The Miami Marlins’ makeover has led them to get rid of the home run sculpture, add a party section in the outfield and paint the green outfield wall blue. As of today it’s going to include new uniforms.
The Marlins Twitter account has been teasing it for a couple of days now:
Sign up for notifications tonight and you’ll also receive limited time savings for new merch at the New Era Team Store at Marlins Park: https://t.co/ecgHZM55y2 pic.twitter.com/kUMY0uqLhu
— Miami Marlins (@Marlins) November 15, 2018
11.15 #OurColores pic.twitter.com/b1B6hR7AZg
— Miami Marlins (@Marlins) November 14, 2018
11.15 #OurColores pic.twitter.com/1mEmBkTykm
— Miami Marlins (@Marlins) November 13, 2018
Based on that it would seem that the primary colors will be black and that, I dunno, royal blue? Dark aqua? I’m not sure what it is, but it’s not the old teal and certainly not a navy. There will be red and white accents too. There will also, apparently, be a new fish logo, a bit different than the old realistic one and the newer stylized one. You can see what that’ll probably look like here.
We’ll reserve final judgment for the overall look when it’s revealed, but for now I’m sorta torn. On the one hand, no, it’s not like the Marlins created any indelible historical moments in the 2012-18 orange and rainbow getup. And, if the stuff was selling like hotcakes or otherwise taking off locally in Miami, they likely wouldn’t be changing it.
On the other hand: we have too much blue -- and red and black -- in baseball these days. Most teams have it and far fewer teams than ever go off in some new direction. I wrote this seven years ago when the last Marlins uniform was unveiled:Said it before and I’ll say it again: the hell with the haters. I like ’em. I like that they’re doing something fresh and new. There was a time in this country when we didn’t look backwards all the time. We looked forward and tried stuff and didn’t care all that much if, in a few years, we realized it was a mistake.
Leave the understated block letters to the franchises crushed under the weight of their own history. If your team is less than 20-years-old, let your freak flag fly.
I stand by that, both with respect to the old Marlins uniforms and with the philosophy in general.
Like I said, I’ll give the Marlins’ new uniforms a chance, but I fear that it’ll be a look backward into some sort of baseball traditionalism that, while a lot of people seem to like it, doesn’t suit a team with such a short history and doesn’t attempt to be terribly creative. I hope I’m wrong.