The Miami Marlins didn’t acquire Leo Jiménez because of what he’s done. They acquired him because the Toronto Blue Jays ran out of room to find out what he could be.
On Monday night, as the Marlins return home to loanDepot park to open a series against the Cincinnati Reds, Jiménez is in the starting lineup — batting eighth, playing second base. It is his first home start as a Marlin.
On September 1, 2024, at Target Field in Minneapolis, Jiménez launched himself headfirst into the first-base netting to catch a foul ball off the bat of Minnesota’s Max Kepler. He disappeared into the stands and came back with the ball still in his glove. “Headfirst into the netting — this may be the wildest catch of 2024,” MLB.com wrote. When the clip resurfaced months later, fans were still reacting. “GOD STATUS.” “Leo Jiménez just redefined impossible.”
It looked like chaos. It wasn’t. It was the most honest thing you’ll see from a player trying to hold onto a roster spot by any means necessary.
Play No. 52 of 2024: How on earth did Leo Jiménez make this play?! ? pic.twitter.com/6X3j0UyUNp
— MLB (@MLB) December 4, 2024
From Chitré to San Juan
Leonardo Joel Jiménez was born May 17, 2001, in Chitré, Panama — a coastal city on the Azuero Peninsula where baseball is not a pastime but a trade, passed down and practiced early. His grandfather took him to a local academy at four years old. He remembers his first ground ball, the wrong base, the lesson.
“My grandpa always loved baseball. He just never had the chance to actually play. He took me to this little academy near my home. I remember hitting a little groundball to the short stop/third base side and I started running to third base. I still remember that. It’s one of those little memories I’m always going to have with me.”
— Leo Jiménez, MiLB.com / Herd Chronicles
He signed with Toronto at 16 for $800,000 — not, he has said, because he was chasing a contract, but because he loved the game. “I play baseball just because I love playing baseball,” he told MiLB.com.

Panama’s Leo Jimenez catches a fly ball against Canada as Jose Caballero looks on during the third inning of a World Baseball Classic game in San Juan, Puerto Rico, Sunday, March 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
Panama has produced more than 75 MLB players — Mariano Rivera, Manny Sanguillen, Carlos Lee, Bruce Chen, Carlos Ruiz, José Caballero, and fellow Chitré native Miguel Amaya among them. When Jiménez suited up for Team Panama at the 2026 WBC in San Juan, the coaching staff around him read like a Panamanian hall of fame: Lee as assistant hitting coach, Chen running the bullpen, Ruiz — a 2008 World Series champion — as advisor. Manager José Mayorga had coached Jiménez years earlier in the Blue Jays’ own Florida Complex League. Panama didn’t advance out of Pool A. But Jiménez was there, which matters in ways a box score can’t measure.
Panama Coaching Staff Announced Under Manager Jose Mayorga For 2026 WBC
The Toronto Years

Toronto Blue Jays’ Leo Jimenez wears a home run jacket in the dugout after hitting his first major league home run during the third inning of a baseball game against the Los Angeles Angels Monday, Aug. 12, 2024, in Anaheim, Calif. (AP Photo/Jayne-Kamin-Oncea)
Jiménez made his MLB debut July 4, 2024, called up after an injury to Isiah Kiner-Falefa. By the second half of the season he was the regular shortstop — Kiner-Falefa traded, Bichette back on the IL. He hit .229/.329/.358, played reliable defense, and was hit by a pitch 16 times in 63 games, trailing only Reed Johnson’s 20 in 2003 for the most by a Blue Jays rookie in a single season. He doesn’t avoid contact. He invites it.
In 2025, the surface numbers collapsed — .069 in 18 games — but the underlying performance didn’t. At Triple-A Buffalo he hit .304 with a .437 on-base percentage and .812 OPS in 19 games. He walked more. He missed fewer pitches. He stayed ready.
“Be who I am as a player and just let the results come.”
— Leo Jiménez
When Bo Bichette strained his calf in December 2025, Jiménez was the one recalled to replace him. And still, when spring came and his options were gone, Toronto designated him for assignment. It wasn’t a baseball decision. It was a roster decision.
What Miami Is Betting On
The Marlins lost Christopher Morel, Esteury Ruiz, Kyle Stowers, and Maximo Acosta to the injured list before April started. Adam Mazur went on the 60-day IL with elbow surgery. The organization needed a middle infielder with professional seasoning who could play now. They traded prospect Dub Gleed and $250,000 in international pool money to get one.
The .069 from 2025 is not the number to look at. His swinging-strike rate has dropped from 12.0% in 2024 to 5.9% this season. His xwOBA sits at .420 with a 50% hard-hit rate. The underlying contact quality is real, and it showed up before Toronto ever ran out of patience.
Jiménez is a contact hitter with plate discipline and genuine defensive range at second base and shortstop. Nine professional seasons of development, already absorbed. Toronto paid the bill. Miami is cashing the check.
“Work hard and let the results come to me.”
— Leo Jiménez
Marlins Lineup Tonight: Jiménez Bats Eighth, Plays Second Base

Miami Marlins’ third baseman Leo Jimenez, top, successfully tags out New York Yankees’ Trent Grisham, bottom, during the eighth inning of a home-opener baseball game, Friday, April 3, 2026, in New York. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)
The Miami Marlins are 6-3 and lead the NL East as they return to loanDepot park for their home opener against the Cincinnati Reds on April 6, 2026. Jiménez is starting at second base and batting eighth — hitting behind Xavier Edwards, who has been one of the hottest hitters in the National League to open the season.
The opponent is Cincinnati — the same Reds who got into the 2025 postseason on the final day of the regular season, in part because Miami beat the Mets when it mattered. The Marlins didn’t make the playoffs that year. The Reds did.
Jiménez is 24 years old, from Chitré, Panama, signed at 16, nine professional seasons behind him. Toronto ran out of room for him. Miami looked at the same player and decided they had room — and tonight, he’s in the lineup to prove them right.
The Miami File — World Baseball Network Coverage
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- Sandy Alcantara Throws a Maddux as Marlins Shut Out White Sox 10–0
- Yankees Beat Marlins 8–2 as Eury Pérez Walks Six in First Road Loss
- Yankees 9, Marlins 7 — Hernández Triples, International Core Delivers, But Bullpen Collapse Costs Miami
- Marlins 7, Yankees 6 — Edwards Delivers as Miami Rallies Late to Avoid Sweep in the Bronx
Featured Photo: World Baseball Network graphic featuring Miami Marlins infielder Leo Jiménez. Background image: Panama’s Leo Jiménez catches a fly ball against Canada as José Caballero looks on during the third inning of a World Baseball Classic game in San Juan, Puerto Rico, March 8, 2026. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)








