Austin Slater was designated for assignment by the Miami Marlins before May, ending a short stint that never found steady footing. In 12 games, Slater hit.174 with four hits in 28 at-bats and saw only sporadic playing time.
The move pushes another veteran outfielder back into a market that has already seen him move through six different franchises since leaving the San Francisco Giants. Slater, who played for San Francisco from 2017 to 2024, had his longest stay with one club after that exit last season, when he spent 51 games with the Chicago White Sox.
The numbers tell the broader story. From 2017 through 2023 with the Giants, Slater hit.257/.345/.402 with 38 home runs and 153 runs batted in, building a reputation as a useful role player, especially against left-handed pitching. Since 2024, however, he has hit.210/.298/.305 with seven homers and 32 RBIs, a slide that has followed him from the Reds to the Orioles, White Sox, Yankees, Tigers and now Miami.
There is an extra layer to the Marlins’ decision. Gabe Kapler, Miami’s general manager, had managed Slater for years in San Francisco, so the club was not guessing at his background or his best use. Even so, the fit did not last, and the team moved on quickly after giving him only a limited chance to settle in.
For Slater, the question is no longer whether he can produce a useful stretch of at-bats. It is whether he can stop becoming a stopgap before another team decides he is worth the wait.






