
#43 RP · Marlins
Height
6'3"
Weight
215 lbs
Age
27
College
Radford
Experience
3 yrs
Bats/Throws
L/L
Grade Andrew Nardi
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On the field, Andrew Nardi grades out as a strong RP for Marlins (B Performance). That places him 169th of 389 graded relief pitchers. The public read is negative (D- Sentiment), drawn from current news and social signal rather than the box score.
| Year | Team | GP | ERA | W-L | K | WHIP | IP | SV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Career | ![]() | 160 | 4.614319 | 15-7 | 194 | 1.378753 | 0.0 | 3 |
| 2026 | ![]() | 25 | 5.16 | 3-3 | 27 | 1.41 | 22.2 | 0 |
| 2024 |
Length
1 year
Total Value
$800K
Guaranteed
$480K
AAV
$800K/yr
Andrew Nardi's on-field production earns a B performance grade against RP peers across MLB. His 2026 season shows 3 wins and 27 strikeouts across 25 games, a solid mid-rotation bullpen contributor profile in terms of raw stuff and execution when deployed. The strikeout total reflects his ability to miss bats in relief situations, which is the ceiling of what a fourth-year pitcher in his role should deliver; however, the win total is modest and likely reflects limited high-leverage opportunities or a bullpen architecture where he's not the go-to late-inning arm. At 27 games pitched through the regular season's midpoint, Nardi has seen consistent opportunity despite the organizational noise, though the recent influx of right-handed pitching signings — Zach Brzykcy, Josh Ekness, and Josh White all added in early June — suggests Miami is actively exploring alternatives and potentially pigeonholing him into lower-leverage work. The disconnect between his respectable on-field performance and the front office's reported non-tender consideration reveals a deeper organizational skepticism, likely rooted in durability concerns from his injury history rather than immediate production failures. For a fourth-year player fighting to secure his roster footprint on a club reshaping its pitching staff, this is a precarious position: solid enough to avoid waiver-wire dismissal, yet undermined at every turn by the Marlins' hedging behavior. The resilience narrative that dominated spring training has been overtaken by the cold reality that Miami itself isn't convinced he's worth protecting moving forward.
Andrew Nardi ranks 169th of 389 graded relief pitchers by performance. That slots Andrew between Gage Jump (B) just ahead and Kyle Harrison (B-) just behind.
Graded higher
Gage JumpAthleticsBSteven MatzRaysBReynaldo LopezBravesBGraded lower
Kyle HarrisonBrewersAuto-moderated fan forum with 5-minute speaker turns
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Andrew Nardi is a player in his 3rd MLB season listed at RP for the Marlins. FanVerdicts covers every MLB player, team, GM, and transaction — and puts your verdict on all of it. Sign in to cast your Fan Verdict on Andrew Nardi, see where the crowd lands, and argue the call. FanVerdicts also brings its own read — performance, sentiment, and Contract Value Index — as one honest input alongside the crowd's. Where FanVerdicts has weighed in so far: Performance B, Sentiment D-.
The crowd's Fan Verdict moves in real time as fans vote on this profile. FanVerdicts' own read updates as new data lands — performance recalculates when MLB game stats post, sentiment shifts with media coverage and fan discussion, and the Contract Value Index recomputes when contract terms change. Contract details below show the structure (years, total value, average annual value, guarantees) behind the Contract Value Index read.
For league-wide context, the MLB hub has team rankings, GM report cards, the transactions feed, and live scoreboards. The MLB player rankings page sorts every active player by performance and contract value within their position.
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| 59 |
| 5.07 |
| 3-2 |
| 70 |
| 1.25 |
| 49.2 |
| 0 |
| 2023 | ![]() | 63 | 2.67 | 8-1 | 73 | 1.15 | 57.1 | 3 |
| 2022 | ![]() | 13 | 9.82 | 1-1 | 24 | 2.66 | 14.2 | 0 |
Andrew Nardi's public standing has deteriorated to one of the lowest points of his career, reflecting deep organizational and fan uncertainty around a reliever whose path back to relevance has been anything but straightforward. The dominant media narrative frames him as a comeback story built on resilience — coverage has leaned into his determination to return from significant injury setbacks, with spring training headlines carrying cautious optimism about his ability to crack the Opening Day roster. The disconnect between that narrative and reality, however, is stark: his on-field performance grades out solidly, suggesting that when healthy and active, Nardi is a legitimate bullpen contributor rather than roster filler. Yet the most damaging signal driving the sentiment slide is the reported non-tender consideration from Miami's front office, which publicly telegraphed that the organization itself wasn't certain he was worth protecting — a devastating blow to the perception of any player, regardless of what he's actually producing on the mound. The Marlins' recent flurry of roster moves, including additions at left-handed pitching with Cade Gibson and a right-hander in Chris Paddack, compounds the problem by suggesting Miami is actively reshaping its pitching staff around other options, leaving Nardi's place in the bullpen hierarchy murkier than ever. At 27 and still on a rookie scale contract, the clock is ticking on his window to cement himself as a dependable piece, and right now the front office's ambivalence is drowning out whatever goodwill his perseverance story generated in the spring. The narrative sits in a difficult place — credible enough on the field to avoid dismissal, but undermined at every turn by organizational signals that suggest he's fighting for his roster life on a team sitting at 16-20 and making significant changes around him.
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