Greg Cote

Cote: Jazz, Scott trades continue Miami Marlins’ cycle of talent-for-prospects cost cutting | Opinion

USA Today Sports

The Miami Marlins continue their perpetual rebuilding toward a future that never seems to get here with a franchise strategy of not spending -- the floundering Fish as sports’ sad epitome of the axiom, “You get what you pay for.”

MLB’s trade season culminated with Tuesday’s 6 p.m. deal deadline as the Marlins, always sellers, again were fully exposed as a team not so much interested in winning as in trading away players with big-league salaries in exchange for prospects who might (or might not) someday be good but in the meantime come cheap.

Rinse, repeat, keep losing, and continue not half-filling your home ballpark.

It’s called loanDepot Park, by the way, after a mortgage lender. Perhaps the company could loan Bruce Sherman enough money to spend on players to be competitive. Because the Marlins owner is either unable or simply unwilling to do that, and the results are a team currently 39-67 (third-worst in baseball), and averaging 13,215 in attendance.

That crowd average ranks 29th of 30, ahead of only the team actively maneuvering to leave Oakland.

Marlins fans who show up every game and spend to watch this product deserve a medal. The surprise is that the ones who do show obviously care about their team yet are so docile. They should be holding up signs exhorting Sherman to spend or sell. There is a mass protest of Sherman going on, of course. It is seen and heard in the tens of thousands of fans not going to games.

The Marlins strategy is to be smarter than other teams. The blind spot in that is that others teams are just as smart and spend.

Miami’s overall player payroll of $99.2 million ranks 27th in MLB and the active 26-man payroll of $40 million ranks 29th. Both figures are last in the NL East. The rival Mets, Phillies and Braves ranked first, fourth and fifth in overall payrolls, spending a combined $797. 3 million, with winning results to show for it.

Barring aberrant luck like a wild-card playoff spot last year because of an unsustainable 33-13 record in one-run games, Miami cannot consistently compete spending so little. Yet the doomed cycle continues.

Latest example was the weekend trade of popular Jazz Chisholm to the big-spending Yankees in exchange for three prospects in catcher Agustin Ramirez and infielders Jared Serna and Abrahan Ramirez.

Then on deadline day Tuesday came the departure of ace reliever Tanner Scott, a free agent at season’s end, to the Padres along with righthander Bryan Hoeing. San Diego sends to Miami four prospects led by starting pitcher Robby Snelling, the 59th-ranked prospect in baseball by ESPN at the start of the season.

That deal happened because of course Miami would not spend big to re-sign Scott.

The trade of Chisholm does not seem terrible, I must say. Jazz was heavy on flash and hype but never really lived up. Trading away starting pitcher Zac Gallen to Arizona to get him in 2019 proved a bad deal for Miami. And Augustin Ramirez was tearing up Triple A for the Yanks and seems big league-ready at 22 and at a position of great need.

Of course catcher is a position of great need because the team traded away J.T. Realmuto to cut costs. Just like they did Giancarlo Stanton, and Christian Yelich, and Marcell Ozuna, and, earlier this season, two-time batting champion Luis Arraez.

Trading Arraez signaled the latest money-driven fire sale that continues with Chisholm, whose trade is frustrating mostly because he was a bargain, making but $2.6 million. They they dealt him for question marks.

Then Marlins fans awoke Wednesday to ne the news the cub had also traded best-hitter-left Bryan De La Cruiz to the Pirates for two prospects, pitcher Jun-Seok Shim and infielder Garret Forrester.

De La Cruz gone on the heels of Chisholm and Arraez leaves what already was a weak-hitting team with perhaps the worst lineup in MLB history.

Miami also traded reliever A.J. Puk to Arizona for a couple of prospects, and sent first baseman Josh Bell, a down-trending one-year rental, to Arizona for cash or a player to be named later.

In yet another talent-for-prospects swap, the Marlins traded lefty starting pitcher Trevor Rogers to the Orioles for infielder Connor Norby and outfielder Kyle Stowers. (In two other, minor deals Tuesday, Miami acquired Mariners pitching prospect Will Schomberg for reliever J.T. Chargois., and Mets minor-league infielder Wilfredo Lara for reliever Huascar Brazobán.)

Teams who wanted Scott also included the big-spending Dodgers and Yankees and also the Orioles, who somehow got really good despite barely outspending Miami. It is teams like the O’s and the Rays that Marlins management always holds up as examples; i.e., as excuses for not spending.

The trouble is, Miami’s front-line competition is the Phillies, Braves and Mets, who do all spend, a lot. And despite the exceptions, the correlation between spending and winning is not up for serious debate.

But the Marlins -- smarter than everybody else, apparently -- continue not spending by trading away talent for the dice roll of prospects more apt to miss than hit.

Rinse, repeat.

And if a prospect does hit big, get good and get pricey, what happens then? The next trade deadline.

Rinse, repeat.

This story was originally published July 29, 2024 at 12:52 PM.

Greg Cote
Miami Herald
Greg Cote is a Miami Herald sports columnist who in 2025 won a first-place Green Eyeshade award in Sports Commentary and has finished top 10 in column writing by the Associated Press Sports Editors on multiple occasions. Greg also hosts The Greg Cote Show podcast and appears regularly on The Dan LeBatard Show With Stugotz.
Sports Pass is your ticket to Miami sports
#ReadLocal

Get in-depth, sideline coverage of Miami area sports - only $1 a month

VIEW OFFER