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Miami Marlins | |||||
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2024 Miami Marlins season | |||||
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Major league affiliations | |||||
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Current uniform | |||||
Retired numbers | 42 (Retired by MLB)[1] | ||||
Colors | |||||
Name | |||||
Other nicknames | |||||
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Ballpark | |||||
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Major league titles | |||||
World Series titles (2) | |||||
NL Pennants (2) | |||||
East Division titles (0) | None | ||||
Wild card berths (4) | |||||
Front office | |||||
Principal owner(s) | Bruce Sherman | ||||
President | Caroline O'Connor (President of Business Operations) | ||||
President of baseball operations | Peter Bendix | ||||
General manager | Peter Bendix | ||||
Manager | Clayton McCullough | ||||
Website | mlb.com/marlins |
The Miami Marlins are an American professional baseball team based in Miami. The Marlins compete in Major League Baseball (MLB) as a member club of the National League (NL) East Division. The team plays its home games at LoanDepot Park.
The franchise began play as an expansion team in the 1993 season as the Florida Marlins. The Marlins originally played home games at Joe Robbie Stadium, which they shared with the Miami Dolphins of the National Football League (NFL). In 2012, the team moved to LoanDepot Park (then known as Marlins Park), their first exclusive home and the first to be designed as a baseball park.[5][6] As part of an agreement with park owner Miami-Dade County to use the stadium, the franchise also changed their name to the Miami Marlins prior to the 2012 season.[7]
With a record of 2,303–2,709 (.459), the Marlins have the lowest winning percentage and fewest postseason appearances (four) among active MLB franchises.[8] Despite this, the Marlins won the World Series during their first two playoff runs in 1997 and 2003. Only three players were on both World Series teams with the Marlins: Jeff Conine, Luis Castillo, and Rick Helling (both Conine and Castillo are the only Marlins to play a thousand games with the team).[9] All four of their playoff appearances came as wild card teams, making them one of two MLB franchises (along with the Colorado Rockies) to have never won a division title, as well as the only franchise to have never appeared in back-to-back postseasons. The Marlins were also the first team to win the World Series as a wild card. The Marlins have no retired numbers, with the exception of Jackie Robinson's universally retired #42 in 1997.[a]
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