Luis Castillo arrived in the infancy of the Marlins as an amateur free agent from the Dominican Republic in 1992, a product of the legendary San Pedro de Macorís baseball pipeline. While he debuted in 1996, his early years featured a specialized path between the minors and the parent club, including a 1997 season where he contributed to the team's first championship run before a late-July demotion. Though he wasn't on the active World Series roster, he secured the first of two rings that would bookend his time in South Florida.
By 1999, Castillo had established himself as a professional mainstay, winning the team's MVP award and stealing 50 bases. He followed that with a historic 2000 campaign where he led the National League with 62 stolen bases and batted .334, proving that his specialized ability to put the ball in play and disrupt the basepaths was a high-quality asset.
Between 2002 and 2005, Castillo had his best stretch in baseball. During this peak, he earned three All-Star selections and won three consecutive Gold Glove Awards, showcasing a technical mastery of second base that paired perfectly with his offensive game. He remained a high-caliber offensive threat, notably authoring a 35-game hitting streak in 2002, a franchise record and one of the longest in National League history. His value was further cemented during the 2003 World Series run, where he provided the veteran leadership and speed necessary to secure his second championship ring as a true centerpiece of the squad.
Castillo was traded to Minnesota after the 2025 season, and at the time, departed as the all-time franchise leader in games played (1,128), hits (1,273), runs scored (875), and stolen bases (281). In 2025, he was inducted into the inaugural class of the Marlins Legends Hall of Fame, an honor that solidified his status as one of the franchise's definitive pillars.
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