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Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Too Early For Panic Button

After wrapping up their series victory on Wednesday, the Padres sent the suddenly struggling Marlins to their third straight series loss, following unsuccessful stops in Houston and Colorado.

This rough stretch has dropped the Marlins to .500 on the year and has left some in Marlin-land reaching for the panic button. The problem, though, is that there really is no right answer for the team right now. The offense hits early and disappears late, the starting pitching and the bullpen never seem to get in sync, and Fredi seems to have an inexplicably long leash for pitchers, demonstrated again today as he stuck with Nate Robertson for 5 excruciating runs in a tough 5th inning.

The Marlins have some prospects who are pretty close to household names in Logan Morrison and Mike Stanton, but right now, the offense isn't the problem, and even then, there isn't a clear spot for either player. The team has already overhauled their bullpen once with the demotion of Jose Veras and they've only recently gotten Brian Sanches back from the disabled list, so it appears this pitching staff is the one the Marlins want, at least for the short term. Even looking long term, there is no hot shot pitching prospect in the minors, and except for Taylor Tankersley, there doesn't appear to be anyone in the system that has ace reliever potential either. Andrew Miller and Sean West are starters with control issues and Ryan Tucker, at least now, is still viewed by the organization as a starter.

That leaves only one remaining option for a potential shakeup: Fredi Gonzalez, he of the continually hot seat. It's no secret the Marlins tried to replace Fredi this offseason; and owner Jeffrey Loria has never been overly enamored with Fredi as he personally directed Larry Beinfest to hire Joe Girardi, not Fredi Gonzalez, prior to the 2006 season and it was only after their well publicized run-in that Loria canned Girardi. Quite simply, Gonzalez has never had the owner's support.

Making a change now, though, would send all the wrong messages. It would reek of desperation and show a complete obliviousness as to the putrid state of the bullpen.

Firing Fredi is certainly possible, and come May, if the Marlins are still towing the .500 line, it's probable the Marlins make a move, fairly or unfairly. However, for now, the fans shouldn't make too much of the slide to .500.

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