rough seas ahead
Ned Yost’s Royals are in first place, and Buck Showalter’s Orioles, John Gibbons’ Blue Jays and Clint Hurdle’s Pirates have winning records and are contending in their respective divisions. The fifth Mississippi-connected manager in the big leagues, Dan Jennings, is running a club much closer to the cellar than first place. And things just took a turn for the worse for his Marlins. Already hindered by injuries, Miami has now lost star slugger Giancarlo Stanton for 4-6 weeks with a hand injury. Jennings, a Southern Miss and William Carey alum, was mocked when he was hired and still is drawing criticism from Miami fans. The team was 16-22 when the “shocking” decision was made to replace Mike Redmond with Jennings, a longtime scout and front office exec whose only experience running a team came at the high school level. The Marlins started 0-5 under Jennings, then went 14-13 over a stretch but have now lost five straight. At 30-45, Miami is 11.5 games out in the National League East. With pitcher Jose Fernandez and some others due back from the DL soon, there was cause for optimism for a team that was expected to contend for a playoff berth. “We’re not jumping off the ship, no doubt about that,” Jennings told a writer for CBS Sports last week. But with the loss of Stanton, the waters have become very choppy.