Miami Marlins RTD: If You Were Marlins Man for the Day; Ultimate Marlins Player

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Dec 9, 2013; Orlando, FL, USA; Jarrod Saltalamacchia (center) is introduced by Miami Marlins director of baseball operations Michael Hill (left) and general manager Dan Jennings (right) during the MLB Winter Meetings at the Walt Disney World Swan and Dolphin Resort. Mandatory Credit: David Manning-USA TODAY Sports

Welcome to another Miami Marlins Round Table Discussion. On today’s agenda, we’ll be discussing if we believe if the Miami Marlins will truly use analytics in 2016, what we would do as Marlins Man for the day, and combining Marlins skills to make a perfect player.

In today’s RTD, we have special guest and friend to Marlin Maniac, Jay Ramos. He’s better known as @Jay_Ram_ on Twitter. We’ll have a special guest, sometimes some of our readers, every week to discuss the Marlins with us this off-season!

1. Do you believe the idea that the Miami Marlins are actually going to invest in an analytic department and then also use that to help make their baseball decisions?

Ehsan Kassim: The Marlins franchise paid lip service for the longest time about building a team around pitching and defense. They finally delivered on the defense part last season, but the pitching was absent. Likewise, they’ll pay lip service to the analytics department, but not actually listen to them for advice. And I agree with Jay, I’d like to call Loria out to start fixing the franchise for the better.

Daniel Zylberkan: No. All of the signs coming out of management and the media point to the fact that they still don’t quite understand what analytics is and how they are actually supposed to be used for making baseball decisions. They keep saying things like “we will use them but we won’t be completely dependent on them” as though the Athletics or Pirates fired all of their scouts and they have some fancy computer program and a set of algorithms watching baseball games.

Michael Sonbeek: Yes, they will invest in the department. And between now and Opening Day, it will factor heavily into decision making. However, Jeffrey Loria will still be the ultimate authority, and will likely discount what the metrics say at the first sign of difficulty. It’s also entirely likely the undermining will begin with whoever is tapped as the next manager of the franchise- again, an instance of the owner gumming up the works. 

Sean Millerick: Yes, they will invest in the department. And between now and Opening Day, it will factor heavily into decision-making. However, Jeffrey Loria will still be the ultimate authority, and will likely discount what the metrics say at the first sign of difficulty. It’s also entirely likely the undermining will begin with whoever is tapped as the next manager of the franchise- again, an instance of the owner gumming up the works. 

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Mark Laming: Should they? Absolutely. Are they going to? Probably not. Several reporters have stated that certain members of the front office have grown close with Loria, therefore creating a situation where there is reasonable bias. It’s also worth mentioning, the team has consistently ignored these developments and there won’t be much change.

Jay Ramos: Nah. It’s not about the raw data. It’s about the critical thinking required from the people influencing decisions to apply it. To be real about this, they don’t even need to make a department to use advanced statistics in the first place.

In general, and I don’t have a statistic to back this, I think middle-aged, tenured men in positions like Mike Hill and Dan Jennings don’t seem like great candidates to greatly alter their current limited ways of evaluating baseball.

Next: If You Were Marlins Man...

2. If you could be Marlins Man for a day, what would you do?

Ehsan Kassim: If I were Marlins Man for the day, I’d probably go about it the same way he does. He’s enjoying his life and is helping others along the way. His main fatal flaw is being a FSU fan. Seriously though, his message of paying it forward is very important.

Daniel Zylberkan: If I was Marlins Man I would basically do exactly what he does. I would love to have the money to travel all the biggest sporting events in the country. That’s really cool. 

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Sean Millerick: Buy season tickets for the next two seasons, and put them in the name of long time Marlins fan Sean Millerick. Always liked the cut of his jib. But if you want a more serious answer, I’d look to swing a Marlins-Heat doubleheader. In process of doing that, I’d show up early for both, and select a diehard fan or couple for an upgrade. The real fans get there early to soak it in before being ushered to the nosebleed seats.

Mark Laming: Do what Marlins Man does. I would just want to sit on the front row for ONE game, it could just be a regular season game but just experience it once would be 100% worth it.

Jay Ramos: I would publicly challenge Jeffrey Loria and the organization. Do it for the people. 

Next: Perfect Marlin?

Apr 10, 2015; Miami, FL, USA; Miami Marlins second baseman Dee Gordon (right) celebrates after scoring the game winning run during the 10th inning with Marlins right fielder Giancarlo Stanton (left) against the Tampa Bay Rays at Marlins Park. The Marlins won 10-9. Mandatory Credit: Steve Mitchell-USA TODAY Sports

3. If you could make the perfect player baseball player, using a skill set from a Marlin currently on the roster, what skills would you use?

Ehsan Kassim: I’d take Christian Yelich‘s plate discipline, Dee Gordon‘s speed, Giancarlo Stanton‘s power, Tom Koehler‘s elbow, and Jose Fernandez‘s pitching arsenal. And then after a great season, be forced to trade the player due to salary demands.

Daniel Zylberkan: I would say the most impressive tool on any of the Marlins is Giancarlo’s power. Like they say chicks dig the long ball and it would be amazing to have a player with Giancarlo’s power that could have Dee Gordon’s speed. Basically creating peak pre-steroids Barry Bonds, a guy who could hit 40 HR and play elite outfield defense, and be one of the best baserunners in baseball.

Michael Sonbeek: I would give Stanton’s power to Yelich.

Sean Millerick: Take Jose Fernandez’s talent and Ichiro’s durability, and make the best pitcher in baseball. 

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Mark Laming: I’d take Yelich and make him develop into the true five tool sensation he was billed as. He has the potential just needs development.

Jay Ramos: Giancarlo’s power is too special to pass on. Also more rare than Gordon’s speed. I thought about Yelich’s on-base abilities though. Not Jose’s fastball because we all know that situation is going to end badly.

Follow Marlin Maniac on Twitter @MarlinManiac for all your Miami Marlins news, opinion and analysis!

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