Carlos Marmol Finally Released by Chicago Cubs, and He Blames Cubs Fans

by Kent Sterling

UnknownIt’s always a little unpleasant to read that a formerly great baseball player has been designated for assignment.  I imagine the manager or general manager calling the player into his office, and giving the player the bad news.  That’s a day that comes for almost all players, and if you have any empathy, there is a bit of a knot in your stomach – even when it’s former Cubs’ closer Carlos Marmol’s turn.

I found out about Marmol from a friend, who said that he “will return to being a Cub fan now that this has FINALLY happened!”  Not sure the removal of a guy can ever make a team better, but at the very minimum, it should be a little less stressful to watch the Cubs without Marmol as a bullpen option.

Marmol wasn’t always a scourge during the parts of eight seasons in which he toiled for the Cubs.  His career at Wrigley ends with a 23-32 record, 117 saves, an ERA of 3.50, and a WHIP of 1.329.

In 2008, Marmol was virtually unhittable with a great fastball, and a slider that was almost never touched.  The best set-up man in the game that year, Marmol gave up only 40 hits in 87 innings pitched as he earned his only trip to the all-star game.

Marmol’s 117 saves rank third in franchise history, behind only Lee Smith (180) and Bruce Sutter (133).  Over his career, Marmol gave up more walks than hits – 366 walks to 355 hits in 542 1/3 innings.

Even eulogizing this guy.  Marmol’s fastball evolved from a difficult to hit pitch that had great movement to a lick your chops and hack pitch over the past few years, and that was the difference between good and bad Carlos.

Against fastballs, opponents slugged .868 Marmol this season, and amassed a stratospheric 1.357 OBP.  In 2008 thru 2013, opponents batting average against his fastball went from .220 to .196 to .186 to .311 to .244 to .395.  Even as the slider has remained effective, it required the fastball to set it up, but the fastball needed to not be hit on the screws to do it.

Of the flyballs hit off Marmol, an incredible 41.7% left the park for a home run.

All that statistical gobbledigook adds up to unemployment for Marmol, and so it goes for the Cubs.

As though Cubs fans needed a parting gift of another reason to hate Marmol, he blamed the fans for his poor performance in an interview with Enrique Rojas of ESPNdeportes.com via phone from Milwaukee, “I would say that the lack of support from the fans was part of the reason of the mental block that I suffered recently,” Marmol said.

Marmol will sit in baseball purgatory for ten days as the Cubs try to work out a trade.  If not, Marmol can either report to the minor league spot where the Cubs point him, or declare himself a free agent.  If he signs elsewhere, the Cubs will be on the hook for the remainder of the $9.8M he was to make this year – minus the league minimum.

Even if he’s hated now in Chicago, St. Louis Cardinals fans will always have a soft spot in their hearts for Marmol because of a wild pitch he threw with two outs in the bottom of the ninth that allowed Adron Chambers to score the winning run of a game that was instrumental in allowing the Cardinals to earn a wild card berth in the postseason that was nurtured into an improbably World Championship.

One thought on “Carlos Marmol Finally Released by Chicago Cubs, and He Blames Cubs Fans

  1. MJ

    DING Dong! MARMOL’s gone!!!!! I have been a life long die-hard CUBS FAN. Been to opening day 37 times, even became an Andy Frain Usher at 16, because my father had given all of our tickets away. For the last several several years, I’ve been living out west….I’ve almost NEVER MISSED a game…even lining there. But last..year?!?! I’d had it! I did NOT WATCH ONE GAME!!!!! That guy masse my stomach turn when I saw him in the bullpen! You just KNEW where why he GAME was going to go if he came in! And he “Blames the fans” ?!?!?! OMGOODNESS!

    Reply

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