New York Mets farmhand Francisco Alvarez is a 19 year old catcher and the team’s #1 prospect. Of course being a #1 prospect does not guarantee future success in the big leagues – just look at Amed Rosario’s career to date, or the likes of Lastings Milledge and Fernando Martinez from a decade ago.
But Alvarez’s performance in his short minor league career raised eyebrows for me by the sheer magnitude of his dominance.
I went back and compared his performance to all of the recent top catcher prospects of the 2010s. One thing to note is that there have not been a significant number of top catching prospects over the last decade, the most prominent are Gary Sanchez, Travis d’Aranud, Mike Zunino, Jesus Montero; and more recently Adley Rustchman and Joey Bart, and compared Alvarez to them at similar ages and similar levels. The most prominent catchers of the 2010s, if you exclude Buster Posey, has probably been J.T. Realmuto, and he never made a top 100 prospect list.
Player | Year | League | Age | G | K/BB Rate | BA | OPS |
Fransico Alvarez | 2021 | Low-A | 19 | 15 | 2.14 | .417 | .1213 |
Joey Bart | 2019 | Low-A | 22 | 57 | 0.28 | .265 | .793 |
Adley Rustchmann | 2019 | Low-A | 21 | 12 | 0.67 | .154 | .594 |
J.T. Realmuto | 2011 | Low-A | 20 | 96 | 0.33 | .287 | .801 |
Salvador Perez | 2009 | Low-A | 19 | 36 | 0.40 | .189 | .466 |
Keilbert Ruiz | 2017 | Low-A | 19 | 63 | 0.60 | .317 | .795 |
Willson Contreras | 2013 | Low-A | 21 | 86 | 0.39 | .248 | .742 |
Gary Sanchez | 2011 | Low-A | 18 | 82 | 0.38 | .256 | .820 |
Travis d’Arnaud | 2009 | Low-A | 20 | 126 | 0.55 | .255 | .738 |
Jesus Montero | 2008 | Low A | 19 | 132 | 0.45 | .326 | .868 |
Even with a small sample size, Alvarez’s performance is several degrees of magnitude more impressive than any recent catcher prospect, again, albeit with a small sample size. (There are a few catchers, notably Mike Zunino and Yasmani Grandal, who I left out because they started off at a higher level than Alvarez.)
Even more exciting is when you compare his performance to not just catchers, but to the elite hitters in Major League Baseball, also at a similar age and level.
Player | Year | League | Pos | Age | G | K/BB Rate | BA | OPS |
Fransico Alvarez | 2021 | Low-A | C | 19 | 15 | 2.14 | .417 | .1213 |
Mike Trout | 2010 | Low-A | OF | 18 | 81 | 1.25 | .362 | .979 |
Juan Soto | 2017 | Low-A | OF | 18 | 23 | 0.88 | .360 | .950 |
Francisco Lindor | 2012 | Low-A | SS | 18 | 122 | 0.78 | .257 | .707 |
Christian Yelich | 2011 | Low-A | OF | 19 | 122 | 0.54 | .312 | .871 |
Fernando Tatis Jr. | 2017 | Low-A | SS | 18 | 117 | 0.60 | .281 | .910 |
Ronald Acuna | 2016 | Low-A | OF | 18 | 55 | 0.64 | .312 | .821 |
Mookie Betts | 2013 | Low-A | OF | 20 | 76 | 1.45 | .296 | .923 |
Bryce Harper | 2011 | Low-A | OF | 18 | 72 | 0.72 | .318 | .977 |
Alvarez is still far and away above this elite cohort at a similar stage in their careers, with the caveat, again, that it is over a very short sample size.
But beyond the small sample sizes, there is a reason he is progressing so quickly. First, he is clearly physically developed well above those in his age group, weighing in at over 230 pounds, and he is dominating to the point where any reasonable person would conclude, there is nothing more for him to prove at that level. He led the league in hard hit %, exit velocity, was clearly being pitched around if you notice his walk rate.
In his debut at High-A Brooklyn he is already scorching balls at exit velocities more typical of Pete Alonso than of a 19-year old single-a catcher.
Defensively, Alvarez is considered above average, with a strong arm.
So how soon until we see him in Queens? Some in the organization think he can move quickly because of his performance at the plate, but also because of the intangibles he possesses. According to Minor League Director, Jeremy Barnes, Alvarez’ has “blown [him] way with these intangible parts of the game, that I feel very confident that he’s going to be able to do it and that he’s currently working on it.”
If he weren’t a catcher, one could argue we could expect in the major leagues by next year; after all most of the elite hitters that I compared him to such as Trout, Soto, Acuna were in the major leagues within a year or two of dominating Low-A, and Alvarez is already in High-A in May of 2021.
My only concern with him is his weight vs. height - I think he is listed at 5'10", 233. At his age, that is a surprising amount of weight for his height. I think he is only 2 of 15 in steals this year, too, so this should be a good learning and progressing year for him.
ReplyDeleteThomas
DeleteIt is all muscle weight.
He is a beast.
Nice - beasts are entirely acceptable :)
ReplyDeleteI did see a video of Alvarez's first Brooklyn hit - it was a single, but it was a laser one hop to wall past left fielder. Just ripped. I am glad he did not try to stretch it to a double.
ReplyDeleteIt is complicated -- very -- because he is a catcher, a position of prime defensive importance.
ReplyDeleteWe can all have confidence in the bat.
But I don't know about the receiving, the technique, the arm, the pop-up speed, etc.
Unfortunately when it comes to the minors, the overwhelming majority of opinion I encounter -- here, and elsewhere -- is from people who have never watched the individuals play -- so they are staring at stat sheets and box scores and guessing -- and/or do not have the deep knowledge that's required to evaluate the skills of, in this case, a catcher.
He must develop into a reasonably "good" defensive catcher or it's a major problem. Therefore, my guess is this is going to take some time, despite the prodigious bat.
Jimmy