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Former Reds, Cubs Gold Glove Catcher Suddenly Retires After 12 Seasons

Former Reds, Cubs Gold Glove Catcher Suddenly Retires After 12 Seasons

Newsweek01-07-2025
Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Longtime Cincinnati Reds catcher Tucker Barnhart is retiring after 12 seasons in the big leagues, according to MLB insider Robert Murray.
Barnhart was a two-time Gold Glove Award winner for the Cincinnati Reds. He also played for the Chicago Cubs, Detroit Tigers and Arizona Diamondbacks. He played eight games for the Texas Rangers this year.
"At least two sources who have spent time around Barnhart throughout his career believe he would make a quality Major League manager, but it's unclear if the longtime catcher would entertain that possibilty," Murray wrote for FanSided.
PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 07: Tucker Barnhart #16 of the Cincinnati Reds can't field a throw by Jesse Winker #33 allowing Josh Bell #55 of the Pittsburgh Pirates to score during the first inning at...
PITTSBURGH, PA - APRIL 07: Tucker Barnhart #16 of the Cincinnati Reds can't field a throw by Jesse Winker #33 allowing Josh Bell #55 of the Pittsburgh Pirates to score during the first inning at PNC Park on April 7, 2018 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. MoreBarnhart was designated for assignment by the Rangers earlier this year and was later assigned to Triple-A Round Rock. In his 12-year career, he slashed .241/.318/351.
He hit 53 career home runs and will be most remembered for his eight seasons with the Reds. He played 744 games with the Reds. He hit .248 as a member of the Reds in his career and collected 261 RBIs. Barnhart appeared just once in the postseason, in 2020, as a member of the Reds.
While he never established himself as an elite hitter, to make it 12 years as a big leaguer is no easy feat. He caught 841 games in his career. He also had 18 appearances at first base, one appearance at third base and one appearance in the outfield.
He finished his career with a 6.9 WAR and 920 total games played. The last three seasons, he had not produced much, so he knew it was time to hang up the cleats.
More MLB: Padres Involved In 'Outrageous' Trade Idea For $75 Million Outfielder
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Fernando Tatis Jr.'s power is missing. His contact point may be to blame
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Fernando Tatis Jr.'s power is missing. His contact point may be to blame

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Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

Surging, slumping, scoreboard watching: A night in the pennant race with the Mariners' Jerry Dipoto
Surging, slumping, scoreboard watching: A night in the pennant race with the Mariners' Jerry Dipoto

New York Times

time18 minutes ago

  • New York Times

Surging, slumping, scoreboard watching: A night in the pennant race with the Mariners' Jerry Dipoto

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The Mariners have won 90, 90, 88 and 85 games each year since 2021 and stand 68-59, tied with the Boston Red Sox for the last two American League wild-card spots. As it turns out, the Mariners weren't falling apart last summer, when they lost a 10-game division lead and missed a wild-card spot by one game. This is who they are, on the edge of something special. A year under Wilson has confirmed it. 'That's kind of been, in baseball's way, the productivity of our roster in general for most of the last five years,' Dipoto said. 'We're kind of hovering around that spot. We're trying to figure out how to break beyond that.' Corner infielders Josh Naylor and Eugenio Suárez — acquired in separate trades with the Arizona Diamondbacks in late July — should be part of the solution. The Mariners' first division title in 24 years seems in their grasp, with the battered Houston Astros fading fast. But they haven't done it yet. Advertisement After a 10-1 stretch that started July 31, the Mariners have lost six of seven games and look exhausted on the final leg of a three-team, four-city, nine-game trip without an off day. The Mariners have lost all three series — to the Baltimore Orioles, the Mets (two games in Queens and one in Williamsport, Pa.) and Philadelphia — but have scored in the seventh inning or later in every game. They tied Tuesday's score with three runs in the seventh but lost 6-4 when J.T. Realmuto homered off Matt Brash in the eighth. 'We have a really good lineup, we're deep, and we let everybody know that we're not going to give up the game,' said Suárez, who doubled twice Tuesday but is batting .176 since the trade. 'No matter who we face, we're ready to compete.' The Mariners still strike out a lot (third in MLB), but after ranking 21st in MLB in runs per game last season, they're up to 10th now. Catcher Cal Raleigh leads the majors in homers, with 47, and five others have hit at least 15: Randy Arozarena, Julio Rodríguez, Jorge Polanco, Naylor and Suárez. 'It's a team that doesn't let down easy, and that's something that all good teams have,' said Wilson, a stalwart of four Seattle playoff teams from 1995 to 2001. 'We're able to strike and we're able to strike quickly.' Alas, that is what the Phillies did Monday to Logan Gilbert, who had never before allowed six runs without pitching more than two innings. The Phillies fouled off his best pitches, hammered his mistakes and wound up with 21 hits in the game, the most they've had here in 16 years. Dipoto understood why Wilson removed Gilbert before the top of the third; after nine hits and 65 pitches, it just wasn't his night. The bullpen wasn't much better. 'This is pretty unbelievable — we're not a particularly easy team to hit,' Dipoto said, mentioning a string of short starts on this trip, as another Phillie lashed a line drive. Advertisement 'In a 162-game season when you're riding the wave, everybody's going to have a clunker now and then. When you start backing up three-inning, four-inning starts on top of one another, it does take its toll.' By the middle innings, Dipoto was conferring with Andy McKay, the assistant general manager, on bullpen coverage for the rest of the series. Sure enough, two relievers were sent to the minors Tuesday, with fresh arms taking their place. One of them, Bryce Miller, made his first start since early June after dealing with elbow inflammation. It marked the first time this season the Mariners have had their projected starting rotation together, with Gilbert, Luis Castillo, George Kirby and Bryan Woo. All but Miller have been All-Stars within the last three summers. 'It sucks it took this long in the season to get all five (of us) healthy and rolling, but we've got to start stringing together good starts and giving us a chance,' said Miller, who allowed four runs in five innings. 'We'll be all right. We're still in a good spot. Everything's going to be fine.' It's easy to picture a rotation like Seattle's — with a bullpen anchored by Andrés Muñoz — pitching deep into October. Strong young starters carried the 2010 San Francisco Giants all the way, same as the 2003 Florida Marlins, 1985 Kansas City Royals, 1969 Mets and so on. Then again, the Oakland Athletics of the early 2000s never got past the division series. Neither did the 2011 Phillies' stable of aces, nor the 2014 Detroit Tigers' Cy Young brigade. Study baseball long enough, and precedents bombard you from every direction. 'My favorite part of baseball history is that what we're doing, there's almost nothing you can do that hasn't been done before, in some weird way,' Dipoto said. 'It's just trying to carve out a modern way of looking at it and doing it. We're no better at predicting the future than anybody else is. We're trying to put a good baseball team on the field.' Advertisement The Mariners have done that. They are weary now; this weekend's home series with the Athletics can't arrive fast enough. But they are probably the healthiest, most complete team in the division. This should be their time. Now they just have to pass the Astros, who have held or shared first place for 78 days in a row and now lead Seattle by a game and a half. Dipoto went hours Monday without checking his phone for the Houston score, but it was only a matter of time. 'Oh, I will,' he said. 'If you are actually the person in baseball that says, 'I don't look at that,' most of them are looking at it. It could be a glance at the out-of-town scoreboard, it could be checking the scores when the game's over, or periodically just popping over to the dot-com scoreboard. So, yeah, I'm watching. We're all watching.' The past is the past, as every closer and general manager knows. The present is the pennant race. It's OK to peek. Spot the pattern. Connect the terms Find the hidden link between sports terms Play today's puzzle

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