Even After A Franchise Best June One Marlins Question Looms

As the Miami Marlins ride high on their best month ever, the spotlight now turns to crucial infield reinforcements to sustain their playoff push.

The Marlins have spent June looking like a team that’s figured something out, and Tuesday at Coors Field gave them one more jolt to close out the month.

Miami rolled to a 14-3 win over the Rockies, and the big swing came from Javier Sanoja, who crushed a three-run homer in the third inning. Those runs turned out to be the game-winners, but the damage went well beyond one blast. The Marlins scored in each of the first three innings and never let Colorado settle in.

The victory locked in a remarkable month for Miami. The club went 20-6 in June, the best monthly record in franchise history, topping the previous high of 21-8 in May 2012.

At 46-40, the Marlins also stayed right in the thick of the NL Wild Card chase, entering Tuesday just one-half game behind the St. Louis Cardinals.

Still, the numbers on the scoreboard don’t hide the roster question hanging over this team. The Marlins’ biggest need ahead of the trade deadline looks a lot like infield help, especially on the corners. Sanoja, a third-year big leaguer, gave Miami exactly the kind of production it’s been missing, and he did it while playing shortstop Tuesday.

Third base remains the area that looks most unsettled. Sanoja has been splitting time there with Graham Pauley and Leo Jiménez, and on this night he made the strongest case of the group. He finished 3-for-5 with three RBI and three runs scored, and over his past seven games he has slashed .500/.859/1.326.

First base is also very much in flux. Kyle Stowers, who has been working as an outfielder/designated hitter, could grow into a long-term answer there.

He had three hits, including a triple, drove in two runs and scored twice. The Marlins are also trying Kemp Alderman, a prospect, at first base, while catcher Liam Hicks got the start at the position Tuesday and went 2-for-6 with a run scored.

That uncertainty shows up in the team’s overall production at the corners. Entering Tuesday, Marlins first basemen had hit just seven home runs, and the club’s third basemen combined for an NL-low .543 OPS.

So even with the best month in franchise history in the books, the question lingers: how long will Marlins general manager Gabe Kapler wait before making a move to bolster the corner infield depth?

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