The Marlins improbably remained alive in the Wild Card race into the season’s final week. While that was enabled largely by the Mets’ collapse, Miami finished just four games under .500 after a 100-loss season in 2024. President of baseball operations Peter Bendix spoke with reporters on Wednesday as he enters his third offseason.
Bendix’s biggest decision is whether to trade Sandy Alcantara. The Marlins held onto the former Cy Young winner at the deadline. Alcantara hadn’t found a groove in his first few months back from Tommy John surgery, and the Fish preferred not to sell low. He looked a lot sharper down the stretch, turning in a 3.70 ERA with a 23.1% strikeout rate in his final 10 starts. He tied for fourth in the majors with 65 2/3 innings pitched after the deadline. Everyone else in the top five had the benefit of an extra start.
The Fish will get calls from teams intrigued by Alcantara’s strong finish. Bendix dodged a question about whether he expected the two-time All-Star to remain in South Florida headed into next season. “I’m not going to speculate on any individual player,” he said (relayed by Isaac Azout of Fish On First). “We’re always looking for ways to improve our club and I’m going to stay as disciplined as possible in doing that.”
It’s the kind of generality that most executives express publicly when asked about specific players. It’s not an especially surprising response, though it does contrast with the club’s approach from last offseason. The Marlins had reportedly informed Alcantara by August that he wouldn’t be moved. Bendix more or less confirmed that publicly during the winter, saying in December that he was “really excited to see him pitch on Opening Day.” A trade this winter seems more plausible now that he’s healthy even if the Fish are closer to contention than they were 12 months ago.
Alcantara is headed into the final guaranteed season of the extension he signed over the 2021-22 offseason. He’ll make $17MM and is guaranteed at least a $2MM buyout on a $21MM club option for ’27. If a deadline trade would’ve been mostly about salary relief, an offseason deal could net a legitimate prospect return. Alcantara finished with an underwhelming 5.36 ERA overall, yet he’d very likely command more than $19MM if he were a free agent this offseason.
Walker Buehler, for instance, pulled $21.05MM coming off a 5.38 ERA in fewer innings because of his pre-injury track record and two good appearances during the World Series. Alex Cobb got a $15MM deal at age 36 after making five combined starts between the regular season and playoffs. If Alcantara carries his second half form into next year, the extra year of control via the club option would also be a bargain.
While payroll is always a consideration for the Marlins, the front office shouldn’t be under financial pressure to deal Alcantara. He’s the only player on the roster making a salary of much significance. They’ll pay Avisaíl García a final $5MM buyout to end that disastrous free agent deal. They owe the Yankees $10MM annually for the next three seasons as part of the Giancarlo Stanton trade. That’s all in terms of guaranteed commitments. They have a lot of arbitration-eligible players — Anthony Bender, Braxton Garrett, Edward Cabrera, Ryan Weathers, Andrew Nardi, Calvin Faucher and Max Meyer — but none who are going to break the bank individually.
Miami did almost nothing in free agency during Bendix’s first two seasons at the helm. They signed three players to major league deals (Tim Anderson, Cal Quantrill and Eric Wagaman) for a combined $8.7MM in guarantees. It’s clear they’ll do more than that this winter. FanDuel Sports Network Florida & Sun’s Craig Mish indicated over the weekend that they’ll likely pursue a late-inning reliever. Barry Jackson of The Miami Herald echoes that sentiment and writes that they’ll try to bring in a free agent offensive upgrade as well.
The Marlins had a middle-of-the-pack offense this past season. They ranked 16th in runs and finished between 11th and 20th in all three slash stats. They were light on power, finishing above only the Padres, Cardinals and Pirates in home runs. Playing at loanDepot Park doesn’t do their hitters many favors, but they were tied for 22nd in road home runs. Kyle Stowers and Agustín Ramírez were their only 20-homer bats.
Miami didn’t get much production out of first base or designated hitter. They’ll probably want to keep at-bats available at the latter position for Ramírez, whose defensive numbers as a rookie catcher were terrible. They should upgrade on Wagaman and Troy Johnston at first base. It’d be a surprise if they made a serious push for Pete Alonso or Josh Naylor, but a mid-level target like Ryan O’Hearn could be within the range of outcomes.
Paul Goldschmidt and Rhys Hoskins will be available on one-year deals and still have a higher floor than the in-house options. The Astros could look to offload part of the Christian Walker contract, while players like Spencer Steer or Triston Casas could be sell-low candidates. It’s not entirely out of the question that the A’s could consider swapping Tyler Soderstrom for a controllable starting pitcher. Maybe there’s a match with a Miami team that has a lot of talented, affordable arms. Almost all of them come with some kind of durability questions, though the Fish finished the season with an impressive front four of Alcantara, Cabrera, Weathers and Eury Pérez.
Garrett missed the entire season after undergoing UCL surgery in January. Meyer suffered a labrum tear in his left hip and went under the knife in June. Bendix told Jackson and other reporters that both pitchers are expected to be ready by the start of Spring Training.

In my opinion, the Marlins would be crazy to keep Alcantara. His value will not be higher even if he has a strong start to the season. But if he comes out and gets shelled in the first half (or even worse, gets hurt again) that value will sink like a rock.
The argument for keeping him would be if Miami felt like they were ready to contend. It’s not impossible but there are a lot of good teams in their division. Even if they take a big step forward, it’s hard to see them winning more than 80-something games. Maybe that gets them into the playoffs? It’s still a long shot even if a lot goes right.
But the market is starved for pitching and he’d likely bring back two good prospects, maybe more. That would be tough for them to pass up.
Fish looked ready to take a wildcard this season. They will need Sandy in 2026 bonus he has a 2nd 2027 club option year. Keep him and maybe trade him next offseason when he’s $21m with a single controllable year. Grab a bullpen arm or two and 1st baseman and this could be an interesting team.
All Sandy is doing is blocking Robby Snelling and Thomas White.
If Ryan Weathers can stay healthy, with Cabrera and Perez,they don’t need Sandy.
Especially if you give Max Meyer another shot
This full on “Thomas” trend needs to stop. We can’t let “Tom”‘s die.
Robert Snelling
That is a gigantic IF: Weathers hits the IL every year, Eddy reached a personal record in IP this year (137), and Garrett, Eury, and Meyer are coming from long absences so they will be on an innings limit next season.
If they want to contend in 2026, they need Sandy, but either him or Eddy are gone anyways.
Barring injuries, Cabrera (or Sandy)-Pérez-Weathers-Junk-Garrett will be the rotation to start the season. I think Meyer will be the multi-innings / spot start guy moving forward, but if one of the above mentioned five cannot make it to the opening day roster, he’s the next man up. After him, you still have Gusto and even Mazur.
By the end of April/early May someone will struggle or get injured. THEN and only then they’ll call Snelling (a.k.a. service time manipulation).
I have a hard time trusting any team that has a low budget and a farm system that is heavily reliant on pitching. Pitching is so volatile. In a perfect world, they can trade Alcantara for a couple of bats that will be ready to contribute at the MLB level.
1st Base is a very weak position across MLB. Of the options mentioned in the article, Soderstrom seems the only attractive upgrade. Alonso and Naylor will be overpaid.
Getting rid of dead weight like Soriano, and getting Bender back would help.the bullpen. Max Meyer going to the pen might also be a good move. Josh White and a returning Nardi might be enough to improve the pen.
I think the A’s would prefer Cabrera over Sandy in a potential Soderstrom trade, but still doable. I’d also try to lure the Orioles about Coby Mayo or maybe buy low now on Encarnación-Strand from the Reds… they are for sure cheaper with low floor but high ceiling.
Sandy’s value matches his 2nd half. As a fan I have preference in keeping but understand if instead this opens up finances to lock down other Marlins with contracts. My top concern is that they trade him, don’t sign any of their up and coming, don’t sign any key free agents to improve the team and the highest paid player is Avisail Garcia(still owed $5M). But at least Sherman makes a profit even while drawing in 10k fans a game
Watch Texas for Sandy trade. Especially if they hire Skip Schumaker as manager. Mike Maddox would fix him.
Sandy is already “fixed” by now. But I see Texas as a potential trade partner, especially if they confirm Skip as the new manager.
Guys like Jung, Corniell, or prospects like Ortiz and Santos can be very interesting for the Fish.