Marlins spent offseason pursuing ‘good, pure hitters.’ Will it spark offense in 2023?

During the past six months, there has been a shift in the Miami Marlins’ priorities when it comes to their desired hitting profile.

It started to be seen in late July when the team selected infielder Jacob Berry with the No. 6 overall pick in the 2022 MLB Draft.

What stood out to the organization about Berry?

“Everything from just being a pure hitter to his knowledge of the strike zone, his plate discipline,” Marlins general manager Kim Ng said.

It continued a couple weeks later, at MLB’s trade deadline, when Miami traded relievers Anthony Bass and Zach Pop to the Toronto Blue Jays for infielder prospect Jordan Groshans.

“This is a guy who’s got a pretty good bat,” Ng said. “Line drive, gap-to-gap hitter.”

It has picked up full steam this offseason.

Miami has acquired four position players so far this winter to bolster their infield depth: reigning American League batting champion Luis Arraez in a trade with the Minnesota Twins, free agent Jean Segura on a two-year deal (with a club option for a third year), and prospects Xavier Edwards and Jacob Amaya in trades with the Tampa Bay Rays and Los Angeles Dodgers, respectively.

The quick scouting report on each of them:

Arraez: “Puts the ball in play, elite contact skills,” Marlins manager Skip Schumaker told Jim Bowden during a Sirius XM Radio interview Saturday.

Segura: “A hit machine,” Ng said, while also noting his “nice combination of power, speed and positional versatility.”

Amaya: “Offensively, one of the things that was very attractive to us about him was his plate discipline, and his offensive game overall,” Ng said.

Edwards: “Switch-hitting infielder that can play a couple of different spots with a good control of the strike zone,” Ng said.

Starting to see a trend here?

Just one season after the Marlins attempted to go with a power-heavy lineup that failed to produce — in part due to injuries to some of those power hitters (Jazz Chisholm Jr. and Jorge Soler), in part due to underproduction (Soler and Avisail Garcia) — Miami is shifting course, with Ng focusing on building a roster with “good, pure hitters.”

“Sometimes the market doesn’t necessarily dictate that,” Ng said in August, “but when it does and when you can, those are things that I think are foundationally great elements to have as part of your team.”

Will it work? It’s impossible to answer until games begin, and Opening Day is still about two months away.

But any change or attempt at an upgrade is a welcomed sight after the offense underwhelmed once again last season.

Marlins’ offensive struggles in 2022

It doesn’t take much time to explain the Marlins’ offense overall by the end of the 2022 season: It was bad.

Pick an offensive stat — just about any stat — and the Marlins were probably in the bottom 10 of the league in the category in 2022.

586 runs scored? Third worst.

.363 slugging? Third worst.

.230 batting average, .294 on-base percentage and .657 OPS? Fourth-worst.

7.3 percent walk rate? Fourth worst.

24 percent strikeout rate? Fifth worst.

144 total home runs? Seventh worst.

The one area where the Marlins excelled? Stolen bases, where they finished second in MLB (122, six behind the Texas Rangers).

How new players help

The Marlins’ hope, then, is that the shift to a contact-over-power approach on offense will spark the offense as they try to be competitive in a daunting National League East division that saw its top three teams (Atlanta Braves, New York Mets, Philadelphia Phillies) make the playoffs and either improved or at least stayed level this offseason.

And, on paper, Miami acquired the players to do it.

Minnesota Twins’ Luis Arraez points to the dugout after hitting a single against the Kansas City Royals during the second inning of a baseball game, Tuesday, Sept. 13, 2022, in Minneapolis. On Friday, Jan. 20, 2023, the Twins traded reigning AL batting champion Arraez to the Miami Marlins for a three-player package featuring starting pitcher Pablo López.

Start with Arraez, who is coming off a season in which he won the AL batting title with a .316 batting average in addition to a .795 OPS, 31 doubles, eight home runs, 49 RBI and 88 runs scored. All of those marks outside of the home runs would have either led or been second on the Marlins last season (Chisholm Jr. had an .860 OPS albeit in only 60 games; Garrett Cooper had 33 doubles and 50 RBI).

Arraez had just a 7.1 percent strikeout rate last season that was the best in baseball and over the course of his MLB career has drawn more walks (137) than struck out (131). According to Statcast, Arraez has made contact on 93.3 percent of pitches he swings at inside the zone and 85 percent of pitches he chased in his career.

Jean Segura, new Miami Marlins infielder, left, shakes hands with Kim Ng, Marlins General Manager, after welcoming him to the team on Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023, at loanDepot Park.
Jean Segura, new Miami Marlins infielder, left, shakes hands with Kim Ng, Marlins General Manager, after welcoming him to the team on Wednesday, Jan. 11, 2023, at loanDepot Park.

Segura, meanwhile, has a career .285 batting average and .330 on-base percentage to go along with a career strikeout percentage of just 13.8 percent. He has had a strikeout rate of 15 percent or lower in each of his past six full MLB seasons and only struck out more than 20 percent of the time in a single season once — the pandemic-shortened 2020 season (20.7 percent).

Miami Marlins’ Jordan Groshans, right, is met by third base coach Al Pedrique while rounding third base after hitting a solo home run during the third inning of the team’s baseball game against the Philadelphia Phillies, Thursday, Sept. 15, 2022, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)
Miami Marlins’ Jordan Groshans, right, is met by third base coach Al Pedrique while rounding third base after hitting a solo home run during the third inning of the team’s baseball game against the Philadelphia Phillies, Thursday, Sept. 15, 2022, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

And while they have yet to be fully tested in the big leagues, the three prospects — Groshans, Amaya and Edwards — fit the same mold as Arraez and Segura.

Groshans, who made his MLB debut on Sept. 13, had a career strikeout percentage of just 18 percent in the minors while hitting .285. Amaya is at a 19 percent strikeout rate but also has a 13.9 percent walk rate in the minors. And Edwards has a career .300 batting average in the minors to go along with a 13.1 percent strikeout rate and 10.3 percent walk rate.

Miami Marlins right fielder Jorge Soler (12) runs towards first base after hitting a double in the third inning against the Washington Nationals at loanDepot park in Miami on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.
Miami Marlins right fielder Jorge Soler (12) runs towards first base after hitting a double in the third inning against the Washington Nationals at loanDepot park in Miami on Tuesday, June 7, 2022.

Team still needs power

Now, this focus on contact hitting doesn’t mean the team is shifting from power entirely. The Marlins know the value home runs and steady extra-base hits can provide to the club.

Chisholm and Soler, who combined for 27 of the team’s 144 home runs in just 132 total games played, will lead the group. The hope is Garcia, who has 135 career home runs but only hit eight last season, has a bounce-back year in the power department. Outfielders Jesus Sanchez and Bryan De La Cruz, likely set up for a platoon role in left field next season, each hit 13 home runs last year, too. Catcher Nick Fortes and first baseman Cooper can hit for power, as well.

But they also understand that a feast-or-famine approach at the plate — that appeared at times last season and backfired when injuries derailed the approach — is not sustainable is there aren’t other options in the lineup.

Just look at what happened last season when they lost their top two power hitters — Chisholm and Soler — midway through the season.

In the Marlins’ first 73 games of the season, through the last game Chisholm and Soler played together on June 28, the Marlins had a collective .244 batting average (14th in MLB), .706 OPS (16th in MLB) and 80 home runs (14th in MLB) while averaging 4.4 runs per game.

Those are middle-of-the-road offensive numbers, for sure, but it was enough to keep them competitive when paired with Miami’s high-end starting pitching.

Miami’s collective stats in the final 89 games: .216 batting average (last in MLB), .278 on-base percentage (last in MLB), .331 slugging (last in MLB), 60 total home runs (last in MLB) and 2.9 runs per game (you guessed it, last in MLB).

Something needed to change. Depth, at a minimum, was needed.

The Marlins opted for a philosophical overhaul and acquired the players to fit that philosophy.

Now, it comes down to execution.

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