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"At the end of the day, whether I'm the manager or Fredi is the manager or Bobby Valentine or the skipper now, it doesn't matter," said Marlins reliever Scott Strickland, who played for Valentine with the '02 Mets. "We still have to get 27 outs. You still have to do your job every day."
Loria expected his team to be a playoff contender this season, but Florida has been around .500 for much of the first half. The Marlins entered Friday night with a 35-37 record, 6 1/2 games out of first in the NL East.
Currently an ESPN analyst, Valentine withdrew as a candidate for the managerial job with the Baltimore Orioles on Wednesday, the same day Gonzalez was fired.
Valentine has been to the postseason in the majors twice, leading the New York Mets to the World Series in 2000, where they lost to the Yankees.
He has a long relationship with Loria, having managed the Texas Rangers when Loria owned that franchise's Triple-A affiliate. Valentine has a record in the majors of 1,117-1,072, and ended a six-year run as manager of the Chiba Lotte Marines in Japan's Pacific League in 2009.
"We hear speculation, this guy, that guy. It's almost like trade rumors," Marlins outfielder Cody Ross said. "You take it all with a grain of salt. Whoever they put in there can hopefully get us going and get us to be one of those final eight teams."
Rodriguez has never met Valentine, but believes him to be a worthy candidate.
"Very knowledgeable," Rodriguez said. "We all know how much baseball's in his mind. He's been around. He's a winner. He knows how to win."
[Associated Press;
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