Below is a partial list of minor league baseball players in the Miami Marlins system:
Jay Jackson
Randy Jackson Jr. (born October 27, 1987) is a pitcher in the Miami Marlins organization.
Jackson was drafted by the Chicago Cubs in the ninth round in the 2008 Major League Baseball Draft out of Furman University.
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference (Minors)
Scott McGough
Scott Thomas McGough (born October 31, 1989, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania) is an American professional baseball pitcher for the Miami Marlins organization. He attended Plum High School in Plum, Pennsylvania and was drafted by the Pittsburgh Pirates in the 46th round of the 2008 Major League Baseball Draft, but did not sign. Instead, he chose to attend the University of Oregon, where he played for the baseball team. In the 2011 Major League Baseball Draft, he was drafted in the fifth round by the Los Angeles Dodgers.
McGough began his professional career in 2011 with the Rookie–level Ogden Raptors. He later earned a call-up to the Single-A Great Lakes Loons. In 2012, he started off the season with the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes, but on July 25, he and Nathan Eovaldi were traded to the Marlins for Hanley Ramírez and Randy Choate.[1]
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference (Minors)
Justin Nicolino
Justin Nicolino |
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Miami Marlins |
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Pitcher |
Born: (1991-11-22) November 22, 1991 (age 22) Orlando, Florida |
Bats: Left |
Throws: Left |
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Justin B. Nicolino (born November 22, 1991) is a minor league baseball pitcher in the Miami Marlins organization.
Nicolino attended University High School in Orlando, Florida. The Toronto Blue Jays drafted Nicolino in the second round of the 2010 MLB Draft with the 80th overall selection.[2][3] On November 19, 2012, Nicolino was traded to the Miami Marlins along with Adeiny Hechavarria, Henderson Álvarez, Yunel Escobar, Jeff Mathis, Anthony DeSclafani and Jake Marisnick, in exchange for Mark Buehrle, Josh Johnson, José Reyes, John Buck, and Emilio Bonifacio.[4] On January 29, 2013, Nicolino was named number 72 on MLB's Top 100 Prospects list.[5]
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference (Minors)
Adam Reifer
Adam James Reifer (born June 3, 1986 in Mira Loma, California, USA) is a minor league baseball relief pitcher who is currently with the Miami Marlins system.
Prior to playing professionally, he attended Jurupa Valley High School and then the University of California, Riverside, where he played college baseball for the Highlanders from 2005–2007.[6] In his first year with UC Riverside, 2005, he made 19 relief appearances and went 2-0 with a 4.77 ERA. He made 20 relief appearances with them in 2006, going 2-1 with a 3.37 ERA. In 2007, he went 0-0 with a 2.46 ERA in six games after he battling bone spurs and elbow tendinitis. He was drafted by the Cardinals in the 11th round of the 2007 amateur draft and began his professional career the following season. He was signed by scout Jeff Ishii for $100,000.
With the Batavia Muckdogs in 2008, Reifer went 2-1 with 22 saves and a 2.97 ERA in 32 relief appearances, striking out 41 batters in 30⅓ innings of work. Opponents hit only .162 against him. Adam was second in the New York-Penn League in saves, one behind ambidextrous Pat Venditte.[7] He saved the championship finale to give Batavia the title. Timed at 99 mph, Reifer was rated the #3 prospect in the circuit by Baseball America, following Jason Castro and David Cooper.[8]
In 2009, he pitched for the Palm Beach Cardinals, going 4-7 with a 4.47 ERA in 54 relief appearances. He had 21 saves and 50 strikeouts in 48⅓ innings of work that season. He led the Florida State League in games pitched and was one save behind the lead once again, this time trailing Jonathan Hovis. He split 2010 between the Springfield Cardinals (51 games) and Memphis Redbirds (one game), going a combined 4-1 with 17 saves and a 2.95 ERA.[9] In five games with the Memphis Redbirds in 2011, he was 0-1 with a 1.42 ERA and again with Memphis in 2012, he was 1-4 with a 4.90 ERA in 58 relief appearances.
He was released by the St. Louis Cardinals on March 16, 2013.[10]
He was signed by the Miami Marlins on May 16, 2013.[11]
Ángel Sánchez
Ángel Luis Sánchez (born November 28, 1989) is a professional baseball pitcher in the Miami Marlins organization.
He signed with the Los Angeles Dodgers as an amateur free agent in 2010 and played with the Great Lakes Loons in the Midwest League in 2011, where he was 8-4 in 20 games (16 starts) with a 2.82 ERA. He was promoted to the Rancho Cucamonga Quakes in 2012 where he struggled a bit, going 6-12 with a 6.58 ERA in 27 games (23 starts).
Sánchez returned to Great Lakes to start 2013 where he was 2-7 with a 4.88 ERA in 14 starts before he was returned to Rancho Cucamonga.
On July 6, 2013 he was traded to the Miami Marlins (along with Josh Wall and Steve Ames) for Ricky Nolasco.
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- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference (Minors)
Anthony DeSclafani
Anthony J. DeSclafani (born April 18, 1990) is an American professional baseball player for the Miami Marlins organization.
DeSclafani attended Colts Neck High Schoolin Colts Neck, New Jersey.[12][13] He then enrolled at the University of Florida, where he played college baseball for the Florida Gators.
The Toronto Blue Jays selected DeSclafani in the sixth round of the 2011 MLB Draft. After the 2012 season, the Blue Jays traded DeSclafani, Adeiny Hechavarria, Henderson Álvarez, Yunel Escobar, Jeff Mathis, and Jake Marisnick to the Miami Marlins, receiving Mark Buehrle, Josh Johnson, José Reyes, John Buck, and Emilio Bonifacio in exchange.[4] The Marlins named him their minor league pitcher of the year in 2013.[14]
- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference (Minors)
Alfredo Silverio
Alfredo Silverio (born May 6, 1987) is an outfielder who is with the Miami Marlins organization.
Silverio was signed as an undrafted free agent by the Los Angeles Dodgers in 2007 after playing for their team in the Dominican Summer League. He joined the Gulf Coast Dodgers for 2007, then played with the Great Lakes Loons (2008–2009) and Inland Empire 66ers of San Bernardino in 2010 before a late-season assignment to the Double-A Chattanooga Lookouts. In 2011, with the Lookouts, he hit .306 with 16 home runs and 85 RBIs. He was selected to the Southern League postseason all-star team and represented the Dodgers at the 2011 All-Star Futures Game.[15]
Silverio was added to the Dodgers' 40-man roster on Nov 2, 2011.[16] He was subsequently involved in a serious offseason car accident in the Dominican Republic and suffered injuries to his back, shoulder, elbow and neck as well as concussion symptoms and was not able to participate at all in Spring Training.[17] On May 9, 2012, he underwent Tommy John Surgery as a result of injuries he suffered in the car accident, the surgery would cause him to miss the entire 2012 season.[18] On Nov 1, 2012, he was outrighted to Triple-A and removed from the 40-man roster.
The Miami Marlins selected Silverio from the Dodgers on December 6, 2012 in the Rule 5 draft.
During June 2013, Silverio underwent Tommy John surgery for the 2nd time of his career which prevented him from playing for the rest of the 2013 season.
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- Career statistics and player information from Baseball-Reference (Minors)
Full Triple-A to Rookie League rosters
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Coaches/Other
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Pitchers
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Catchers
Infielders
Outfielders
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Manager
Coaches
7-day disabled list
* On Miami Marlins 40-man roster
∞ Reserve list
§ Suspended list
‡ Restricted list
# Rehab assignment
Roster updated April 11, 2013
Coaching staff
→ More MiLB rosters
→ Miami Marlins minor league players
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Double-A
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Players
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Coaches/Other
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Pitchers
- -- Peter Andrelczyk
- -- Ramón Benjamín
- 46 Michael Brady
- 37 Arquimedes Caminero *
- 4 Adam Conley
- -- Jordan Conley
- 29 Grant Dayton
- 22 Sam Dyson *
- 22 Bryan Evans
- 26 Brian Flynn
- 6 Raudel Lazo
- 35 James Leverton
- 27 Scott McGough
- -- Matthew Montgomery
- 23 Robert Morey
- 24 Matthew Neil
- -- Joseph O'Gara
- -- Michael Ojala
- 26 Edgar Olmos *
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Catchers
- 3 Aaron Dudley
- 31 Taylor Krick
- 11 J. T. Realmuto
Infielders
Outfielders
- 20 Kyle Jensen *
- 16 Michael Main
- -- Jake Marisnick
- -- Marcell Ozuna *
- 2 Daniel Pertusati
- 14 Jake Smolinski
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Manager
Coaches
- 13 John Duffy (pitching)
- 8 Kevin Randel (hitting)
7-day disabled list
* On Miami Marlins 40-man roster
∞ Reserve list
§ Suspended list
‡ Restricted list
# Rehab assignment
Roster updated April 11, 2013
Transactions
→ More MiLB rosters
→ Miami Marlins minor league players
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Class A-Advanced
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Players
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Coaches/Other
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Pitchers
- 36 Collin Cargill
- 31 Kevin Cravey
- 26 Anthony DeSclafani
- 11 Sean Donatello
- 32 Jake Esch
- 9 Tyler Higgins
- 33 Josh Hodges
- 22 Justin Nicolino
- 24 James Nygren
- 12 Jared Rogers
- 39 Jose Urena
- 13 Nick Wittgren
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Catchers
- 12 Austin Barnes
- 25 Wilfredo Gimenez
- 29 Michael Vaughn
Infielders
- 10 Josh Adams
- -- Terrence Dayleg
- 21 Ryan Fisher
- 14 Austin Nola
- 3 Noah Perio
- 16 Matt Smith
- 4 Ross Wilson
Outfielders
- 27 Isaac Galloway
- 6 Ryan Goetz
- 23 Roger Rieger
- 37 Aaron Senne
- -- James Wooster
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Manager
Coaches
- 15 Joe Coleman (pitching)
- 20 Corey Hart (hitting)
- 4 Rigoberto Silverio (first base)
7-day disabled list
* On Miami Marlins 40-man roster
∞ Reserve list
§ Suspended list
‡ Restricted list
# Rehab assignment
Roster updated April 11, 2013
Transactions
→ More MiLB rosters
→ Miami Marlins minor league players
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Class A
{{MiLB roster
| TeamName = Greensboro Grasshoppers
| Pitchers =
- 32 Ronald Barnes
- 43 Andy Beltre
- 38 Austin Brice
- 55 Ramon Del Orbe
- 49 Sean Donatello
- 22 Brian Ellington
- 10 Mason Hope
- 39 Chad James
- 30 Blake Logan
- 31 Scott Lyman
- 26 Jheyson Manzueta
- 40 Matt Milroy
- -- Brad Mincey
- 16 Frankie Reed
- 33 Chipper Smith
- 20 Drew Steckenrider
- 28 Beau Wright
| Catchers =
- 15 Jose Behar
- 14 Tony Caldwell
- 8 Sharif Othman
- 27 Michael Vaughn
| Infielders =
- 8 Blake Barber
- 25 Yordy Cabrera
- 2 Anthony Gomez
- 14 Colin Moran
- 35 Viosergy Rosa
Short A
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Players
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Coaches/Other
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Pitchers
- -- Miguel Del Pozo
- -- Sean Donatello
- -- Justin Jackson
- -- Casey McCarthy
- 34 Patrick Merkling
- 25 Ryan Newell
- -- Robert Ravago
- 35 Beau Wright
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Catchers
Infielders
- -- Blake Barber
- 27 Felix Munoz
- 4 Rony Peralta
- 18 Yefri Perez
- 9 Avery Romero
Outfielders
- 36 Kolby Copeland ‡
- 7 Kentrell Dewitt
- -- Rand Smith
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Manager
Coaches
- 33 Rich Arena (hitting)
- 28 Brendan Sagara (pitching)
7-day disabled list
* On Miami Marlins 40-man roster
∞ Reserve list
§ Suspended list
‡ Restricted list
# Rehab assignment
Roster updated June 12, 2013
Transactions
→ More MiLB rosters
→ Miami Marlins minor league players
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Rookie
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Players
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Coaches/Other
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Pitchers
- 27 Ronald Barnes
- 35 Jorgan Cavanerio
- -- Esmerling De La Rosa
- 23 Miguel Del Pozo
- 40 Hayden Fox
- 38 Jarlin Garcia
- 17 Michael Garcia
- 36 Domingo German
- 37 Justin Jackson
- -- Daniel Oliver
- 28 Robert Ravago
- 33 Junior Rincon
- -- Chipper Smith
- 22 Joel Tamares
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Catchers
- 11 Felix Castillo
- 16 David Cruz
Infielders
- 20 Pedro Acosta
- 14 Patrick Claussen
- 1 Rehiner Cordova
- -- Carlos Duran
- 15 Ron Miller
- 13 Luis Ortiz
- 2 Christian Rivera
Outfielders
- 7 Connor Burke
- 12 Austin Dean
- 43 Christian Keene ‡
- 5 Edward Sappelt
- -- John Schultz
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Manager
Coaches
7-day disabled list
* On Miami Marlins 40-man roster
∞ Reserve list
§ Suspended list
‡ Restricted list
# Rehab assignment
Roster updated April 11, 2013
Transactions
→ More MiLB rosters
→ Miami Marlins minor league players
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References
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| World Series Championships (2) | |
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| Wild Card Berths | |
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| Minor League Affiliates | |
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| Seasons (22) |
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