Marlins’ Andrew Nardi solid in return from injury

For Miami Marlins reliever Andrew Nardi, the early portion of the 2026 season is an adjustment period.

In his return from missing an entire season due to injury, Nardi has made the physical adjustments leading up to his return to his mental adjustments playing in front of a crowd and in serious situations.

Nardi said in an interview with Five Reasons contributor Tyler Boronski that “it is a feeling that you have to get used to.”

“Definitely some new feelings I got to get used to again with the fans,” Nardi said. “I still hold the standard high. I obviously want to be doing well. I also have to give myself a little adjustment period to get back into the swing of things again, get used to the adrenaline rushes and stuff like that.”

While never an innings guy, Nardi has been Miami’s main weapon in high-leverage situations. He goes in, gets strikeouts, and calls it a day. In five appearances this year, the 27-year-old Arizona alum struck out six batters in four innings with only one earned run allowed.

“You just have to keep throwing strikes and your stuff will play,” Nardi said. “Just got to trust yourself.”


Nardi was nearly derailed by injuries since late 2024. He was placed on the 15-day Injured List on Aug. 24, 2024, due to an elbow injury and was transferred to the 60-day IL on Sept. 7 of that year. His 2025 was over before it started when he was placed back on the 60-day IL on March 15 due to severe lower-back inflammation that required extensive treatment, including an epidural.

“Last year was just a grind mentally and physically,” Nardi said.

Nardi described how he got through the mental hurdle post-rehab in spring training. He saw that the velocity of his pitches was lower than normal and made the conscious decision to trust that his body would not break under the force of his power.

He instantly saw the radar gun rise and hit 94 mph in his first spring training appearance.

“Just seeing my body be able to jump up and level each time just felt really good,” Nardi said. “As spring training kept going on, just sitting around 92-93 mph felt really good. I just felt like once I got to that point, I was able to compete.”

Nardi made his MLB debut on Aug. 16, 2022, and his first full season turned out to be his best season. He struck out 73 batters in 57.1 innings over 63 appearances with a 2.67 ERA, helping the Marlins reach the 2023 postseason. Before injuries cut his 2024 season short, Nardi struck out 70 batters in 49.2 innings over 59 games.

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