Hanley Ramirez

(This is a guest article by Stephen Lombardo)SD Dirk

It is unlikely for the Marlins to make news in January.  Usually they handle their in-house business around this time of year.  Trying to keep guys like Hanley Ramirez and Josh Johnson are priority number one for this so called small market team.  However, this past week, the players union and the Florida Marlins have reached an agreement for this cellar dweller franchise to up their payroll.  I guess the one big question can now be asked; did baseball just wake a sleeping giant?

For as far back as we can remember, the Marlins are a draft and trade team built on their pitching and a few scattered all stars in the lineup.  Just look at their championship teams.  The 1997 team had up and coming stars like Gary Sheffield, Edgar Renteria, Moises Alou and a few others, but they won because of their pitching.  With the likes of Kevin Brown, Al Leiter, and Livan Hernandez anchoring their rotation they were obviously good enough to go all the way.  The same argument can be made for their 2003 campaign.  This team supposedly won by accident.  Or did they?  Once again they did it with budding stars on the field like Juan Pierre, Derek Lee, Mike Lowell, and Luis Castillo who was there for both titles.  Yes they had the leadership of Ivan Rodriguez, but that wasn’t why they won.  They won again with a rotation that when healthy went five deep.  Josh Beckett, A.J. Burnett, Brad Penny, mid-season call up and phenom Dontrelle Willis, and yes Carl Pavano, were the biggest reasons why the 2003 Marlins won the World Series.

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