Tinoco, Bachar making most of opportunity in Marlins' 'pen

September 25th, 2024

MINNEAPOLIS -- When the Trade Deadline came and went, the Marlins’ bullpen was nearly unrecognizable. Two months later, it’s playing a key role in spoiling the dreams of contending clubs.

Three relievers -- Lake Bachar, and -- combined to toss four scoreless innings in the Marlins’ 4-1 victory over the Twins on Tuesday night at Target Field. Miami’s win dropped Minnesota two games back in the American League Wild Card race.

“I credit our staff,” said manager Skip Schumaker, who also recently gave kudos to the front office for under-the-radar finds. “[Pitching coach] Mel [Stottlemyre Jr.] and [bullpen coach Wellington Cepeda] and [pitching strategist] Brandon [Mann] have done a really good job of keeping these guys confident, keeping these guys ready. You never stop developing at this level. I don't care how old you are. A lot of these guys are from the waiver wire, honestly, and they're older, and I think this is their first shot. And our pitching staff and our coaching staff has not stopped developing them.

“It's our job when they come here to get them better. And I feel like there's a couple of guys that have never had a shot pitching in those high-leverage spots now, because they've been developed the right way, and they feel confident about it, and we've been staying positive about it, that they have been OK with whatever role we put them in.”

At the top of that list would be Tinoco, who has taken over closer duties since righty Calvin Faucher landed on the injured list on Sept. 7 with a right shoulder impingement. Designated for assignment twice this season, Tinoco -- a member of the 2020 Marlins -- found himself back in the Miami organization on July 30.

All the 29-year-old Tinoco has done since then is dominate. He has a 1.80 ERA and a 0.56 WHIP in 20 outings as a Marlin following Tuesday’s five-out save. Entering the series opener, his .091 average against his slider was lowest in the Majors among pitchers with at least 50 plate appearances ending on the pitch.

Inheriting a situation with runners on first and second with one out in the eighth, Tinoco got Ryan Jeffers to pop out and pinch-hitter Edouard Julien to fly out to end the threat. He worked a 1-2-3 ninth, ending the game on a strikeout looking of Carlos Correa.

“Just basically came with the mindset of working hard, helping the team in any way that I could,” Tinoco said last Friday via interpreter Will Nadal. “I talked with the coaches, talked a little bit about just how I was pitching, specifically talking about left-handed hitters, seeing how I could be more effective against them. We worked a little bit on me being able to attack the zone a little bit higher when I'm throwing the ball.”

While Tinoco has appeared in parts of five big league seasons since 2019, Bachar had to wait nine years for his chance. After Miami claimed him from San Diego on Sept. 3, he made just one appearance for Triple-A Jacksonville before going unscored upon in his first six Major League outings.

Bachar, 29, pitched a perfect sixth with two strikeouts before giving way to Bender with a runner on and one out in the seventh.

“It's a special moment for me,” said Bachar, who grew up in the Great Lakes area and had family and friends in attendance. “Through the past nine years, I've always thought I could pitch at this level, and being trusted in those situations, I'm really grateful for that. Just to go out there and do what I need to do. It's a crazy whirlwind. I don't even think it'll really hit me until probably this offseason, the road it's taken me to get here and all that. But I'm just very grateful for every opportunity.”

Like everyone else on the roster -- from Jonah Bride (three hits, homer) and Nick Fortes (2-for-4, RBI) -- Tinoco and Bachar are trying to make cases to be included in either the Marlins’ or another organization’s 2025 plans.

“It's difficult, it's challenging to get to know basically a whole new bullpen in the middle of the year, but it's part of catching, it's the fun part,” Fortes said. “I'm proud of the way that these guys have competed. A lot of these guys have gotten opportunities here, and they've made the most of it, so it's cool to see them have success over here when maybe it didn't work out in another organization for them.”