Red Sox Video
So I had this hunch. I'm going to tell you about it.
The other day, MassLive’s Chris Cotillo wrote that even after signing Yasmani Grandal, the Red Sox might still be exploring other catcher options. I was advocating for the Red Sox to sign Grandal basically since the 2024 season ended, so I’m psyched about the move, but he’s no longer young, and the fact that he was one of the best options available in free agency is no guarantee that he’ll actually produce this season. But still, I had this nagging hunch. Here’s the hunch I had: maybe the Red Sox have been the worst organization in baseball when it comes to catching this season.
I don’t mean to say that the Red Sox have the worst catcher situation in baseball. Connor Wong was due for regression this season, but he was still a perfectly reasonable starting catcher. Likewise, backup options like Carlos Narváez, Blake Sabol, and Seby Zavala, while not exciting, all seemed like adequate options. It hurt not to have Kyle Teel bound for Boston, but at the very least, the Red Sox had adequate depth. The situation wasn’t dire.
The performance, on the other hand, has been rough. Wong got off to a terrible start with the bat, then went down with a broken pinky, Narváez has cooled off after a short hot start, and Blake Sabol has hit, well, about as well as we expected Blake Sabol to hit. Zavala is hitting .129 in Worcester. You can see where I got my hunch, right? So I decided to crunch the numbers. Let’s start in the majors. Here’s how the team’s three catchers have hit.
| Name | PA | HR | AVG | OBP | SLG | wRC+ | WAR |
| Blake Sabol | 7 | 0 | .167 | .143 | .167 | -31 | -0.1 |
| Connor Wong | 26 | 0 | .087 | .192 | .087 | -16 | -0.1 |
| Carlos Narváez | 48 | 0 | .182 | .250 | .250 | 42 | -0.2 |
Yeesh. Narváez has the best batting average at .182. He also has the best wRC+ at 42, meaning that he’s 58% worse than an average hitter. All three catchers have been below replacement level so far. As a whole, the Red Sox are getting a 16 wRC+ and -0.4 from the catcher position this season. No team has hit worse or put up less value in the catcher spot. The biggest bright spot I can find? Boston’s catchers are hitting .143, which is only second-worst in baseball (behind the Rays catchers, who are hitting a shocking .086, but who have at least hit one home run).
But I didn’t stop there, my friends. I pulled every minor league number too. Across all levels of the minors, Red Sox catchers are batting .178 with a 52 wRC+. The only team that’s been worse is the Reds, who are batting .161 with a 43 wRC+. But here’s the thing. At the major league level, the Reds are absolutely crushing it at the catcher spot. They’re batting .298 with a 135 wRC+. Jose Trevino and Austin Wynns look like absolute rock stars in Cincinnati.
So when you combine all levels, here’s what you get. The entire Red Sox organization has a .170 batting average and a 43 wRC+ from the catcher spot. Both of those are the worst in baseball. The Reds, with their 59 wRC+ and .186 batting average, aren't even close. Hunch proven. Now, we're obviously talking about very small sample sizes here. The season has barely started, and we have no idea who will get hot and who will cool off. But still, it's enough to make you miss Kyle Teel. Maybe the Red Sox should indeed do a little more looking around to reinforce the catcher position.







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