
The most obscure MLB All-Stars ever: World War II fill-ins, a shortstop with a 37 OPS+ and … this year’s Rockies rep
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David SchoenfieldJul 6, 2025, 06:00 PM ET
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The Colorado Rockies, on pace for the modern record for losses in a season set last year by the Chicago White Sox, will have an All-Star in catcher Hunter Goodman. Those are the rules, of course — every team gets an All-Star representative. Is Goodman one of the best 32 players in the National League? Probably not, but he’s having a nice season and is maybe the second-best catcher of the first half in the NL. And now he’ll forever get to call himself an All-Star.
According to data at Baseball-Reference.com, there have been 2,227 All-Stars in MLB history, including those selected to the Negro Leagues East-West All-Star Game. That’s out of the 23,521 players who had appeared in the major leagues as of a few days ago. That means nearly 10% of all MLB players have been an All-Star.
You might not have heard of many of them.
Let’s dig into All-Star history and look at some of the most obscure and surprising All-Star selections.
Frankie Zak: The king of obscure All-Stars
One All-Star stands out among all others as the unlikeliest All-Star of all time. It’s a story hard to believe, and it’s all true. It happened during World War II, when the majors were full of minor leaguers and 4-F players unable to serve in the military. It provides context to Zak, who would play just 123 games in the majors, hit no home runs and drive in just 14 runs.
Zak was a 22-year-old rookie backup shortstop for the 1944 Pittsburgh Pirates, a team that featured guys named Babe and Rip and Fritz and Preacher, which tells you this was long ago. Zak made the roster out of spring training but didn’t even start a game until June 1, filling in for a slumping Frank Gustine. Zak got two hits that day, two more the next and two more the day after, and he remained the starting shortstop until the All-Star break, when he was hitting .305 with five RBIs in a grand total of 82 at-bats.
The All-Star Game happened to be in Pittsburgh that year. The backup shortstop was Eddie Miller of the Cincinnati Reds — a seven-time All-Star — but Miller was injured and unable to attend the game. With wartime travel restrictions in place, manager Billy Southworth sought a local replacement, but Pirates infielder Pete Coscarart had gone fishing and third baseman Bob Elliott was already on the team. Zak was in town and put on the roster. As ESPN’s Steve Wulf once wrote: the accidental All-Star.
Alas, starter Marty Marion played the entire game, with Zak not appearing in the contest. He finished the season hitting .300 in 160 at-bats, played sparingly for the Pirates the next two seasons and died of a heart attack at age 49 in 1972.
The most obscure All-Star starter
Through the years, I have spent untold hours looking at All-Star Game box scores, perusing rosters and wondering how some guys got selected. Somehow, I had skipped right past Eddie Kazak — until last week, when his name popped up. My knowledge of baseball history is, shall we say, reasonably deep, but I had never heard of him. And Kazak had not only been an All-Star but started the 1949 contest.
A 28-year-old rookie third baseman for the St. Louis Cardinals, Kazak had served in Europe during World War II, spending 18 months in the hospital after his right elbow had been crushed by shrapnel and falling mortar during an artillery attack in France in July 1944. Doctors considered amputating the arm before using pieces of plastic to repair his shattered elbow.
“I was warned to give up baseball because throwing might dislocate the synthetic elbow,” Kazak had told the AP.
Kazak reached the majors briefly in 1948, and with regular third baseman Whitey Kurowski unable to throw because of bone chips in his elbow in 1949, Kazak got the opportunity to play. His first home run was a grand slam. At the All-Star break, he was hitting .302 with four home runs and 38 RBIs. The Chicago Tribune ran the fan balloting to elect the starters that year and the fans, no doubt appreciating Kazak’s war hero background, voted him as the starter over the more accomplished Elliott (the 1947 NL MVP) and Sid Gordon (.310 with 16 home runs at the break).
Kazak went 2-for-2 in the game, but two weeks into the second half, suffered bone chips in his right ankle sliding into second base and played sparingly the rest of the season. He was never again a regular, and his major league career was over by 1952 with just 218 career games, although he played in the minors until 1960.
The Eddie Kazak All-Star lineup
In honor of Kazak, let’s pick a team of unlikely players who started an All-Star Game at each position, although we’ll skip over anyone from the World War II years, when the competition was significantly diluted. These guys all had significant careers but wouldn’t be the type of players you associate with the title of “All-Star starter.”
C: John Romano (1961)
Romano started both games in 1961 (there were two games each year from 1959 to 1962 to help fund the players’ pension fund), a season in which he hit .299/.377/.483 with 21 home runs and 80 RBIs for Cleveland. He was a legit All-Star that year and again in 1962, posting similar power numbers, but he had trouble keeping his weight down and was out of the league by 1967.
1B: Justin Smoak (2017)
A first-round pick by the Texas Rangers in 2008, the Rangers sent him to the Seattle Mariners for Cliff Lee during his rookie season in 2010. The Mariners waited and waited for Smoak to break out; I don’t think a first baseman was ever given so many plate appearances with such mediocre results. They finally waived him, and the Blue Jays signed him. Then, in 2017, he put together an All-Star-worthy first half, hitting .294 with 23 home runs. Smoak would finish his career with 6.8 WAR in nearly 5,000 plate appearances — 3.1 of that coming in 2017.
2B: Mariano Duncan (1994)
Duncan had a 12-year MLB career, but most of that was spent as a utility player, and he had just three seasons with 500 plate appearances. In 1994, Duncan did start regularly at three infield positions for the Phillies, who were coming off a World Series appearance in 1993, and Phillies fans stuffed the ballot box to elect him despite mediocre numbers. Duncan was hitting .265 with a .712 OPS at the break, getting the starting nod over future Hall of Famer Craig Biggio, who was hitting .320 with an .894 OPS.
3B: Eddie Kazak (1949)
Obviously, Kazak gets the nod here. But an honorable mention goes to Ken Reitz, who started the 1980 All-Star Game for the NL over the injured Mike Schmidt. Reitz had over 5,000 career plate appearances, but finished with minus-3.2 career WAR, making him one of 11 All-Star position players who finished their careers with negative WAR.
SS: Orlando Arcia (2023)
This happened just two years ago, and while Arcia has been around since 2016, he’s the least accomplished shortstop to ever start an All-Star Game, with just 4.2 career WAR and a career OPS+ of 77. He did hit well in the first half of 2023 for the Atlanta Braves, although check out these first-half stats from that year:
Arcia: .294/.345/.424, 7 HR, 28 RBI
Francisco Lindor: .239/.320/.478, 19 HR, 60 RBI
Lindor didn’t even make the team.
LF: Iván Calderón (1991)
We could go with a couple of recent NL starters here — Jurickson Profar last year or Jesse Winker in 2021 — but Calderon is a fun blast from the past. A talented prospect for the Mariners, Seattle traded him after manager Dick Williams caught him eating a sandwich during a game. He made his only All-Star appearance with the Montreal Expos, hitting .309 with nine home runs and 49 RBIs at the break (solid numbers for that era), and drew the start with Darryl Strawberry injured.
CF: Kosuke Fukudome (2008)
You might remember the name, but you probably don’t remember that Fukudome started as a rookie in 2008. A 31-year-old veteran from Japan when he signed with the Chicago Cubs, Fukudome had a lot of hype entering the season and was OK but hardly great in the first half — .279/.383/.408, seven home runs. He got elected to start, and while he was primarily a right fielder, he drew the assignment in center field over the even less defensively-inclined Ryan Braun and Matt Holliday. Fukudome slumped in the second half and ended the season with just 0.6 WAR.
RF: Pat Mullin (1948)
If we went strictly by lowest career WAR, the answer here would be Don Mueller (1955) or Dante Bichette (1996), both of whom finished with fewer than 5 career WAR (Bichette, thanks to his Coors Field-inflated numbers, made four All-Star teams). Mullin was a two-time All-Star in 1947 and ’48, the only two seasons he was a regular in the majors. He was a solid platoon hitter who finished with 10.4 career WAR, missing four prime seasons while serving in the war.
DH: Corey Dickerson (2017)
Dickerson was your classic journeyman-type outfielder who played 11 seasons in the majors. Alongside his teammate Smoak with the Blue Jays, he had a big first half in 2017, hitting .312 with 17 home runs.
SP: Dave Stenhouse (1962)
A rookie for the woeful Washington Senators, Stenhouse was 10-4 with a 2.73 ERA when he started the second All-Star Game that season on July 30 (there were two All-Star Games held in each season from 1959 to 1962, in order to increase the money going to the players’ pension fund). I had always wondered why Stenhouse drew the start since he finished the season 11-12 with a 3.65 ERA, but he had good stats at the time. It’s also clear that this stretch probably ruined his career. Heading into the All-Star Game, he had starts of 10 innings, seven, nine, nine and nine, with one relief outing thrown in as well. On July 27, he faced 43 batters, throwing an estimated 160 pitches. Then he pitched two innings in the All-Star Game. Two days later, he threw 10 innings again.
He was never the same. He had a 5.54 ERA over the final two months, then battled injuries the next two seasons, finishing his career with a 16-28 record.
The anonymous All-Star lineup
The players above might have been surprising starters, but at least they had solid and long careers. It does make you wonder about what the percentage is of players who have a 10-year career and also make an All-Star team. There’s a good chance that if you’re good enough to last that long, you were good enough at some point to have a half-season somewhere along the way that makes you an All-Star.
Here’s a different type of lineup — and yes, these guys were, in fact, all All-Stars. Let’s call them, umm, a more anonymous list of All-Stars.
C: Steve Swisher (1976)
The father of 2010 All-Star Nick Swisher, Steve was a Cubs catcher who would have a .216 career batting average in under 1,600 plate appearances and finish with minus-1.9 career WAR. He hit .268 with three home runs in the first half of 1976 — and for some reason was selected as the Cubs’ representative over Bill Madlock (who won the batting title that year and was eighth in the NL in OPS at the All-Star break) or Rick Monday (who had 15 home runs and was ninth in OPS).
1B: Bryan LaHair (2012)
This is one of the best All-Star stories ever. LaHair was a 29-year-old minor league journeyman who got a chance to play for the Cubs in 2012 during their rebuilding phase. He hit .390 in April, and the players voted him as the backup at first base. He tailed off from there, didn’t play much in the second half and signed to play in Japan in 2013, never playing again in the majors. With 599 career plate appearances in the majors, he has the fourth-fewest plate appearances of any position player All-Star (behind our man Frankie Zak, last year’s All-Star David Fry and a catcher named Don Leppert).
2B: Mike Sharperson (1992)
Yes, there was a time when the Los Angeles Dodgers were bad and irrelevant. That year was 1992: They lost 99 games, and their All-Star rep was a 30-year-old backup infielder. Sharperson had started only 48 games in the first half but was hitting .328 with a .424 OBP. He fell off in the second half and by 1994 was back in the minors (before tragically dying in a car crash in 1996).
3B: Don Wert (1968)
OK, 1968 was the Year of the Pitcher, and Wert’s Detroit Tigers would go on to win the World Series, but Wert was hitting .220 with seven home runs and 19 RBIs at the All-Star break — weak numbers even by 1968 standards. However, he somehow got the backup nod behind Brooks Robinson over Sal Bando or Ken McMullen. Wert finished his All-Star season hitting .200 with a .258 OBP and 37 RBIs, making his selection look even more dubious.
SS: Billy Hunter (1953)
The worst hitter to ever make an All-Star team? By career OPS+, it’s Hunter, who was worse even than Swisher with a career OPS+ of 53 in just over 2,000 career plate appearances. He made the All-Star team as a rookie with the St. Louis Browns in 1953 — and wasn’t even their only rep, as Satchel Paige also made it. How did Hunter make it when he finished the year hitting .219/.253/.259 with one home run for an OPS+ of 37? He was a defensive whiz (he would lead the AL in defensive WAR that year) but he was also hitting .307 in early June. He didn’t bat in the game but did pinch run for Mickey Mantle.
OF: Myril Hoag (1939)
By career WAR, Hoag is the worst player ever to make an All-Star team. Primarily a backup outfielder in a 13-year career, Hoag finished with minus-4.6 career WAR, with an OPS+ of 83. He made the AL team with the Browns in 1939, hitting .319 in the first half. Here’s the more amazing part of this story though: In 1936, while with the Yankees, Hoag collided with Joe DiMaggio in the outfield. Both players were knocked unconscious, but Hoag played the next day. Two days later, however, he suffered a blood clot on the brain and was rushed into emergency surgery, missing the rest of the season. He returned to become an All-Star three years later.
OF: Domonic Brown (2013)
Brown was a heralded Philadelphia Phillies prospect — Baseball America’s No. 4 overall prospect entering the 2011 season — who was one of the worst defensive outfielders I’ve ever seen. He never hit much either, except for two months in 2013, when he hit .290 with 18 home runs in May and June, earning All-Star honors. Two years later, he was out of the majors.
OF: Richie Scheinblum (1972)
A 29-year-old journeyman with little time in the majors when the Kansas City Royals acquired him in 1972, Scheinblum parlayed his one season as a regular into an All-Star appearance while nearly winning a batting title, leading the AL for much of the season before finishing sixth with a .300 average. He didn’t have much power and was a poor defensive outfielder, however. Kansas City traded him in the offseason (for Royals legend Hal McRae) and he was out of the league within two years.
DH: Daniel Vogelbach (2019)
The 2019 Mariners were not a good team — they lost 94 games — but did have nine other players who made an All-Star team at some point in their career. Their selection, however, was their lovable DH, who was hitting .238 with 21 home runs at the break before slumping to .162 with nine home runs in the second half.
SP: Mark Redman (2006)
There is no shortage of candidates for the pitcher slot, but Redman holds the honor as the starting pitcher who finished his All-Star season with the highest ERA — 5.71. But maybe he had a good first half? Nope. Pitching for the Royals, Redman was 6-4 with a 5.19 ERA, with equal totals of walks and strikeouts (32). The Royals, you won’t be shocked to learn, lost 100 games that year.
RP: Derrick Turnbow (2006)
What was in the air in 2006? Turnbow holds the mark for lowest WAR in an All-Star season at minus-2.4. He had a lights-out year as the Milwaukee Brewers‘ closer in 2005, posting a 1.74 ERA with 39 saves, but he didn’t make the All-Star team that season. He made it in 2006, when he would finish 4-9 with a 6.87 ERA and 24 saves. To be fair, he was a little better in the first half with a 4.74 ERA, but it was still a strange selection. Honorable mention goes to Mike Williams of the 2003 Pirates, who made the All-Star team despite a first-half ERA of 6.44 (he did somehow have 25 saves).
The other accidental All-Star
Alfredo Griffin had a long career as a defensive specialist, playing 18 seasons and serving as the primary shortstop on the 1988 World Series champion Dodgers even though he hit just .199 that season. He ran the bases as aggressively as a rabid rhino, one season getting thrown out eight times at home plate and seven times at third base. Despite a lowly career WAR of just 3.0, he also once made an All-Star team.
Here’s the story. In 1984, Griffin’s Blue Jays teammate Damaso Garcia made the All-Star team. Players were allowed to bring one guest at MLB’s expense, and when Garcia’s wife couldn’t make it, he invited his double-play partner. Tigers shortstop Alan Trammell came up with a sore arm on the day of the All-Star Game, however, and since Griffin just happened to be in town, manager Joe Altobelli added Griffin to the roster. He even got into the game, making one play in the field but not batting.
Here’s the kicker: Griffin finished the season hitting .241/.248/.298 (he drew just four walks in 140 games) with minus-1.5 WAR, no doubt putting him at the top of the list for worst All-Star season ever. Only one other position player finished with a lower WAR in his All-Star season and it was a much more accomplished player: Reggie Jackson was an All-Star in 1983, a season he hit .198 with minus-1.8 WAR.
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Inside the shift in evaluating MLB draft catching prospects
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July 8, 2025By
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Dan HajduckyJul 8, 2025, 04:30 PM ET
Close- Dan Hajducky is a staff writer for ESPN. He has an MFA in creative writing from Fairfield University and played on the men’s soccer teams at Fordham and Southern Connecticut State universities.
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — It’s the top of the 11th inning of an early March baseball game at North Carolina. With a runner on first and two outs, a Coastal Carolina batter laces a single through the right side of the infield. The Tar Heels’ right fielder bobbles the ball, then slips. The runner barrels around third toward home, where catcher Luke Stevenson awaits.
The relay throw naturally takes Stevenson to the third base side of home plate, into the path of the runner diving headfirst. Stevenson slaps a tag between his shoulder blades, shows the umpire the mitted ball and erupts into a fist pump. The game remains tied. In the bottom half of the inning, UNC wins on a sacrifice fly.
The Tar Heels went on to claim an ACC title, where Stevenson was named MVP. They hosted and won an NCAA tournament regional, rose to No. 1 in Division I, then fell at home to Arizona in a super regional and missed returning to the Men’s College World Series for the second consecutive year. Days later, Stevenson, a draft-eligible sophomore, reported to Phoenix for the MLB combine. Depending on who you ask, Stevenson is the first or second-best pure catcher and a consensus mock top-35 pick for the 2025 MLB draft, which begins July 13 (6 p.m. ET on ESPN).
Stevenson and other catchers with MLB potential have long been evaluated on how well they manage pitchers, frame pitches and lead a team’s defense — including directing positioning and keeping runners from stealing and scoring. But MLB general managers and player personnel say dual-threat backstops such as Seattle’s Cal Raleigh, an AL MVP favorite, now rank as the standard bearers for players in the pipeline to baseball’s major leagues. The gap between a catcher with All-Star potential and one who could hold down the position at a replacement level is glaringly obvious.
What might not be so obvious, however, is just how much MLB’s 2023 rules changes are now influencing how the position is being taught, played, coached and scouted at all levels of the game — and just how much of a premium is being placed on the offensive abilities of catchers such as Stevenson or Coastal Carolina’s Caden Bodine, another likely early draft pick.
From high school and youth ball to college and the minor leagues, a shift has already begun. In fundamental ways, the value of the position itself is being reframed — and Stevenson is a fitting avatar for catchers joining the professional ranks at a time when their livelihoods are in flux, their success most likely dictated by their capacity to adapt to this new reality.
“I don’t want to say it’s a dying position, [but] the bar for a being a good catcher offensively is so low,” said one MLB director of amateur scouting. “You could be an everyday catcher if you hit .210 with 10 home runs. [But] if you hit .210 with 30 home runs and a Platinum Glove? You’re a superstar.”
Jim Koerner, USA Baseball’s director of player development, said it’s still imperative for catchers to wield “middle-infield hands” and a strong arm to be an MLB starter.
“[But] in five years,” he said, “once they institute robo umps, I think it’s going to be completely an offensive position.”
AHEAD OF THE 2023 MLB season, at the behest of on-field consultant and former Chicago Cubs and Boston Red Sox president Theo Epstein, the league instituted a slew of rule changes intended to energize a purportedly staling sport. Baseball banned defensive shifts, instituted a pitch clock, limited mound disengagements to two per plate appearance and widened the bases from 15 inches to 18 inches — all changes first tested in the minor leagues.
The dividends were immediate. In 2023, runners stole 3,503 bases and upped it to 3,617 last season, the most in 109 years and the third most in any MLB season. The average game time fell to 2 hours, 36 minutes in 2024, the quickest in 40 years. Attendance and television engagement records were set in 2023 and broken in 2024.
Just as quickly, it became harder for catchers to stop runners from stealing. Catchers faced an increase of nearly 12 and 14 more stolen base attempts a season in 2023 and 2024, respectively, than in 2022. Exchange times and pop times increased exponentially to compensate, as did the speed at which catchers throw on steal attempts. But runners are faster and — owed to new limited disengagements rules for pitchers — closer to their would-be stolen bases than ever.
From 2016 to 2022, the lowest average caught stealing percentage for a single season among qualified catchers was 22.28% in 2021. In 2023 it was 17.43% and, last season, it was 18.78%. Through July 7, MLB runners have stolen 1,947 bases, on pace to eclipse 2024’s total. The Minnesota Twins stole an MLB-low 65 bases in 2024; 14 teams already have more in 2025.
Jerry Weinstein, a Chicago Cubs catching consultant, said pitchers get the ball to the plate in the 1.3-second range, and catchers’ pop times are between 1.8 and 2.0 seconds.
“There’s nothing we can do to improve that, that’s a staple,” Weinstein said. “The average runner runs 3.35, one-tenth of a second for the tag … it’s a math problem. If the baserunner is perfect, and the catcher and pitcher are perfect based on those parameters, the guy’s going to be safe most of the time. Which is exactly what we’re seeing.”
But one MLB director of player development said even with the rise in stolen bases’ effect on strategy, the best batteries still control how efficiently they get outs.
“From an analytic standpoint, swinging the count in your favor is more valuable than defending the stolen base,” the player development director said. “Ninety feet matters in certain situations, [but] some teams don’t even care. They’d rather have a guy execute his stuff: High leg kick, deliver the stuff, go for the punch out.”
Behind the plate, he said, there’s a different catching archetype than there was 25 years ago. They’re now bigger, taller and can get under the ball with a one-knee-down stance behind the plate. But, unlike the days when an offensive juggernaut catcher was a rarity — Mike Piazza and Carlton Fisk, or dual-threats like Johnny Bench, Ivan Rodriguez and Yogi Berra — now an adept offensive catcher can separate himself from a logjam.
“If you can’t hit,” he said, “you’re going to have a hard time sticking around.”
From both 1991-1998 and 1999-2007, there were eight MLB catchers (at least 50% of games at catcher) with three or more .800 OPS, 10-home run, 50-RBI seasons. From 2008-2015, that number fell to five. From 2016 through 2024, there were three.
“The offensive product is incredibly low, the physical demands very high, and what we value in catching has changed so much and is on the precipice of changing again,” said a director of amateur scouting. “We put so much value on catchers being able to frame pitches and get extra strikes … and the minute that goes away, that drastically changes how we evaluate amateur and professional catchers.”
When organizations find offensive-minded catchers who are capable behind the plate, they tend to hold onto them.
“It’s getting harder and harder to find those guys that are really offensive, they’re few and far between,” a director of amateur scouting said. “You name one, then I’ll name one. I guarantee it’s going to be a short list.”
Another director of amateur scouting said part of what makes some catchers in this year’s draft so valuable is that they can catch and potentially be a standout offensive performer.
“You don’t want [a catcher you draft in the first round] to have a position change a year and a half down the road,” the scout said. “You’re going to move him to first base or left field, and now the offensive bar is so much higher there.”
Which is why some MLB scouts are high on Stevenson and think he can handle the adjustments the position now requires. He was steady behind home plate for North Carolina, a great blocker but below-average receiver. But it’s what the 6-foot-1, 210-pound, left-handed hitting All-America catcher did with his bat that has drawn the attention of MLB scouts: Among Division I catchers who have caught 90 games since 2024, Stevenson ranked second in home runs (33), third in runs (104) and sixth in OPS (.960). He drew 29 more walks (107) than any other catcher while having the second-best chase rate (17.2%) and second-most pitches per plate appearance (4.09).
Although some MLB scouts and player development personnel have raised questions about Stevenson’s glove and whether he could thrive behind the plate at the sport’s top level, others say his power and discerning eye come at such a premium that defensive concerns are secondary and correctable. One director of amateur scouting said Stevenson’s floor is backup catcher at the MLB level.
One executive of a team with a top-10 draft pick said Stevenson is in the mix that high because his defensive technique is easily adjustable, but an eye and bat like that at a position such as catcher is too rare to pass up.
“You could be an outstanding defensive catcher, but if you can’t hit a lick, it’s hard to make a roster as an everyday player,” he said.
“Hardest position to evaluate,” another director of amateur scouting said, “amateur catcher.”
He compared the predraft evaluation to college quarterbacks trying to play in the NFL: “Can you transition? With edge rushers, you have less than three seconds to get rid of the ball — same for a catcher, you want him to be better than two and to be able to throw it on the bag. Guys that are 1.78, 1.83, 1.85? They can get away with a higher throw, but the 2.0 guys have to be perfect. It takes a special human being to do it and do it for many years.”
Steve Rodriguez, Stanford University’s catching coach, was Trevor Bauer and Gerritt Cole’s catcher at UCLA before spending six seasons in the Atlanta Braves and Arizona Diamondbacks organizations. He lauded Stevenson’s prowess with a bat and said he is underrated behind the plate.
“[With] his ability and size to be light on his feet and his knees … I watch him and he can scrape the dirt with that knee down so easily: That means his balance and flexibility is at a high level,” Rodriguez said. “When you’re able to do that with the skill set he has with his hands, you have a pretty phenomenal player.”
Stevenson said UNC catching coach Jesse Wierzbicki, a former UNC starting catcher who played in the Houston Astros minor league system, hammered receiving and blocking drills all season — footwork, transfers to second base, stealing strikes. He also had inspiration at home.
“You’ve got eight guys staring at you, being a leader on that field, directing traffic,” Stevenson said. “I was probably 8 years old — my mom caught, so I was always wearing the gear — when I fell in love with it. It’s what I wanted to do.”
ON A FRIGID Tuesday morning in March, more than 50 high school boys in full uniform took the field at the USA Baseball Complex in Cary, North Carolina, with Jim Koerner in the stands. Koerner develops on-field programming and curriculum for USA Baseball’s 13- to 17-year-old teams and is one of amateur American baseball’s most important barometers. His son, Sam, 18, catches for Pro5 Academy’s Premier team, an elite developmental academy.
Scattered around the diamond were players committed to Old Dominion and NC State, Virginia Tech and UNC, Ohio State and Tulane. Haven Fielder, the San Diego State-bound son of Prince Fielder, is Pro5’s designated hitter. Sam committed to Division I Radford University in Virginia. Almost all of them take remote classes and rarely, if ever, attend high school in-person.
The elder Koerner said it’s a moment of extreme change, both for the beloved sport that has long been his livelihood and the position his son fell in love with. From a young age, Sam showed a natural lean toward catching, but Jim said he urged Sam toward the position he thought would provide the best chance of a prosperous baseball life.
Now he’s not so sure.
Twenty years ago, Jim Koerner said, catchers were as still as possible; now, framing and throwing are more important than blocking, and passed balls are skyrocketing.
His son, like Stevenson, is a left-hitting catcher. Sam is just shy of 6 feet and defensively gifted with a plus-arm. He also hits well for contact. He situationally adapts his catching stance: one knee down if the bases are empty, traditional with runners on. Sam said, even with the position under siege, it’s easier to throw out of that. Anything to tip the scales.
“[Sam] has aspirations, like a lot of young kids,” Jim Koerner said. “It’s hard to tell young kids, ‘Hey, man, you’re a really good receiver … but in five years, that might not matter. Just focus on your arm and hitting.'”
Sammy Serrano, Sam’s catching coach and a second-round draft pick in the 1998 MLB draft, said he isn’t worried about Sam or how he’ll adapt to rule changes. Serrano said Sam has an extremely high baseball IQ and he “just happens to be the catcher.”
During a game this spring, Sam Koerner took a relay from right field, swiped his mitt across the plate and waited: Runner out. Seconds later, he was in the dugout asking Serrano, what he could do to improve his timing and technique. It was a good play, but Sam isn’t interested in only good.
“He always wanted to [be a catcher],” his father said. “Two or three years old, he’d squat down in front of the TV and I’d be like, ‘Hey Sam … whatcha doin’?’
“He’d just point at the catcher on TV.”
DAVID ROSS’S WARM laugh spilled through a cellphone speaker when asked how well he would fare as a catcher in today’s MLB.
“I probably wouldn’t have a job,” he said. “I hit .180 my last year in Boston and I laughed: I got a two-year deal. I had a couple of deals on the table. That would’ve never happened early in my career when framing wasn’t a thing.”
Ross’s career was extended by his proclivity in the margins.
“When I was coming up, you had holds, hold pick, pitchouts, slide steps, four or five different signs from coaches that would help you manage the running game,” he said. “Well, that turned into nobody wanted to run anymore because the percentages didn’t match up. Now you see all these teams building with legit base stealers and athletes.”
After retiring following their 2016 World Series victory, Ross became a special assistant with the Cubs, then worked as an ESPN analyst before becoming the Cubs’ manager from 2020 to 2023, the first season under the rule changes. He is torn on some elements of the changes and changes that still might come, such as the Automated Ball-Strike system already implemented in MiLB that MLB tested this spring training.
“As a player, it’s a hard job, mistakes cost games, so, I love the challenge system because you’re going to keep the beauty of the game,” Ross said. “I don’t think we’ll get away from — you’re still going to be teaching kids about receiving, blocking, throwing, calling the game, the little intricacies of baseball. I don’t think that’s going to go away. Even with all the analytics, you still need a sense of feel back there.
“But offense has won out.”
Two-time All-Star catcher Jonathan Lucroy was an offense-first catcher out of college who became an analytic darling of the mid-2010s for his ability to frame pitches.
A mid-2000s ESPN feature on Lucroy pointed to then-Cubs general manager Epstein’s savvy in being an early adopter to the framing movement, which included the signing of Ross. Ironically, it’s the same aspect of the game Epstein might undo if an ABS system is implemented.
“Framing will be so devalued because of the advent of the ABS system and they’ll be prioritizing the offensive side of the position even more,” Lucroy said. “I’m biased, but I’ve experienced it firsthand.”
Lucroy predicted that the bedrocks of the position will remain.
“The most important part of the position is the game management and leadership,” he said. “There’s a lot of psychology that goes into it: How different guys communicate, how they receive information, take it in, apply [it]. You can’t take a paint brush and swipe it across and everyone does it the same way.”
Lucroy got to know his pitchers, learn about their families, how they respond to constructive criticism.
“How do you go out and speak to them properly to reel them in? Get them to change stuff up, change their thought process?” Lucroy said. “Are they a hand-hold guy? Do you have to tell them everything’s good, breathe, slow it down? The majority of guys are like that. On the flip side, a guy like Max Scherzer you can go out and yell at him, insult him a bit, and he responds positively.”
Lucroy said Jason Kendall once told him that the best catchers were also the best communicators, that their job is to make the pitcher look as good as possible.
‘”Make them more important than you,'” Lucroy recalled. “You want them to trust you and believe in you, like any other relationship. ‘Cause 99% of the time, guys don’t feel the best when they go out and play.”
Lucroy said catchers will adapt to the rule changes, because they always do. Lucroy said he thinks once an ABS system is instituted, catchers will go back into a more traditional stance, which means they’ll block balls better and throw out more runners.
But having experienced an analytics revolution himself, he worries about coming into an MLB transitioning between eras.
“The game is always shifting, always evolving,” Lucroy said. “If you go back and look at 2016, remember how the Cubs had Willson Contreras back there? And they put in David Ross. Why? Because David Ross is a veteran who ended up being a future manager who knows what the heck he’s doing and how to handle guys in big situations.”
Lucroy said he doesn’t think that’s an accident.
“Framing is important, to a certain extent,” he said, “but the best framers in the world aren’t catching in the World Series — the better offensive guys are. Even the years when I was one of the top framers in the league, I think I made the playoffs once.”
SAM KOERNER’S PRO5 TEAM took on a Canadian baseball academy at a minor league stadium in Holly Springs, North Carolina. The bases were wider — Sam called them “pizza boxes” — than those at the USA Baseball complex, so they stole more often here.
Sam was one of three catchers on the roster that day, and the only one committed to a college. He didn’t play until the eighth inning, and when he finally got to bat, he cranked the first pitch over the right field wall. It nearly hit a car on the adjacent NC 55 roadway.
His dad rushed to pull the video — it was Sam’s third in-game home run ever — but the camera was off.
In the press box afterward, Sam said he’s taking a gap year. He’ll enroll at Radford in the fall of 2026 and play with Pro5 until then, maximizing his growth literally and technically.
Sam doesn’t have to contend with new MLB-type rules yet, but if aspiration meets opportunity, he soon will.
“It’s already a challenge trying to hold runners on [even] though the rule changes aren’t affecting me,” Sam said. “I don’t know what else [catchers] could do. I’m just tryin’ to be as fast as I can to second base, on the bag.”
In working with thousands of players and coaches across the U.S., Jim Koerner said MLB’s rules changes haven’t been adopted at the youth levels, which means they haven’t directly altered how youth ball is played — yet. But for Sam and his peers, and even younger players, making it to an NCAA baseball team and eventually to MLB are the goals.
“The way pro evaluators are going to look at the catching position is going to start to change now,” Koerner said. “But on the flip side, when you value the guy on the mound as much as he’s valued now at the professional level, they still need to trust the guy catching. There’s still a confidence, a comfort, a leadership aspect.”
It’s the aspect Sam prides himself on most and what Lucroy said was invaluable.
“Building good relationships with my pitchers, always having their back,” Sam said. “It makes them perform better knowing they have a guy behind the plate where they can, even as simple as 0-2, they can spike a brick in the dirt and know I’m going to pick ’em up and block it and throw the guy out at first.”
At lunch in between his game and a weightlifting session, Sam inhaled a Philly cheesesteak. He buzzed while breaking down the catching techniques of Cincinnati’s Jose Trevino and San Francisco’s Patrick Bailey. He also acknowledged that during a game earlier, his middle finger got caught asking for a curveball and he took a 90-mile-per-hour fastball in the chest plate.
Jim said it’s just how Sam is; there is no version of him absent of catching.
“When he was 7 or 8, he’d get back there and see these big guys come to hit and … he’d be excited but he’d look at me like…” Jim said, his eyes going wide.
“I was scared to death,” Sam said.
“But he eventually warmed up to it,” Jim said, smiling.
They fell into a cadence, starting and finishing each other’s anecdotes. They’ve chosen a baseball life, devoid of free time. Jim wishes he were home more often, and Sam might as well live in catching gear. Recently, they tried to game-plan on a rare, shared day off. They couldn’t decide what to do. Eventually, Jim pitched batting practice to Sam.
“[At a] concert the other day, one of the guys was tellin’ a story about fishing, being out there with his daughter and she’s thinking, ‘We’re going fishing?’ The guy says, ‘It’s not … just fishing,'” Jim said.
“When I ask Sam, ‘Hey, do you wanna hit? You wanna go lift?’ For him, it might be just baseball.”
Suddenly, a knock came on the press box door to vacate. Sam and Jim turned in their chairs and shared a glance.
“Well, for me,” Jim said, packing up, “it’s not just baseball.”
Sports
Pirates ball-crusher Cruz accepts HR Derby invite
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4 hours agoon
July 8, 2025By
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Field Level Media
Jul 8, 2025, 04:16 PM ET
Pittsburgh Pirates center fielder Oneil Cruz accepted an invitation on Tuesday to compete in Monday’s Home Run Derby in Atlanta.
Cruz is the fifth player to commit to the competition, held one day before the All-Star Game. The others are Ronald Acuna Jr. of the Atlanta Braves, Cal Raleigh of the Seattle Mariners, James Wood of the Washington Nationals and Byron Buxton of the Minnesota Twins.
Cruz, 26, is known for having a powerful bat and regularly delivers some of the hardest-hit homers in the sport. His home run May 25 at home against the Milwaukee Brewers had an exit velocity of 122.9 mph and was the hardest hit homer in the 10-year Statcast era.
But Cruz has never hit more than 21 in a season, and that was in 2024. He’s on track to set a new high this year and has 15 in 80 games.
Cruz has 55 career homers in 324 games with the Pirates.
Cruz will be the first Pittsburgh player to participate in the Derby since Josh Bell in 2019. Other Pirates to be part of the event were Bobby Bonilla (1990), Barry Bonds (1992), Jason Bay (2005), Andrew McCutchen (2012) and Pedro Alvarez (2013).
Overall, Cruz is batting just .203 this season but leads the National League with 28 steals.
Among the players to turn down an invite to the eight-player field are two-time champion Pete Alonso of the New York Mets, Kyle Schwarber of the Philadelphia Phillies and 2024 runner-up Bobby Witt Jr. of the Kansas City Royals.
Defending champion Teoscar Hernandez of the Los Angeles Dodgers recently turned down a spot as a consideration to nagging injuries.
Top power threats Aaron Judge of the New York Yankees and Shohei Ohtani of the Dodgers also are expected to skip the event.
Sports
Yanks moving Chisholm back to 2B after 3B stint
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4 hours agoon
July 8, 2025By
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Field Level Media
Jul 8, 2025, 01:40 PM ET
New York Yankees All-Star Jazz Chisholm Jr., after making 28 starts in a row at third base, is moving back to second base starting with Tuesday’s game against the Seattle Mariners, manager Aaron Boone said.
Boone confirmed the change on the “Talkin’ Yanks” podcast on Tuesday.
Chisholm, who is batting .245 with 15 home runs, 38 RBIs and 10 steals in 59 games, has recently been bothered by soreness in his right shoulder, which he said is an issue only on throws.
He said he prefers to play second base and prepared in the offseason to exclusively play in that spot before injuries played havoc with Boone’s lineup card, starting with Chisholm’s oblique injury in May.
Third baseman Oswaldo Cabrera went down with a season-ending ankle injury on May 12.
DJ LeMahieu manned second base while Chisholm was at third, but Boone has a better glove option in Oswald Peraza, a utility man with a stronger arm plus defensive skills across the infield.
LeMahieu, 36, is batting .266 with two home runs and 12 RBIs this season.
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