Boston Red Sox
fromESPN.com
1 day agoFantasy baseball free agent pickups: Slow starts by catchers got you down? Here's who can help
Catchers are historically underperforming in fantasy baseball, making it challenging to find reliable options.
In the history of Major League Baseball, there have been 670 World Series games and just four have featured three catchers appearing for the same team. But only once in all those years and all those contests have all three catchers also produced a hit and RBI.
Somewhat surprisingly, the Nats signed Riley Adams to a one-year split deal ahead of the non-tender deadline. Adams had been widely considered a likely non-tender, coming off a dreadful season and out of minor league options. The move seemed all the stranger when the Nats traded for Harry Ford just a couple weeks later. Adams was designated for assignment and outrighted to clear a roster spot for newly acquired reliever Gus Varland in late January. He's now in camp as a non-roster invitee.
Those efforts shouldn't be taken as a knock against Carlos Narvaez, who turned in an impressive 2025 season that earned him a sixth-place finish in AL Rookie of the Year voting thanks to a combination of league average offense at the plate and elite defense behind it. It seems likely that Narvaez would remain the primary catcher in Boston even if they were to find another backstop to bring into the mix.
The Blue Jays' catching depth isn't quite as deep as it used to be after trading away Danny Jansen and Gabriel Moreno over the course of past few seasons. That bet ended up paying off for Toronto as the team saw its heights with a catching tandem of Alejandro Kirk and Tyler Heineman in 2025. Both catchers played well, but a large part of the Blue Jays' success on the catching side came from Kirk excellently executing every aspect of his position, from framing to offence. The fact that the Blue Jays always put Kirk in the lineup for almost the entirety of the 2025 postseason run was a testament to their faith in the main catcher.