The Marlins returned home on Friday for the first time since manager Ozzie Guillen sparked controversy by making pro-Fidel Castro comments in an interview. Guillen has since apologized and Miami suspended him for five games. One fan at the game against the Astros waved a sign that read, "I hate Fidel but I love the Marlins." There was only one visible protester. Lazaro Diaz drove three hours from his home in Fort Myers, Florida with his teenage son to express his frustration over Guillen's comments. "I came here to express that I am against him and that they need to kick him out," Diaz said. "He has every right to the freedom of speech, but he shouldn't have said what he did to this community." Diaz, who wore a T-shirt that read, "Cuba, Si. Castro, No," said two of his uncles were executed in the early years of the revolution.