Marlins Are Building Real June Momentum With One Frustrating Catch

After a week of hard-fought victories, the Miami Marlins continue their strong momentum despite narrowly missing a series sweep against the Cardinals.

The Marlins kept stacking wins through another strong June stretch, finishing 4-2 over the week and taking series from both the Rangers and Cardinals. They head into a four-game set with the Rockies in Colorado on Monday after wrapping up the month’s final full week with plenty to like, even if the finish in St. Louis wasn’t perfect.

Miami opened the Cardinals series in Busch Stadium with a burst of momentum and never let go early. The Marlins took the first two games by a combined 9-1, putting themselves in position for a sweep before Sunday slipped away. Max Meyer set the tone Friday with seven shutout innings, giving up only two hits while trimming his season ERA to 2.60.

The bats did just enough behind him, coming through with runners in scoring position in the eighth and ninth to close out the win. On Saturday, Ryan Gusto handled the early work with three hits allowed over 3.1 innings, and the bullpen backed him up by surrendering just one run the rest of the way. Miami’s offense didn’t need much more than five singles to manufacture every run it scored.

Sunday was a different story. The Marlins again kept the Cardinals quiet, but the offense couldn’t match that work.

Phillips held St. Louis to two runs across 7.1 innings, yet Miami managed only four hits, including three singles, in the loss that kept them from the sweep.

Before the trip to St. Louis, the Marlins had brought an eight-game home winning streak into their series with the Rangers, only to see it end in Monday’s opener.

Tyler Phillips turned in a solid bounce-back start after his previous outing, when he had allowed eight runs, but the bullpen couldn’t finish the job. Calvin Faucher gave up two runs on two hits and a walk in the eighth, and the streak was over.

Miami answered right away. Over the next two days, the Marlins outscored Texas 10-6 to take the series anyway.

Owen Caissie launched his ninth homer of the series in game two, a three-run blast that gave Miami a comfortable cushion. In the finale, the bullpen limited the Rangers to one run over 4.1 innings, and Otto Lopez’s eighth-inning home run helped seal the win.

Now the Marlins turn to Colorado, where Sandy Alcantara is set to start Monday’s opener against the Rockies.

In Other News...

Janson Junks Return Just Hit A New Snag For The Marlins

Janson Junks rehab outing Thursday was supposed to be another step toward getting back into the Marlins rotation picture, but it turned into a reminder of how quickly a return can go sideways. Working for Triple-A Jacksonville while recovering from right shin bone inflammation, Junk got through 2 2/3 innings and showed some of the crispness Miami was hoping to see, even as the assignment remained all about building back toward game readiness.

Instead, the latest concern came from a line drive that struck him in the left wrist and forced him out early. There was no immediate update afterward, leaving the Marlins with another layer of uncertainty around a pitcher who had only just begun his comeback and was trying to reinsert himself into a staff that has already been piecing together innings behind Sandy Alcantara, Eury Prez and Max Meyer. [Read more 🡒]

Marlins Are Suddenly Facing A Deadline Call Fans Know Too Well

With the Marlins sitting in the National League Wild Card mix at 44-40, the front office has reached the familiar midseason question of whether to stay patient or push in a little harder before the trade deadline. Miami has enough life in the standings to justify a look around, and enough obvious holes to make the exercise worthwhile, especially at third base and in the pitching mix.

The search is already centering on veteran help, with the kind of names that fit different needs depending on how aggressively the Marlins want to shop. Some options would stabilize the infield, while others would add swing-and-miss arms or give the club another layer of depth for the stretch run, but the challenge is always the same for Miami: finding the right upgrade without paying for a short-term fix that does not match the moment. [Read more 🡒]