Max Meyer Just Changed Everything For The Marlins Rotation

Meyer's remarkable resurgence has not only placed him at the forefront of the Marlins' rotation but has also redefined the team's fortunes this season.

Max Meyer’s first half has flipped the script for the Miami Marlins.

At the start of the season, the expectation was simple: Sandy Alcantara and Eury Pérez would be the rotation’s headliners, the two arms carrying Miami in a crowded National League East. There was room for another pitcher to pop, sure, but nobody was supposed to outrank those two.

That’s not how it has played out. Alcantara and Pérez have been solid enough, with ERAs hovering around 4.00, and both have helped fuel the Marlins’ surge. But neither has been the staff’s top performer.

That honor belongs to Meyer, who was named to his first All-Star team just a couple of days ago.

The numbers explain why. In 18 starts, Meyer owns a 2.53 ERA with 112 strikeouts and only 36 walks.

He has been one of the best pitchers in baseball, and he’s a huge reason Miami is still very much in the mix right now. Take him out of the picture, and it’s hard to see the Marlins staying this relevant at this point in the season.

What makes the run even more striking is how much Meyer has already been through. The third overall pick in the 2020 MLB Draft reached the majors in two seasons, only to have his career derailed almost immediately. Six innings into his big league life, he tore his UCL and missed the rest of 2022 and all of 2023.

He returned in 2024, but the Marlins didn’t seem fully sold. After only three starts, they sent him to Triple-A in a move that raised eyebrows at the time and didn’t appear to be tied to service time. Meyer came back in July and finished that season with a 5.68 ERA over 11 starts.

There was improvement in 2025, but he still wasn’t close to the pitcher he was projected to become on draft day. In 12 starts and 64.2 innings, he posted a 4.73 ERA with 68 strikeouts and 20 walks. A season-ending hip injury in the middle of the year only made things tougher.

Now, though, the story has changed. Meyer has been healthy, which is always a “knock on wood” situation with him, and that availability has let him stack quality start after quality start. While Alcantara and Pérez have had their ups and downs, Meyer has kept rolling.

Baseball can turn fast. A pitcher who looks buried one year can suddenly look reborn the next.

That’s exactly what Meyer has done so far in 2026, and his first half has been one of the most impressive developments in the sport. Whether he can keep it going for the full season is still to be determined, but what he has already done has been a marvel.

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