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How To Watch Marlins At Dodgers: Series Preview, TV Channels, Start Times, And Streaming For April 27–29 At Dodger Stadium

World Baseball Network 2026 Miami Marlins coverage graphic previewing the international friendly Marlins road series at the Los Angeles Dodgers, April 27-29 at Dodger Stadium, with Miami flying west at 13-15 to face the back-to-back World Series champions Description: WBN graphic produced for World Baseball Network's 2026 Miami Marlins beat coverage, previewing the three-game road series at Dodger Stadium. Miami enters at 13-15 to face the defending World Series champion Dodgers across three consecutive nights — Yamamoto on Monday, Ohtani on Tuesday, Glasnow on Wednesday afternoon.

There is no soft framing for this one. Miami is 13-15 after losing two of three at Oracle Park, the Mets are 9-19, the Phillies are 9-19, and the Marlins now fly to Los Angeles for a three-game set against the defending champions. The Dodgers are 19-9, the most expensive bullpen in baseball, and the only NL team with three top-of-rotation starters lined up over the next three nights.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto on Monday. Shohei Ohtani on Tuesday. Tyler Glasnow, who one-hit the Giants over eight innings on April 23 at Oracle Park, on Wednesday afternoon. The Marlins counter with Chris Paddack (0-4, 6.38), Janson Junk (1-2, 3.67), and Sandy Alcántara (3-2, 3.05).

This is the hardest three-game stretch on the Marlins’ April schedule. There is no other version of that sentence.

How to Watch Marlins at Dodgers — All Three Games

Game 1 — Monday, April 27

  • Matchup: Miami Marlins (13-15) at Los Angeles Dodgers (19-9)
  • First Pitch: 10:10 PM ET / 7:10 PM PT
  • Venue: Dodger Stadium, Los Angeles, California
  • Pitching Matchup: Chris Paddack (0-4, 6.38 ERA) vs. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (2-2, 2.48 ERA)
  • TV: SportsNet LA, Marlins.TV, ESPN Unlimited
  • Streaming: MLB.TV, Fubo, ESPN+
  • Radio: WQAM 560 (English), WAQI 710 (Spanish), AM 570 LA Sports (Dodgers feed)

Game 2 — Tuesday, April 28

  • First Pitch: 10:10 PM ET / 7:10 PM PT
  • Pitching Matchup: Janson Junk (1-2, 3.67 ERA) vs. Shohei Ohtani (2-0, 0.38 ERA)
  • TV: SportsNet LA, Marlins.TV
  • Streaming: MLB.TV, Fubo
  • Radio: WQAM 560, WAQI 710 (Spanish), AM 570 LA Sports

Game 3 — Wednesday, April 29

  • First Pitch: 3:10 PM ET / 12:10 PM PT (matinée)
  • Pitching Matchup: Sandy Alcántara (3-2, 3.05 ERA) vs. Tyler Glasnow (3-0, 2.45 ERA)
  • TV: SportsNet LA, Marlins.TV
  • Streaming: MLB.TV, Fubo
  • Radio: WQAM 560, WAQI 710 (Spanish), AM 570 LA Sports

Series Storyline — Why This Three-Game Set Matters

The Marlins took two of three from the Cardinals last week to climb back to within a game of .500 at 12-13. Then they flew to Oracle Park, won the opener 9-4 behind a Liam Hicks two-run homer and a Connor Norby three-run shot, and lost the next two games 6-2 and 6-3. Sunday’s loss came when Calvin Faucher blew a save and Andrew Nardi gave up a three-run home run to Casey Schmitt in the seventh. The bullpen has now blown three save situations in the last fifteen games.

Across the same three days, the Mets and Phillies both lost series, leaving them at 9-19 — tied for the worst record in baseball. The Nationals are 11-15. The Braves are leading the NL East at 18-8. The NL Wild Card math is real but it is also fragile, and Miami needs to keep pace with the Dodgers (19-9), Padres (18-9), Cubs (16-12), and Diamondbacks (16-12) for any of the three NL Wild Card slots.

The all-time series is 132-101 in the Dodgers’ favor. The 2025 season series was 5-1 LAD. The 2024 season series was 5-1 LAD. The Marlins have not won a season series against Los Angeles since 2018.

The International Players Coming to Town

The Dodgers carry the largest international footprint of any active roster in Major League Baseball. They have three Japanese-born starters they can run out in any week. They have a Korean-born infielder, a Cuban-born corner outfielder, three Dominican-born regulars, and two Venezuelan players, including a former Marlins shortstop and franchise cornerstone. They are managed by Dave Roberts, who was born in Naha, Okinawa, the son of a Japanese mother and an American serviceman father — the only Japanese-American manager in Major League Baseball history.

If WBN had to draw the chart for the most internationally constructed clubhouse in modern baseball, it would look very close to this Dodgers roster.

Yoshinobu Yamamoto — Bizen, Okayama, Japan (JP) · RHP, Monday Starter

Year three of a 12-year, $325 million deal. Yamamoto is 2-2 with a 2.48 ERA through five starts in 2026, with 28 strikeouts in 32.2 innings and a 0.89 WHIP. He has gone six or more innings in every start, and has not given up more than three earned runs in any of them. He came up through the Orix Buffaloes in NPB, won three consecutive Sawamura Awards in Japan before the move, and is the kind of strike-throwing right-hander whose changeup-curveball combination is built to punish lineups that swing at his fastball expecting velocity. He has faced the Marlins exactly once — May 7, 2024, at Dodger Stadium — and went eight innings, gave up two earned, struck out five. The Dodgers won 8-2.

Los Angeles Dodgers’ Yoshinobu Yamamoto smiles in the dugout during the ninth inning of a baseball game against the Texas Rangers in Los Angeles, Saturday, April 11, 2026. (AP Photo/Kyusung Gong)

Shohei Ohtani — Ōshū, Iwate, Japan (JP) · DH/RHP, Tuesday Starter

The most decorated baseball player on Earth is also Tuesday’s Marlins opponent. Ohtani is hitting .293 with seven home runs through 28 games as a position player. As a pitcher, his 2026 line is 2-0, 0.38 ERA, 25 strikeouts in 24 innings, .140 batting average against. Three of his last five outings have been Game Score 68 or higher. He has not faced the Marlins as a pitcher since 2023, when he went six innings of two-hit, ten-strikeout ball at loanDepot park, gave up one earned run, and earned a no-decision. Career numbers vs. Miami: 13 IP, 8 H, 1 ER, 20 K. The Marlins have never solved him.

Los Angeles Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani smiles toward Alex Freeland as he stands on second after Freeland hit an RBI single during the eighth inning of a baseball game against the New York Mets Tuesday, April 14, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Tyler Glasnow — Newhall, California (USA) · RHP, Wednesday Starter

American by birth, but worth a paragraph of his own as Wednesday’s matchup. Glasnow is 3-0 with a 2.45 ERA. His last start was the eight-inning, one-hit performance at Oracle Park on April 23 that the WBN preview piece named as the pitcher profile most likely to shut down a slumping lineup. The Marlins’ offense — which managed five runs total over the final two games of the Giants series — gets him on Wednesday afternoon. Sandy Alcántara is 2-3 with a 7.52 ERA in his last five career starts against Los Angeles. This is the matchup that most concerns the Marlins’ coaching staff.

Dodgers News: Tyler Glasnow Passed On Playing For Team USA In 2026 World Baseball Classic

Roki Sasaki — Rikuzentakata, Iwate, Japan (JP) · RHP, Likely Bullpen

The third Japanese-born arm on the Dodgers’ staff is not slated to start this series, but Sasaki has been working out of the bullpen in 2026. The Dodgers used him as a closer through the 2025 postseason, and at age 24 with a fastball that touches 102, he is one of the late-game options if any of the three games are close. He has never faced the Marlins.

Los Angeles Dodgers pitchers Shohei Ohtani, right, of Japan, and Roki Sasaki, of Japan, smile as they talk during a throwing session during spring training baseball Friday, Feb. 13, 2026, in Phoenix. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

Hyeseong Kim — Suwon, South Korea (KR) · INF

Kim signed a three-year, $22 million deal with Los Angeles before the 2025 season, lost most of his rookie year to inconsistent playing time, and has emerged in 2026 as a regular at second base while Tommy Edman is on the 10-day IL. He is hitting .293 across 18 games, has stolen four bases, and was a career .310 hitter in the KBO before the move. The Korean-born middle infielder paired with the Korean-born center fielder we just saw at Oracle Park is, by itself, a story baseball is still figuring out how to cover.

Los Angeles Dodgers’ Hyeseong Kim, of South Korea, smiles as he celebrates after scoring against the Seattle Mariners during the third inning of a spring training baseball game Friday, March 7, 2025, in Peoria, Ariz. (AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin)

Teoscar Hernández — Cotuí, Dominican Republic (DO) · LF/DH

Hernández signed a three-year, $66 million deal in December 2024, won a championship with Los Angeles in his first season, and has been a fixture in the heart of the Dodgers lineup since. Career numbers against Sandy Alcántara: 11 plate appearances, 1.273 OPS — one of the best individual matchups in baseball against the Marlins ace. He hits Sandy. The Marlins know it. Sandy gets him on Wednesday.

Los Angeles Dodgers’ Teoscar Hernández smiles during the second inning in an MLB Japan Series exhibition baseball game against the Hanshin Tigers, Sunday, March 16, 2025, in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Andy Pages — Mantanzas, Cuba (CU) · CF

Cuban-born outfielder, signed as an international free agent in 2018 after his family left Cuba. Pages has been one of the best stories in the National League through the first month of 2026 — five home runs, 25 RBI (third in MLB), .337 average, .554 slugging. He plays an outfield position next to two of the most expensive bats in baseball. The Cuban-born center fielder in a Dodgers lineup that also features the Dominican-born corner bat is the lineage WBN tracks game by game.

Los Angeles Dodgers left fielder Teoscar Hernandez (37), Dodgers center fielder Andy Pages (44) and Dodgers right fielder Kyle Tucker (23) react after a win over the Chicago Cubs during a baseball game Sunday, April 26, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Caroline Brehman)

Santiago Espinal — Salcedo, Dominican Republic (DO) · INF

Espinal signed with Los Angeles before 2026 and has been the utility infielder filling time at second, third, and short. He is hitting .250 across 12 games. His career numbers against Sandy: 3 plate appearances, .666 OPS. Smaller sample, smaller story, but Espinal is the Dominican-born veteran in a clubhouse with a clear DR core.

Los Angeles Dodgers third baseman Santiago Espinal (21) in the sixth inning of a baseball game Monday, April 20, 2026, in Denver. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)

Miguel Rojas — Caracas, Venezuela (VE) · INF

This is the homecoming story for the series. Rojas was a Marlin from 2014 through 2022, the franchise’s primary shortstop through some of the leanest years in club history, and is the kind of player Marlins fans of a certain age will stand and applaud when he comes to bat regardless of the uniform. He is 37 years old, hitting .279 in 17 games as the Dodgers’ utility infielder, and will be in the lineup at some point this series. Rojas was the Marlins shortstop on the 2020 NL East division team. He is the connective tissue between the Don Mattingly era and now.

Los Angeles Dodgers’ Miguel Rojas (72) reacts after hitting a two-run double, scoring teammates Kyle Tucker and Teoscar Hernandez, during the first inning of a baseball game against the Chicago Cubs, Sunday, April 26, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Caroline Brehman)

Miami Marlins’ Miguel Rojas smiles as he warms up during a baseball workout at Marlins Park, Saturday, July 4, 2020, in Miami.

Edgardo Henriquez — Caracas, Venezuela (VE) · RHP

The 24-year-old Venezuelan right-hander has been a key bullpen arm in 2026, with a 2.84 ERA through nine appearances and a fastball that sits 99-100. He is the kind of high-leverage arm the Dodgers will use late in any game that’s close. The Venezuelan-born reliever, the Cuban-born center fielder, the three Japanese-born starters — this is a clubhouse map that sprawls.

Los Angeles Dodgers relief pitcher Edgardo Henriquez, right, and catcher Dalton Rushing celebrate after the team’s win in a baseball game against the Seattle Mariners, Saturday, Sept. 27, 2025, in Seattle. (AP Photo/Ryan Sun)

Edwin Díaz — Naguabo, Puerto Rico (PR) · RHP

The most decorated closer of his generation signed a three-year, $69 million deal with Los Angeles this offseason after seven years with the Mets, and went on the 15-day IL on April 21 with loose bodies in his right elbow. He underwent surgery and is expected to miss approximately three months. He will not appear in this series, but he is the most prominent name on the Dodgers’ Puerto Rico contingent. Díaz pitched for Puerto Rico in the 2026 World Baseball Classic in March, where he was the closer for a team that reached the quarterfinals.

Los Angeles Dodgers relief pitcher Edwin Diaz (3) celebrates with teammates after a baseball game against the Washington Nationals, Sunday, April 5, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

Puerto Rico pitcher Edwin Díaz reacts during the eighth inning of a World Baseball Classic quarterfinal game against Italy, Saturday, March 14, 2026, in Houston. (AP Photo/Karen Warren)

Brusdar Graterol — Calabozo, Venezuela (VE) · RHP

Also on the 15-day IL with shoulder soreness. The Venezuelan-born right-hander has been a Dodgers high-leverage piece since 2020 and is another reminder of how the Dodgers built their bullpen — and how it has fared in April.

Los Angeles Dodgers relief pitcher Brusdar Graterol reacts after San Francisco Giants’ Evan Longoria grounded out to end the top of the sixth inning of Game 4 of a baseball National League Division Series, Tuesday, Oct. 12, 2021, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez)

Manager: Dave Roberts was born May 31, 1972 in Naha, Okinawa, Japan. His mother is Japanese, his father was an American serviceman stationed at the Futenma Air Base. He is the only Japanese-American manager in MLB history. He won a championship with Los Angeles in 2020, won another in 2024, and won another in 2025. He manages a clubhouse that includes Yamamoto, Ohtani, and Sasaki — three Japanese-born stars on the same staff. There is not another roster construction in baseball that approaches this geography.

Los Angeles Dodgers starting pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto, left, gets a pat on the back from head coach Dave Roberts as he is taken out of the game during the eighth inning of a baseball game against the New York Mets, Tuesday, April 14, 2026, in Los Angeles. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)

Stats to Know — Hitters Who Will Decide the Series

Andy Pages has hit five home runs this season, driven in 25 runs (3rd in MLB), and scored 15 runs. In 111 plate appearances he has slashed .337/.378/.554 with a 6.3% walk rate and a 22.5% strikeout rate. He has stolen four bases on five attempts. The Cuban-born center fielder is the early-season MVP candidate the Marlins will see most often this series.

Max Muncy has been the Dodgers’ second-best hitter behind Pages — .300/.394/.633 with a 1.028 OPS through 104 plate appearances. Nine home runs (5th in MLB), 11 RBI, 22 runs scored. His career numbers against Sandy Alcántara are 18 plate appearances, 1.189 OPS — the second-most problematic matchup in this series for the Marlins ace, after Teoscar Hernández.

Liam Hicks is Miami’s leverage bat through the first month. The Canadian catcher has hit five home runs, driven in 24 runs (6th in MLB), and scored 16 times across 96 plate appearances. He is hitting .314/.354/.523. He has reached base safely in 10 consecutive games entering Monday.

Xavier Edwards leads the National League in batting average at .343 (also slashing .425/.467) through 121 plate appearances. The Marlins second baseman has hit one home run, driven in nine runs, stolen four bases on five attempts, and scored 20 runs (15th in MLB). He has a 12.4% walk rate and a 12.4% strikeout rate — meaning he walks as often as he strikes out, the kind of contact-and-discipline profile that gives elite arms problems.

Otto Lopez sits 4th in the NL in batting average at .330. The Dominican-born shortstop has been the connective tissue at the top of the Marlins lineup all month.

Injury Report

Dodgers (10-day IL): Tommy Edman (ankle), Mookie Betts (back). Dodgers (15-day IL): Brock Stewart (shoulder), Brusdar Graterol (shoulder), Blake Snell (shoulder), Edwin Díaz (elbow — surgery, out 3 months), Ben Casparius (shoulder), Landon Knack (undisclosed). Dodgers (60-day IL): Bobby Miller (shoulder), Gavin Stone (shoulder), Jake Cousins (elbow), Kiké Hernández (elbow), Evan Phillips (elbow). Day-to-day: Will Smith (back).

Marlins (10-day IL): Griffin Conine (hamstring), Christopher Morel (oblique). Marlins (60-day IL): Adam Mazur (elbow), Ronny Henriquez (elbow).

The injury context that matters for this series: Will Smith is day-to-day with a back issue, which would force Dalton Rushing into a bigger role behind the plate. Mookie Betts is on the 10-day IL — that has reshaped the top of the Dodgers’ lineup, with Andy Pages and Hyeseong Kim getting more at-bats than projected. Edwin Díaz being out for the season’s middle stretch leaves Tanner Scott, Alex Vesia, and Blake Treinen as the primary late-inning options for Los Angeles, all three of whom have been inconsistent through April.

How Miami Could Steal a Game

The Dodgers are 19-9. The path to a Marlins series win is narrow, but it exists, and it has a specific shape.

Wednesday is the day to circle. Sandy Alcántara is the only Marlins starter with a realistic chance of matching the opposing arm. Glasnow is the toughest of the three, but he also threw 105 pitches over eight innings on April 23 — a workload that historically shortens the leash on the next start. Sandy’s last outing at Oracle Park was uneven (six innings, nine hits, three earned), but he held the Giants to four hits over the previous two starts before that, and his ERA still sits at 3.05. If Sandy goes seven and the Marlins offense gets to Glasnow for two runs, the bullpen has a real opportunity to navigate a 4-3 type game. That is the formula.

The Dodgers’ bullpen is not what it was. Edwin Díaz is having elbow surgery. Brusdar Graterol is on the IL. Tanner Scott posted a 4.74 ERA last year and blew ten saves leading the league. Blake Treinen has a 4.05 ERA in 2026. The Dodgers’ rotation is overpowering. Their bullpen is a 4.27 ERA group that struggled even when healthy. Get to a Dodgers reliever in the seventh or eighth inning of any close game and Miami’s offense — which has been quietly productive across the board, with Edwards (.343), Lopez (.330), Hicks (.314), and Sanoja (.339) — has a chance.

The Marlins’ offense has been better than their record. Through 28 games, Miami is averaging 4.50 runs per game, which sits in the middle third of the National League. Liam Hicks is on a 10-game on-base streak. Xavier Edwards leads the NL in batting average. The hits are there. What has not been there is the bullpen.

The bullpen is the actual problem. On Sunday, Calvin Faucher came in to a 3-1 lead in the sixth, blew the save, and the Marlins lost 6-3. Andrew Nardi gave up a three-run home run to Casey Schmitt in the seventh that ended the game in real time. The Marlins’ bullpen ERA across the Giants series was approximately 7.20. The pen has now blown three save situations in the last 15 games. Pete Fairbanks remains the only reliever Marlins fans want to see in a leverage spot. The rest of the pen has not earned that trust through the road trip.

How Miami loses all three: Paddack gives up six runs in three innings to Yamamoto’s lineup on Monday and the bullpen pitches the rest of a blowout. Junk does what Junk does on Tuesday — locates around the zone, induces ground balls, throws four-and-two-thirds — and Ohtani strikes out nine through six innings while the offense scores seven. Sandy gets to Wednesday afternoon, gives up three, and the Marlins drop the matinée.

How Miami steals one: Sandy on Wednesday. That’s the realistic path.

The Three Games — Closer Look

Monday, April 27 · 10:10 PM ET · Chris Paddack vs. Yoshinobu Yamamoto

Paddack (0-4, 6.38) has not won a start in 2026. He has gone five innings or fewer in three of his five outings. His career numbers against the Dodgers: 0-3, 6.45 ERA, 22.1 IP, 25 hits, 16 earned. His most recent outing against Los Angeles was at Dodger Stadium on July 23, 2025, and he gave up one earned run over six innings — by far his best career outing against this team — but earned a no-decision. Yamamoto (2-2, 2.48) has gone six or more innings in every start. The probable outcome here is the Dodgers’ bats put up four runs in the first three innings and the game is decided early. Pete Fairbanks does not pitch in this game.

Tuesday, April 28 · 10:10 PM ET · Janson Junk vs. Shohei Ohtani

Junk (1-2, 3.67) has never faced the Dodgers as a starter. He is coming off the best outing of his Marlins career — five innings, one hit, two strikeouts in the 4-1 series finale win over the Cardinals last Wednesday. Ohtani as a pitcher is the closest thing baseball has to a 1968 Bob Gibson — 0.38 ERA, 25 strikeouts in 24 innings. Career numbers vs. Miami as a pitcher: 13 IP, 1 ER, 20 K. The path to a Marlins win in this game is Junk-on-the-edges for six innings and the Dodgers’ bullpen giving back a one-run lead in the eighth. It exists. It is unlikely.

Miami Marlins catcher Agustin Ramirez, left, talks with starting pitcher Janson Junk (26) during the second inning of a baseball game against the Milwaukee Brewers, Friday, April 17, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Wednesday, April 29 · 3:10 PM ET · Sandy Alcántara vs. Tyler Glasnow

The matinée is the Marlins’ game. Sandy (3-2, 3.05) needs to be sharper than his last start at Oracle Park. Glasnow (3-0, 2.45) is the most overpowering arm in either rotation through April. Teoscar Hernández is the matchup to watch — career 1.273 OPS in 11 plate appearances against Sandy. Sandy will need to navigate Hernández, Freddie Freeman (.321 OPS in 13 PA — manageable), and Max Muncy (1.189 OPS in 18 PA — deeply problematic). The Marlins win this game if Sandy holds the Dodgers to two runs over seven and the offense gets to Glasnow for three. That is the realistic path. Anything else is a loss.

The Dodger Stadium Variable

Dodger Stadium plays the way Oracle Park does not. The marine layer doesn’t compress the ball the way it does in San Francisco. Center field at Dodger Stadium is 395 feet but it plays neutral; right field is 330 feet down the line and is a fly-ball graveyard for left-handed hitters. The Marlins’ lineup leans right-handed in its current configuration, with Marsee, Stowers, and Caissie as the lefties. The matchup against Yamamoto on Monday and Glasnow on Wednesday — both right-handed power arms — is asymmetric in the Dodgers’ favor.

Game-time temperature in Los Angeles will be roughly 65-72°F across the three games. The wind blows out to right-center on most spring nights at Dodger Stadium. There is no Oracle Park weather variable here. The Dodgers’ offense, which is averaging 5.68 runs per game, plays exactly the way it is built to play in this ballpark.

What a Series Win Looks Like — and What 0-3 Looks Like

A 1-2 series outcome is the realistic ceiling. Miami flies home from Los Angeles at 14-17, the bullpen still the variable that defines this team’s first half, and the home stretch starting next Friday at loanDepot park against the Diamondbacks. That is a survivable outcome. The pitcher who wins it is Sandy on Wednesday afternoon.

A 2-1 series outcome would require Junk or Paddack to outpitch one of the two best starters in the National League this April. It is a low-probability event. It is not impossible.

A 0-3 series puts the Marlins at 13-18 heading home, and the Wild Card math becomes a conversation about July and August rather than May. The Mets at 9-19 are the only thing keeping the NL East from looking like a closed division, and they will not stay at 9-19 forever.

Sandy Alcántara walks out to the mound at Dodger Stadium on Wednesday afternoon with a Dominican counterpart in his catcher (Agustín Ramírez), a Dodgers lineup that includes three Dominican hitters (Hernández, Espinal, and Rojas off the bench) and a Cuban center fielder, and a Japanese-American manager in the home dugout managing three Japanese-born starters across the three-day stretch. The internationality of this matchup is not a footnote. It is the frame through which this series gets covered.

Baseball Without Borders. Three games starting Monday night in Los Angeles. Marlins.TV, SportsNet LA, and if you are reading this an hour or two before first pitch on Monday, you are the exact kind of fan this beat was built for.

— MT

Series at a Glance

  • Mon 4/27 · 10:10 PM ET — Chris Paddack (0-4, 6.38) vs. Yoshinobu Yamamoto (2-2, 2.48) · SportsNet LA / Marlins.TV / ESPN Unlimited / WQAM 560 / WAQI 710 (Spanish)
  • Tue 4/28 · 10:10 PM ET — Janson Junk (1-2, 3.67) vs. Shohei Ohtani (2-0, 0.38) · Same broadcasts
  • Wed 4/29 · 3:10 PM ET — Sandy Alcántara (3-2, 3.05) vs. Tyler Glasnow (3-0, 2.45) · Same broadcasts

International Players to Watch

Dodgers (Active Roster): Yoshinobu Yamamoto (Bizen, Japan — Monday starter), Shohei Ohtani (Ōshū, Japan — Tuesday starter), Roki Sasaki (Rikuzentakata, Japan — bullpen), Hyeseong Kim (Suwon, South Korea — 2B), Teoscar Hernández (Cotuí, DR — LF/DH), Andy Pages (Mantanzas, Cuba — CF), Santiago Espinal (Salcedo, DR — utility), Miguel Rojas (Caracas, Venezuela — utility, former Marlin), Edgardo Henriquez (Caracas, Venezuela — RHP). On IL: Edwin Díaz (Naguabo, PR), Brusdar Graterol (Calabozo, Venezuela). Manager: Dave Roberts (Naha, Okinawa, Japan — only Japanese-American manager in MLB history).

Marlins (Active Roster): Sandy Alcántara (DR, Wednesday starter), Eury Pérez (DR), Agustín Ramírez (DR), Otto Lopez (DR), Heriberto Hernández (DR), Esteury Ruiz (DR), Javier Sanoja (Venezuela), Leo Jiménez (Panama), Michael Petersen (Great Britain), Liam Hicks (Canada), Owen Caissie (Canada). On IL: Christopher Morel (DR, 10-day), Ronny Henriquez (DR, 60-day).

Miami Marlins Files — Full Coverage

Marlins at Giants Preview — Chasing the NL Wild Card · Cardinals Coming to Town — Series Preview · Junk and the Bullpen Three-Hit Cardinals — MIA 4, STL 1 · Dustin May Wins Pitchers’ Duel — STL 5, MIA 3 · Marlins Take the Opener — MIA 5, STL 3 · Eury Perez Answers the Question — MIL 3, MIA 5 · Woodruff Goes Seven, Sandy Walks Six — MIL 5, MIA 2 · Otto Lopez Homers to Tie It — MIL 7, MIA 5 (10) · Elder Strikes Out Seven — ATL 6, MIA 3 · Dominic Smith Clears the Bases — ATL 6, MIA 5 · Marlins Punch First — MIA 10, ATL 4 · Sandy Flirts With a Maddux — MIA L 6-3 · The Miami Marlins Are Winning. Nobody’s Been Told Yet. · Meet Leo Jimenez, Miami’s Newest Panamanian · Edwards Delivers — MIA 7, NYY 6 · Bullpen Collapse at Yankee Stadium — NYY 9, MIA 7 · Eury Perez Walks Six — NYY 8, MIA 2 · Sandy Throws a Maddux — MIA 10, CHW 0 · Marlins Bounce Back — MIA 9, CHW 2 · Caissie Walk-Off Sweep — MIA 3-0 · Alcantara Dominates — Opening Day

Miami Files · Series Preview · How To Watch · World Baseball Network · Baseball Without Borders

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