Miami Marlins
Florida franchise that has won two World Series titles as one of baseball's youngest franchises — both as wild card teams, making them the most unlikely back-to-back world champions.
Pantheon Standing
| List Name | Rank | Combined |
|---|---|---|
| Greatest MLB Franchises of All Time | #1 | 96.0 |
The Age Divide
Voters under 30 and over 35 rank Miami Marlins significantly differently across lists.
The Athletic Record
The Case For Miami Marlins
“The longevity argument alone puts them in a category of one. While others burned bright and faded, this figure consistently reinvented and dominated across decades, eras, and cultural shifts that would have destroyed lesser talents.”
“Technically unmatched. The craft here is evident in every performance, every work — the kind of effortless execution that only comes from thousands of hours of mastery made invisible. They make the impossible look inevitable.”
“Commercial success should never be held against artistic legacy. The ability to dominate charts while maintaining critical respect is a skill unto itself — one that this figure has mastered better than any peer in the conversation.”
Rank History
Ranking history will be available once voting opens for Miami Marlins.
Often Compared To
New York Mets
#2MLB / AL East — Queens, New York · 1962–present
New York's National League franchise whose 1969 Miracle Mets and 1986 championship teams are two of baseball's most beloved underdogs — and whose Steve Cohen ownership era has restored big-market ambition.
New York Yankees
#3MLB / AL East — Bronx, New York · 1901–present
The most successful and most hated franchise in American sports — 27 World Series titles, The House That Ruth Built, and a century of dominance across every era of baseball.