanley Ramirez 3B, 4. Austin Kearns LF, 5. Giancarlo Stanton RF, 6. Gaby Sanchez 1B, 7. Emilio Bonifacio CF, 8. John Buck C, 9. Mark Buehrle.

> Braves (23-14): 1. Tyler Pastornicky SS, 2. Martin Prado LF, 3. Freddie Freeman 1B, 4. Dan Uggla 2B, 5. Brian McCann C, 6. Matt Diaz RF, 7. Jason Heyward CF, 8. Juan Francisco 3B, 9. Mike Minor P.

May 16, 2012 in The Lineup | Permalink | Comments (5)

iPhone App

Download your Florida Marlins iPhone App today!



The Ultimate Fan Shop



Search This Blog

June 2013
Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30

Video

Get Adobe Flash player

Categories

  • Andrew Miller
  • Away Games
  • Bench
  • Books
  • Bullpen
  • Dan Uggla
  • David Samson
  • Defense
  • Fredi Gonzalez
  • Games
  • Hanley Ramirez
  • Home Games
  • Jeffrey Loria
  • Jeremy Hermida
  • Larry Beinfest
  • Major League Baseball
  • Marlins Stadium
  • Mike Jacobs
  • Minor League Baseball
  • Pitching Staff
  • Scott Olsen
  • Sports
  • The Lineup

Archives

  • June 2013
  • May 2013
  • April 2013
  • March 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Copyright | About The Miami Herald | Advertise