Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Miami Marlins are a professional Major League Baseball based in Miami, Florida. The Marlins are members of the National League East division in MLB, joining in 1993 as an expansion team . In baseball, the head coach of a team is called the manager , or more formally, the field manager.
Jared Michael "Skip" Schumaker (/ ˈ ʃ uː m ɑː k ər / SHOO-mah-kər; born February 3, 1980) is an American former professional baseball outfielder and second baseman, coach, and manager, most recently of the Miami Marlins from 2023 to 2024. He played in MLB for the St. Louis Cardinals, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Cincinnati Reds.
Order of tenure as General Manager W: Regular season wins L: Regular season losses Win% Winning percentage: LC: League Championships: number of League Championships, or pennants, achieved under the general manager WS: World Series Championships: number of World Series victories achieved under the general manager Ref: Reference † Won World ...
The Miami Marlins have their new manager.. The Marlins struck a deal to hire Clayton McCullough as their next manager on Saturday, according to ESPN's Alden Gonzalez.McCullough will replace Skip ...
New Marlins manager Clayton McCullough is moving from a team that will pay a single player (Shohei Ohtani) $68 million every single year for 10 years after his contract expires next decade to join ...
On Sunday, the Miami Marlins hired Dodgers first base coach Clayton McCullough to be their new manager, as ESPN first reported, creating the first opening on the Dodgers’ coaching staff in two ...
Schumaker joined the Marlins in 2023, helping the team to a 83-78 record and its fourth-ever playoff berth and earning NL Manager of the Year honors. Miami was eventually swept in the wild-card ...
Mattingly with the Marlins in 2021. In fall of 2015, Mattingly signed a four-year contract to manage the Miami Marlins. [48] [49] Mattingly led the Marlins to win 79 games in his first year (the most wins for the team since winning 80 in 2010), which had him place fifth in the final voting for NL Manager of the Year. [50]