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Marlins At Nationals: Sandy Alcántara Returns To The Mound In Washington With Miami’s Rotation Suddenly Threadbare

WASHINGTON — The Miami Marlins (26-34) fly to D.C. on Sunday night after being swept by the New York Mets at Citi Field. The series ended 10-1 Sunday afternoon with the Marlins’ offense managing three hits, two of them by Owen Caissie. The Mets won all three games of the weekend by a combined 22-6. Miami left Queens in last place in the NL East, eight games under .500, and with a rotation that has lost two starters to the injured list in the last four days.

Eury Pérez went on the 15-day IL on Friday with a right gracilis strain. Janson Junk went on the 15-day IL on Wednesday with right shin bone inflammation. Robby Snelling is already out for the season after UCL surgery. Braxton Garrett was demoted to Triple-A Jacksonville two weeks ago. What was a five-man rotation in April is, this week, a three-man rotation in practice: Max Meyer, Tyler Phillips, and Sandy Alcántara.

The Washington Nationals (31-29) sit in third place in the NL East. They have a young core that has clicked through the first two months, they are 12-17 at home at Nationals Park, and they are entirely catchable on the right week. This is the right week for the Marlins to find some footing — and they have to, because every week from here on out is a week that determines whether the front office spends June planning for a sellable trade deadline or planning for an open audition for the manager and the manager’s office.

Washington Nationals relief pitcher Miles Mikolas hands the ball to manager Blake Butera as he leaves during the fifth inning of a baseball game against the Cleveland Guardians, Wednesday, May 27, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Phil Long)

Monday: Sandy Alcántara at Cade Cavalli (6:45 PM ET)

Sandy Alcántara (3-4, 4.66 ERA) returns to the mound for the Marlins after being charged with the loss in Toronto on May 26, his worst start of the season. He has not won a decision since May 7. The 2022 Cy Young winner is, by his own standards, in a rough month — and the Marlins need him to find some rhythm before the trade deadline conversation gets louder than it already is.

Miami Marlins’ Sandy Alcantara signs autographs for fans before a baseball game against the Atlanta Braves, Tuesday, May 19, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

Tallarini sat down with Alcántara at Citi Field this weekend. That conversation will run as a separate piece later this week.

Across the diamond, Cade Cavalli (3-3, 3.62 ERA) gets the ball for the Nationals — the 27-year-old former first-round pick (No. 22 overall in 2020) finally healthy after Tommy John surgery in 2023 and several setbacks. He has 12 starts this season, the most of his major-league career. His 65 strikeouts in 67 innings is the best ratio of any Nats starter. He is the kind of comeback story that the National League has not noticed yet.

Tuesday: TBD at Miles Mikolas (6:45 PM ET)

The Marlins have not yet announced a starter for Tuesday. The most likely option is a bullpen game built around the relievers who threw early in Sunday’s loss, or a Triple-A call-up from Jacksonville. Whoever takes the ball faces Mikolas (1-4, 5.72 ERA), the most hittable starter in the Nationals’ rotation right now. The 37-year-old veteran is in his 11th season and has been giving up runs at a rate that has made his June rotation spot an open question. If the Marlins are going to steal a game in this series, Tuesday is the night.

Wednesday: Max Meyer at Andrew Alvarez (1:05 PM ET)

The Wednesday afternoon getaway-day matinee features two undefeated starters: Marlins ace Max Meyer (5-0, 2.52 ERA), the only undefeated starting pitcher in baseball with eight or more starts, against Andrew Alvarez (1-0, 4.02 ERA), the 26-year-old Nationals left-hander out of Cal Poly San Luis Obispo and a 12th-round draft pick in 2021. Alvarez has been working in bulk-relief and spot-start roles this season — five appearances, all out of the bullpen — and Wednesday will be his first major-league start of 2026 after making five starts as a rookie in 2025. Someone leaves Nationals Park still unbeaten on the season.

Australia’s Curtis Mead, left, and Australia’s Rixon Wingrove celebrate after they won the game against Taiwan at a World Baseball Classic game in Tokyo, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Louise Delmotte)

James Wood celebra con su compañero de los Nacionales Nasim Núñez tras ganar el juego ante los Padres de San Diego el domingo 31 de mayo del 2026. (AP Foto/Nick Wass)

Washington Nationals pitcher Andrew Alvarez (54) in action during a baseball game against the San Francisco Giants, Sunday, April 19, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

Washington Nationals relief pitcher Andrew Alvarez catches a football before a baseball game against the Cleveland Guardians, Monday, May 25, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Phil Long)

The game starts at 1:05 PM ET, giving both clubs a clean window to catch flights before Thursday’s day-off. The NBA Finals tip off Thursday night. Neither club plays. Both teams get the same chance to reset.

The Nationals Young Core

James Wood is the Nats’ best hitter and the centerpiece of the rebuild. The 23-year-old outfielder, acquired in the Juan Soto trade from San Diego in 2022, has played in every Nationals game this year. He hit the walk-off Sunday that beat the San Diego Padres 4-3 and pushed Washington to 31-29. Wood is the foundation.

Washington Nationals’ James Wood looks on during a baseball game against the New York Mets, Thursday, May 21, 2026, in Washington. (AP Photo/Nick Wass)

James Wood celebra con su compañero de los Nacionales Nasim Núñez tras ganar el juego ante los Padres de San Diego el domingo 31 de mayo del 2026. (AP Foto/Nick Wass)

CJ Abrams, the 25-year-old shortstop, is the team’s leadoff catalyst and was photographed playing catch in Cleveland on May 25 — the green glove, the headband, the relaxed pre-game routine that comes from a player settling into a role he is finally comfortable in.

Washington Nationals’ CJ Abrams plays catch before a baseball game against the Cleveland Guardians, Monday, May 25, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Phil Long)

Abrams hit a solo home run against the Atlanta Braves on May 22.

Washington Nationals shortstop CJ Abrams takes batting practice before a baseball game between the Atlanta Braves and the Washington Nationals, Saturday, May 23, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

Washington Nationals’ CJ Abrams hits a solo homer in the eighth inning of a baseball game against the Atlanta Braves, Friday, May 22, 2026, in Atlanta. (AP Photo/Mike Stewart)

Dylan Crews, the No. 2 overall pick from the 2023 draft, is in his second full season. Brady House, the 23-year-old third baseman drafted by Washington in 2021, has played 44 games this year as the third member of the long-promised next-wave Nats infield.

Luis García Jr. is hitting through the lineup at .266 in 53 games. García is one of the more interesting international roster stories in baseball. He was born in New York City but moved to the Dominican Republic at age three, signed as an international free agent out of the Dominican Republic in 2016, and has been a Nationals player ever since. His father, Luis Rafael García, was a Dominican-born shortstop who reached the major leagues briefly with the Detroit Tigers in 1999. The veteran piece around the young core, alongside Keibert Ruiz (Venezuela) behind the plate and Jose Tena (Dominican Republic) at the corners, gives Washington enough international flavor to make this a series where, for both clubs, the dugout sounds like baseball at its broadest.

Curtis Mead, Team Australia, And The Tokyo Run That Set Australia Back

The Nationals’ utility infielder is the player this Marlins series will introduce to most American fans. Curtis Mead, 25, is from Adelaide, South Australia. He plays second base, third base, and first base. He has 26 starts at second this year and another four at first. The Nats acquired him in the offseason. He is, importantly for World Baseball Network’s readership, one of the most accomplished Australian players in Major League Baseball.

Mead represented Team Australia at the 2026 World Baseball Classic in March. Australia was in Pool B in Tokyo with Japan, Taiwan, Czech Republic, and Korea. They beat Taiwan in the pool opener — a result that briefly put Australia in position for a quarterfinal berth.

Australia’s Curtis Mead reacts after getting struck out during the eighth inning of a World Baseball Classic game between Japan and Australia on Sunday, March 8, 2026 in Tokyo. (AP Photo/Eugene Hoshiko)

Australia then ran into Japan. The 2026 WBC’s run-differential tiebreaker rules turned the game into one of the strangest math problems in international baseball: Australia needed to lose by less than five runs without scoring more than nine total runs in the game, with a path to advance still in play if they could keep the score within a specific window. They could not. A defensive error late in the game set the country back not only in WBC seeding for 2030 but also in Olympic qualifying. Mead, who had been having a fine tournament, struck out in a key spot against Japan in the eighth inning and walked off the field with the Australian baseball program’s tournament dreams behind him.

Australia’s Curtis Mead, left, and Australia’s Rixon Wingrove celebrate after they won the game against Taiwan at a World Baseball Classic game in Tokyo, Thursday, March 5, 2026. (AP Photo/Louise Delmotte)

Australia finished the tournament 2-2 in pool play, the best WBC performance in the program’s history. But it was also a tournament where they were genuinely playing for something — there is no Australian-born Shohei Ohtani equivalent, no big-market sponsorship deal driving their roster, no dozens of Major Leaguers to choose from. The Australians who put on the green-and-gold in Tokyo played for the country.

Travis Bazzana, the 22-year-old Cleveland Guardians infielder and the No. 1 overall pick in the 2024 draft, is the next generation of that program. Bazzana is also Australian — Sydney-born and raised, where Mead is from Adelaide. The two played each other on Monday, May 25 at Progressive Field in Cleveland, the first time two Australian-born players started on opposing Major League sides since June 27, 2011, when Luke Hughes of the Minnesota Twins faced Trent Oeltjen of the Los Angeles Dodgers.

Washington Nationals’ Curtis Mead, left, listens as Cleveland Guardians’ Travis Bazzana, right, answers a question from Washington Nationals team reporter Alexa Datt,before a baseball game, Wednesday, May 27, 2026, in Cleveland. Both players are from Australia. (AP Photo/Phil Long)

Mead made the first time count. He hit two home runs that night, the first multi-homer game of his career, in a 10-2 Nationals win. The first home run carried 122 meters to the left-field bleachers at almost 170 km/h. Sitting in those bleachers, wearing an Australian national team jersey he had bought during the WBC in March, was an Ohio native named Jack Seiple. Seiple jumped, caught Mead’s home run with his left hand, landed on his feet, and high-fived a security guard while a man dressed as a hot dog watched. It was, as the ABC’s Simon Smale wrote the next day, “incongruous only in that a man in an Australian jersey caught a fly ball hit by an Australian hitter.”

The third active Australian-born player in Major League Baseball is Oakland pitcher Jack O’Loughlin. Three Australians. Three teams. One country whose baseball pipeline is finally beginning to deliver at the highest level.

World Baseball Network exists for these conversations.

The Marlins International Refresh

The Marlins’ international core has been the story of their May. Otto Lopez (Panama, plays for Team Canada) is hitting .326. Xavier Edwards is at .314 with the lowest strikeout rate of any starting infielder in the National League. Liam Hicks (Canada) has 45 RBIs and is still in the top five in the National League. Owen Caissie (Canada) was the only Marlins bat with multiple hits on Sunday. Jakob Marsee (Team Italy at the 2026 WBC) is the center fielder. Javier Sanoja (Venezuela) hit his first career grand slam two weeks ago and pitched the eighth inning of Sunday’s loss as the position-player-pitching mop-up. Heriberto Hernández (Dominican Republic) entered Sunday’s game as a pinch-hitter and stayed in as the left fielder.

Eleven Marlins were on 2026 World Baseball Classic rosters. That number has not changed since opening day. The personnel has.

The Salary Cap Backdrop

This series unfolds against the backdrop of the most consequential labor news in baseball in three decades. On Wednesday and Thursday of last week, the MLB Players Association and the league exchanged opening proposals for the next collective bargaining agreement. The current CBA expires December 1, 2026.

The MLBPA’s proposal includes a “competitive integrity tax” that would penalize any team spending less than $150 million on payroll. The league’s counter-proposal includes a hard salary floor of $171.2 million and a hard cap of $245.3 million.

The Marlins’ current payroll is approximately $78-84 million. Sandy Alcántara’s $17 million salary accounts for roughly 20 percent of it. Whichever version of these proposals ultimately becomes the structure of MLB economics after the 2026 season, the Miami Marlins are the franchise most directly in the middle of the conversation. Their owner, Bruce Sherman, and their president of baseball operations, Peter Bendix, will spend the second half of 2026 with one eye on the trade deadline and one eye on December — when the franchise’s spending floor may, for the first time in its history, be set by something other than the owner’s discretion.

Miami Marlins president of baseball operations Peter Bendix, left, and principal owner Bruce Sherman, right, talk on the field before a baseball game against the Colorado Rockies, Friday, March 27, 2026, in Miami. (AP Photo/Lynne Sladky)

How To Watch

  • Monday June 1 · 6:45 PM ET · Alcántara vs. Cavalli · Marlins.TV · MASN
  • Tuesday June 2 · 6:45 PM ET · TBD vs. Mikolas · Marlins.TV · MASN
  • Wednesday June 3 · 1:05 PM ET · Meyer vs. Alvarez · Marlins.TV · MASN
  • Radio: WQAM 104.3 (Miami) · WAQI 710 AM (Spanish) · WJFK 106.7 (DC)
  • Streaming: MLB.TV · Fubo

The Stakes

The Marlins are eight games under .500. The Nationals are two over. Both clubs are five-plus games out of the third National League Wild Card. Neither is currently in the playoff picture. Both are scrappy. Both have young cores that can carry a series. Washington has won 10 of its last 15. Miami has lost 7 of its last 10. The standings are not flattering to either franchise.

But this is the soft middle of the schedule for both teams, and three games against a fellow under-.500 NL East club is the kind of stretch where seasons can quietly turn. Sandy Alcántara has to be Sandy Alcántara. Max Meyer has to stay undefeated. The bullpen has to hold something together for nine innings on Tuesday night. And whoever Miami hands the ball to in that Tuesday game has to give the team a chance to win.

First pitch Monday is 6:45.

— MT

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