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Ryan Jeffers burst onto the scene with the Minnesota Twins after getting called up in August of last season to fill in for an injured Mitch Garver. In 26 games in 2020, Jeffers posted an OPS of .791, demonstrating hard-hit ability as well as patience at the plate. Jeffers was equally impressive behind the plate, where he quickly became a defensive savant, ending the season in the 90th percentile in all of baseball in pitch framing.
Through the first handful of games in the 2021 campaign, Ryan Jeffers has had a quiet start at the plate. Through the first two weeks of the season, Jeffers has collected just four hits and is slugging a mere .190. Of course, these numbers come from a minuscule sample size of just 19 plate appearances and, while no true conclusions can be gained from these numbers, the usage plan for Rocco Baldelli’s catchers has been made crystal clear — one day on, one day off, but Mitch Garver gets to hit against lefties.
Through the first 13 games of the 2021 season, the Minnesota Twins have faced four left-handed starting pitchers, and Mitch Garver has gotten the start in all four of those games. The reasoning for this is obvious, Mitch Garver destroys left-handed pitching. In the 2019 season, Garver posted a 1.170 OPS against southpaws, absolutely destroying every left handed pitcher he saw.
The adverse effect that this is causing, though, is that it is leaving Ryan Jeffers in the position where he is strictly facing right-handed pitching in every game in which he appears. While Jeffers has been successful against righties up to this point in his career, nearly every baseball player is going to struggle more against same-handed pitchers than if they had a platoon advantage.
Additionally, Mitch Garver simply hasn’t been that same hitter, even against lefties, since the 2019 season came to an end. Since the beginning of 2020, Garver has posted a .761 OPS against southpaws. While we have already seen what Garver’s ceiling against lefties has been, just how much leash can he have while not exactly destroying the ball, especially when it is coming at the expense of Ryan Jeffers getting advantageous batting matchups?
When the Minnesota Twins made the decision to move from the traditional righty/lefty catchers split in favor of their two right handed mashers, the question of how the playing time would be divided was a big one. In the early going the Twins have clearly made that decision and it has resulted in Ryan Jeffers getting 4x the number of his plate appearances against righties rather than lefties. If Mitch Garver can get back to his mashing ways against lefties, the decision will pay off, but if he continues his marginal hitting against the opposite handed pitchers, Rocco Baldelli will need to adapt quickly and adjust his catching plan. Garver is 30-years-old and hasn’t looked impressive at the plate in 18 months, while Ryan Jeffers is 23-years-old and slated to be the catcher of the future for the Twins for the next 6+ seasons.
It might be time to start setting up Ryan Jeffers to succeed.
What has been your impression of the Minnesota Twins catching split to start the season? Do you think that Ryan Jeffers has been set up to fail? Leave a comment below and start the conversation!
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