Miami's Already Looking Up At The Rest of the NL East

The Miami Marlins had the worst start of all five teams in the NL East
Jazz Chisholm Jr. wasn't able to bring this one back, as the Pittsburgh Pirates went on to win all four games of the weekend series.
Jazz Chisholm Jr. wasn't able to bring this one back, as the Pittsburgh Pirates went on to win all four games of the weekend series. / Jim Rassol-USA TODAY Sports

The Miami Marlins made the postseason in 2023 by virtue of their excellence in one run games and extra innings - last season, the team was 33-14 in one-run games and 7-3 in extra innings.

Hello, regression to the mean.

Miami dropped two extra innings contests over the weekend, 6-5 in twelve innings on Thursday and going down 9-7 yesterday. As the only team to play a four game series and one of two teams in the division to be swept, Miami's already in last place in the division.

Let's look at what each team did last weekend, where they currently stand in the division after the first weekend, and what their next series has in store.

Braves - 2-1 (.667), -- GB, +13 run differential
Phillies - 1-2 (.333), 1.0 GB, -13 run differential
Nationals - 1-2 (.333), 1.0 GB, - 6 run differential
Mets - 0-3 (.000), 2.0 GB, - 6 run differential
Marlins - 0-4 (.000), 2.5 GB, -14 run differential

Atlanta Braves

Atlanta went into Philadelphia and exorcised some demons, absolutely blasting Philly pitching in the first two games before losing a closely-fought contest on Sunday afternoon. The Braves did it against Philly starters, tagging Aaron Nola for seven runs, and they also did it against Philly's bullpen, scoring nine runs in two innings on Friday.

Now, Atlanta's not unbeatable - they lost Sunday's game and also Sean Murphy (oblique) for several weeks, but they're clearly the class of the East once again.

Philadelphia Phillies

It's incredibly early, but Philadelphia needs to get some of their stars going this week. Bryce Harper, who took Sunday off as a "planned maintenance day" after tumbling over the dugout railing, is hitless in eight plate appearances, while infielders Trea Turner and Alex Bohm have combined for only three hits in twenty-four plate appearances. Philly's twelve runs and twenty-two hits for the series place them 14th out of 15 NL teams while their twenty-eight strikeouts is 5th in the NL. The hope is that they can get off the skid against a tough Reds team in Citizens Bank Park starting today.

Washington Nationals

Several of the new bats showed up against the Reds, pushing Washington to one win and staking them to another lead entering the 9th inning in a game Cincinnati eventually walked off thanks to back-to-back homers in the 9th.

Jesse Winker was 5-11 with a run over the weekend, while former Braves leftfielder Eddie Rosario (playing centerfield!) chipped in a homer, a double, and three RBIs. Prospect Trey Lipscomb, called up after the injury to Nick Senzel, went 3-7 over the weekend with a homer and a stolen base.

Washington hosts Pittsburgh this week, a team that might be good or might have played a bad opponent in their opening series - more on that in a minute.

New York Mets

When discussing the possibility of trading Max Scherzer and Justin Verlander last season, team officials reportedly told Scherzer that the organization was eyeing 2025 as the earliest contention window.

Last weekend did nothing to disprove that assessment, as the Mets were swept by the Milwaukee Brewers at home. The pitching wasn't great, as reclamation project Luis Severino was blasted for six runs on twelve hits in just five innings, but Jose Quintana (2 runs in 4.2 innings) and Tylor Megill (2 runs, 1 earned, in 4.0 innings) acquitted themselves somewhat okay but couldn't give New York the length needed to stay competitive on the weekend.

Offensively, wunderkid catcher Francisco Alvarez was the most impressive performer of the weekend, going 5-10 with a homer, a double, and two RBIs, while Pete Alonso kicked his walk year off in style by going 4-11 with a homer and Brett Baty drove in three thanks to a well-timed pinch-hit bomb in game two.

Miami Marlins

Woof. Miami showed that they've not addressed any of the weaknesses from last year's squad and don't have the same strengths as last year in their opening four game series against the Pirates.

For a team that finished below-average in homer production on the 2023 season, they hit only three longballs in the four games...but none of them were able to turn the tide and get them into the win column, as they were swept in all four games. Miami did push two of the games into extras, playing four total extra innings, but never could get in the win column against Pittsburgh.

What's worse, the extra innings and the pre-existing rotation injuries exposed the weakness of the team's pitching staff, historically a strenght for the franchise. They had to make a roster move for another pitcher prior to Sunday's series finale, throwing newly called-up Vladimir Gutierrez three innings and still being forced to use their closer for the 10th as he was the only arm with less than 35 pitches across the previous three days.

On the weekend, Miami put up a 6.08 ERA and saw only one starter, Opening Day's Jesus Luzardo, leave with the possibility of getting a win after going five innings with two runs on two hits, walking two and striking out eight.

MVP's for the weekend

Hitter: Atlanta's Ozzie Albies - 5-13, 2 HR, 6 RBIs, 1 SB
Pitcher: Philly's Zach Wheeler - 6.0 IP, 5H, 0R/ER, 0 BB, 5 Ks

Who's playing today?

The entire division's back in action today, with everyone playing at home except Atlanta.

Atlanta (Morton) @ CWS (Flexen), 2:10 PM
Washington (Gore) vs PIT (Gonzales), 4:05 PM
Philadelphia (Sánchez) vs CIN (Abbott), 6:40 PM
Miami (Meyer) vs LAA (Silseth), 6:40 PM
New York (Manaea) vs DET (Olson), 7:10 PM

Enjoy the games, everyone.


Published
Lindsay Crosby

LINDSAY CROSBY

Managing Editor for Blackerby Media, covering the Atlanta Braves and Miami Marlins Also: Senior Baseball Writer for Auburn Daily, member of both the National College Baseball Writers Association and Internet Baseball Writers Association of America (where he won the 2023 Prospects, Minors, & College Writer of the Year award)