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The Rangers arrive in Miami at 37-40, carrying another bruised rotation into a dangerous little Monday spot at loanDepot park. The Marlins are 40-38, 14-4 in June, and riding eight straight home wins, their longest home streak since 2009. They just swept the Giants with a 4-3, 6-3, 2-1 run, which says plenty about how they have been winning: enough pressure, enough late pitching, enough timely contact. Texas sends Kumar Rocker into that room with a talented arm, uneven command, and a profile that can get expensive quickly when the first two hitters of an inning refuse to go away. Below is my preview, prediction, and pick for today’s baseball game between the Miami Marlins and the Texas Rangers.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
Rocker’s surface line already brings some stress: 2-6, 4.17 ERA, 1.41 WHIP, 56 strikeouts, 67 hits allowed, eight homers, and 30 walks across 69 innings. The deeper numbers make the Miami total more attractive. He owns a 7.30 K/9, 3.91 BB/9, 18.5% strikeout rate, 9.9% walk rate, and 8.6% K-BB rate, with a 4.38 FIP, 4.48 xFIP, and 5.08 xERA behind the ERA. Rocker has enough stuff to win individual at-bats, but he has averaged barely more than four innings per start. That leaves Texas needing volume from a bullpen already carrying extra weight.
The pitch mix gives Miami the cleanest part of the handicap. Rocker has thrown his slider 38.1%, sinker 32.7%, cutter 11.5%, four-seamer 10.9%, and changeup 6.7%. Against left-handed bats, the contact has turned loud: .352 wOBA, .364 xwOBA, .403 wOBAcon, .421 xwOBAcon, 91.2 mph average exit velocity, 47.5% hard-hit rate, and 11.8% barrel rate. That matters against a projected Miami group that can send Jakob Marsee, Xavier Edwards, Kyle Stowers, Owen Caissie, and Joe Mack into those lanes from the left side. Rocker’s sinker/slider foundation can miss barrels when he is ahead. It can also invite long innings when his location leaks arm-side or he falls behind and has to reach back over the plate.
Miami’s season-long offense still keeps this from becoming an alternate-total play. The Marlins have a .245/.321/.381 slash and .702 OPS against right-handed pitching, with 467 hits, 96 doubles, eight triples, 49 homers, 193 walks, and 31 hit batters across that split. They are built more for traffic than constant thunder, especially with Liam Hicks on the IL after leading the club with 13 homers and 53 RBI. That absence matters. It removes the cleanest RBI bat from the middle. The remaining shape still works for 4.5 runs because Rocker gives baserunners away, Miami is seeing the ball well, and this lineup has enough left-handed lift to punish the mistake that follows the walk.
Stowers is the centerpiece. He has a 90.7 mph average exit velocity, 51.1% hard-hit rate, 10.7% barrel rate, .322 wOBA, and .332 xwOBA, and he just took Logan Webb out at 106 mph and 426 feet. Otto Lopez gives Miami another useful pressure point with a .361 wOBA, .336 xwOBA, 90.1 mph average exit velocity, and 45.4% hard-hit rate. Caissie is the volatile swing, but the underlying power fits: 91.1 mph average exit velocity, 44.5% hard-hit rate, and 13.6% barrel rate. Add Edwards’ contact, Marsee’s on-base route, and the bottom-third lefty paths, and Miami can get to five without needing a cartoonish homer barrage.
loanDepot park removes the easy weather bump, so the late-game layer has to do some work. Texas owns some strong season relief names, including Jacob Latz, Jakob Junis, and Tyler Alexander, but the group has a 6.09 ERA over the last seven days. Jack Leiter’s IL stint also creates a Tuesday pitching problem, which could matter if Rocker only gives the Rangers four or five innings. Miami does not need a clean slugfest to cash this. It needs traffic against Rocker, one middle-order swing, and at least one late inning against a bullpen with roster stress. That is enough at plus money.
Best bet: Marlins TT over 4.5 runs at +110. Playable to -115.
Projected score: Marlins 5, Rangers 4.
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