The Marlins are calling up right-hander Robinson Piña for his major league debut, reports Kevin Barral of Fish On First. The team has not announced the move yet. Piña’s contract will need to be selected to what is currently a full 40-man roster in Miami, so the Fish will need to make a corresponding move in that regard.
Piña, 26, will make his big league debut the first time he takes the mound. He spent the 2017-23 seasons in the Angels system before becoming a minor league free agent and signing with the Phillies ahead of the 2024 campaign. The Phils never added him to the 40-man roster, and Piña again became a minor league free agent this past offseason, signing with Miami in his second run through the open market. This time around, he’ll get that coveted first MLB opportunity.
Piña has certainly earned his call to the majors. He’s appeared in 13 games, 11 of them starts, and tallied 57 innings with a 3.47 ERA, a 22.2% strikeout rate, a 6.2% walk rate and a 46.9% ground-ball rate. Command was an issue for him early in his minor league career, but he’s now turned in consecutive minor league seasons with walk rates that clock in considerably south of average. This year’s 92.8 mph average sinker is up a mile per hour over last year’s levels, and Piña has been consistent all season; he hasn’t yielded more than three earned runs in any appearance and has held opponents to two or fewer runs in 10 of 13 outings overall.
Miami has Edward Cabrera lined up to start today, with Janson Junk, Eury Pérez and Sandy Alcantara listed as probables in their next three games thereafter. There’s no need for an immediate spot starter — barring an injury the team has not yet made public — but they could be looking to add some length with Junk having spent the season in a long relief role. The Marlins also have an off-day coming on Monday, so they could option Adam Mazur and skip the fifth starter’s spot next time through the rotation. Doing so would give them options for how best to use Piña, who’s fully stretched out and has topped 80 pitches in five of his past six appearances.
They’re trolling us.
Mazur left too many pitches up in the zone. The Phillies didn’t even take advantage as often as they could have. His stuff was ok, but nowhere good enough to constantly miss up.
The Marlins have some good pitching. This trade talk around Edward Cabrera is nuts, Cabrera has the makings of an Ace and three years of team control.
Alcantara
Cabrera
Perez
Meyer
in ’26 w/
Pina
Weathers
Garrett
Fulton
N. Meyer
White
Mazur
Snelling
I could see them trading Max Meyer for a good up and coming bat first prospect. I think Cal Quantrill could return a prospect too, he has pitched pretty good for the fish this season.
They seem to be struggling so much on who to DFA…Connor Gillispie is right there, 8 ERA in Miami and almost a 5 in AAA, absolutely no brainer.