logo
Boston Red Sox prospect Marcelo Mayer reminds veteran of 5-time All-Star SS

Boston Red Sox prospect Marcelo Mayer reminds veteran of 5-time All-Star SS

Yahoo23-05-2025

Both the way 22-year-old shortstop prospect Marcelo Mayer swings the bat and plays defense looks almost effortless to Red Sox first baseman Abraham Toro.
'It kind of looks nonchalant,' said Toro, who played with Mayer in Triple-A Worcester before his call-up May 3.
Advertisement
Toro compared Baseball America's No. 8 overall prospect to a five-time All-Star shortstop.
'It's so relaxed,' Toro said. 'On the defensive side, he kind of reminds me of (Corey) Seager. It's so loose and it's like he's not trying — and I'm not saying he's not. That's the feel.
'Even his swing, it looks like he's not trying but like bat speed, I work out with him, it's one of the best,' Toro added. 'So that's helped him to be successful.'
It's not the first time someone has described Mayer's play as effortless. Manager Alex Cora said during spring training he's an 'old-school shortstop' who 'moves with grace.'
Advertisement
It's also not the first time the 6-foot-3, 188-pound Mayer has been compared to Seager, a 6-foot-3, 215-pound left-handed hitter who has five defensive runs saved in 197 innings this season and 14 defensive runs saved since the start of 2023.
Assistant GM Paul Toboni, then Boston's amateur scouting director, made the same comp when Boston drafted Mayer fourth overall in 2021.
'Probably some cross between Corey Seager, Brandon Crawford,' Toboni said almost four years ago. 'But thinking back to it, probably more advanced. I keep saying it, but he's got a really advanced feel to his game and ease to his game. I throw those two names out there not to really set expectations for him or anything. I say Seager because Marcelo does have a little bit of a bigger build.
'I say Brandon Crawford, because if you watch this kid take pregame ground balls, he's one of the cockiest defenders I've ever seen in my life,' Toboni added. 'I say that with a positive tone behind it. He's flipping balls with his glove, catching balls through the legs and going behind the back. It's not like he's showing off. It's just kind of his nature. It all comes pretty easy to him.'
Advertisement
The Red Sox appear to be creating a path to the majors for Mayer with Kristian Campbell working out at first base. If Campbell gets comfortable enough at first, Boston could move him there and promote Mayer to play second base. Cora said Tuesday that Campbell still has a lot of work to do to be ready for games and won't play first base on this homestand.
Mayer has started at second base in three of four games for Worcester since Campbell began working out at first base Friday.
Mayer had a 22-game on-base streak end May 11 and has slumped some recently. His OPS has dropped 66 points from .850 to .784 the past six games but he did have an RBI single in his final at-bat Tuesday. He leads the International League in RBIs (41). He's tied for sixth in the league in home runs with eight.
His time is coming —whether it's at second or shortstop.
Advertisement
It would be difficult to move on from Trevor Story because he has another two years, $55 million remaining on his contract after this season. That's $25 million both in 2026 and '27 and a $5 million buyout in 2028.
But how much longer can the Red Sox play Story every day with how he's hitting? The 32-year-old enters Wednesday with the 22nd worst OPS (.617) among qualified major league hitters.
'He wanted to play a lot of games, more than 150, and I think he's on pace to do that,' Cora said recently about Story. 'But obviously I gotta be smart, too. Not only with the production, but also the body.'
Story has been an elite defender throughout his career but he's not playing shortstop well enough right now to justify keeping him in the lineup every day despite his poor offense. He's in the ninth percentile in outs above average/range (-3) and the 17th percentile in fielding run value (-2).
Advertisement
As MassLive's Sean McAdam put it Sunday, the Red Sox can't rely on Mayer and Roman Anthony to save their season.
Mayer has struggled at times this year at Worcester and there should be adjustment and growing pains once he reaches the majors (Campbell is 4-for-50 in May).
But Mayer's time should be coming.
Roman Anthony has a .970 OPS
It's becoming difficult for the Red Sox to justify keeping Roman Anthony, baseball's No. 1 prospect, at Triple A.
Anthony blasted a 369-foot, 103.5 mph against a 95.9 mph sinker in Worcester's 8-2 win over Durham on Tuesday.
He went 1-for-3 with two walks, two runs and a strikeout.
Advertisement
The 21-year-old is batting .322 with a .450 on-base percentage, .520 slugging percentage, .970 OPS, six homers, eight doubles, two triples, 18 RBIs, 33 runs, 37 walks and 38 strikeouts in 42 games (191 plate appearances).
Toro recently said about Anthony, 'I don't say this lightly — I think he's the best minor league hitter I've ever seen."
The Password homers in Triple-A debut
Outfield prospect Jhostynxon Garcia— also known by his popular nickname 'The Password'— blasted a three-run home run (106.3 mph off the bat) in his Triple-A debut Tuesday.
The Red Sox promoted the 22-year-old from Double-A Portland on Sunday.
The other Garcia returns
Jhostynxon Garcia's brother Johanfran Garcia played in his first minor league game Tuesday since he underwent surgery for a major knee injury last May.
Advertisement
The 20-year-old went 1-for-3 with two RBIs and a run in the Florida Complex League Red Sox' 3-1 win over the FCL Orioles.
Monegro has a 43.9% strikeout percentage
Righty Yordanny Monegro struck out 10 and allowed just three hits and one walk in 5 scoreless innings in Double-A Portland's 4-3 win over Reading.
The 22-year-old Monegro has a 43.9% strikeout percentage (47 strikeouts, 107 batters faced)
More On Red Sox Prospects
Read the original article on MassLive.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Red Sox open 3-game series at home against the Angels
Red Sox open 3-game series at home against the Angels

Associated Press

time29 minutes ago

  • Associated Press

Red Sox open 3-game series at home against the Angels

Los Angeles Angels (26-32, fourth in the AL West) vs. Boston Red Sox (29-32, fourth in the AL East) Boston; Monday, 7:10 p.m. EDT PITCHING PROBABLES: Angels: Tyler Anderson (2-2, 3.39 ERA, 1.21 WHIP, 46 strikeouts); Red Sox: Richard Fitts (0-2, 2.70 ERA, 1.10 WHIP, 15 strikeouts) BETMGM SPORTSBOOK LINE: Red Sox -152, Angels +127; over/under is 9 1/2 runs BOTTOM LINE: The Boston Red Sox host the Los Angeles Angels on Monday to start a three-game series. Boston is 16-14 at home and 29-32 overall. The Red Sox have a 22-9 record in games when they record at least eight hits. Los Angeles has a 26-32 record overall and a 16-17 record in road games. The Angels have the fifth-ranked team slugging percentage in the AL at .402. Monday's game is the first time these teams meet this season. TOP PERFORMERS: Taylor Ward leads the Angels with 16 home runs while slugging .493. Jorge Soler is 10 for 39 with two doubles, two home runs and seven RBIs over the past 10 games. LAST 10 GAMES: Red Sox: 4-6, .246 batting average, 3.33 ERA, outscored opponents by five runs Angels: 3-7, .223 batting average, 3.78 ERA, outscored by six runs INJURIES: Red Sox: Justin Slaten: 15-Day IL (shoulder), Liam Hendriks: 15-Day IL (hip), Alex Bregman: 10-Day IL (quadricep), Triston Casas: 60-Day IL (knee), Masataka Yoshida: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Kutter Crawford: 60-Day IL (knee), Tanner Houck: 15-Day IL (flexor), Romy Gonzalez: 10-Day IL (back), Chris Murphy: 60-Day IL (elbow), Patrick Sandoval: 60-Day IL (elbow) Angels: Robert Stephenson: day-to-day (biceps), Jose Fermin: 15-Day IL (elbow), Ben Joyce: 60-Day IL (shoulder), Gustavo Campero: 10-Day IL (ankle), Garrett McDaniels: 15-Day IL (biceps), Anthony Rendon: 60-Day IL (hip) ___ The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.

UCLA baseball defeats UC Irvine to advance to NCAA super regionals
UCLA baseball defeats UC Irvine to advance to NCAA super regionals

Los Angeles Times

time2 hours ago

  • Los Angeles Times

UCLA baseball defeats UC Irvine to advance to NCAA super regionals

UCLA baseball is one step closer to earning a trip to Omaha. The Bruins continued to roll in every facet of the game in the Los Angeles Regional final, scoring early and trusting its bullpen to defeat UC Irvine 8-5 on Sunday night. The Bruins advance to the super regionals of the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2019 and will host the Texas San Antonio at Jackie Robinson Stadium this week. UTSA defeated Texas 7-4 in the Austin Regional final, taking down the national second-seed Longhorns to advance to its first-ever super regional. If UCLA beats UTSA, it'll advance to the College World Series in Omaha, Neb., for the first time since 2013. UCLA's offense was just as ready to explode — like they did against Fresno State and Arizona State — against a depleted UC Irvine pitching staff (with high-leverage bullpen arms Ricky Ojeda and David Utagawa unavailable after pitching earlier Sunday). Rallying for six hits across the first two innings, the Bruins put together three runs thanks to RBI singles from Roman Martin and Cashel Dugger, and a sacrifice fly from Roch Cholowsky. UCLA first baseman Mulivai Levu helped place the game in blowout territory — an 8-0 lead — when he connected for a three-run home run in a five-run fourth inning. Much like UCLA had done all weekend, the lineup kept on churning. Freshman right-hander Wylan Moss set the tone for UCLA's combined pitching effort. Moss, who entered the contest with a 2.25 earned-run average and an All-Big-Ten Freshman Team recognition, was as good as advertised to stymie UC Irvine, who came off an 11-run offensive showing earlier in the day. The six-foot-three righty struck out the top of the Anteaters lineup — Will Bermudez, Chase Call and Jacob McCombs — swinging on change ups. Moss, who had yet to pitch in the NCAA Tournament, was lying in wait for a game of magnitude. He pitched 3 ⅓ innings, giving up two runs and two hits, while walking three and striking out four. From there, a five-pitcher bullpen effort kept Irvine at bay, pitching 5 ⅔ innings of five-run ball the rest of the way to wrap up regional action in Westwood. Things got more complicated for UCLA in the sixth, when freshman right-hander Cal Randall gave up a solo home run to UC Irvine designated hitter Alonso Reyes to make it a three-run game, but right-hander Jack O'Connor entered to extinguish the threat — and set down UC Irvine outfielder Chase Call on a fielder's choice to close out the inning. It wasn't easy sailing for the Bruins in the late innings. Graduate student right-hander August Souza bailed UCLA out of a bases-loaded jam by freezing the potential go-ahead run, Blake Penso, on a full-count, 87-mph fastball in the seventh. When the Bruins needed it the most, Souza struck out two in a scoreless eighth, putting metaphorical champagne on ice in Westwood. Freshman right-hander Easton Hawk tossed a perfect ninth, striking out James Castagnola to end it, prompting the Bruins to run onto the field in celebration. UCLA owned the Los Angeles Regional title. Postseason baseball will remain in Jackie Robinson Stadium for at least one more weekend. Levu led all Bruins with three RBIs, while Cholowsky went one for three with two RBIs from sacrifice flies.

Celtics Could Lose NBA Champion to Knicks in Free Agency
Celtics Could Lose NBA Champion to Knicks in Free Agency

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Celtics Could Lose NBA Champion to Knicks in Free Agency

Celtics Could Lose NBA Champion to Knicks in Free Agency originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Even before Jayson Tatum tore his Achilles, there were many questions regarding who would stay and who would go on the Boston Celtics this offseason. Being above the NBA's second tax apron, the Celtics will likely part ways with some of their players. Advertisement They also have some free agents this summer, including Al Horford, Luke Kornet, and Torrey Craig. The most decorated of those free agents is obviously Horford, who has played seven years for the Celtics and has helped make multiple extensive playoff runs. The five-time All-Star will be 39 this summer, and while he has impressively continued to play at an NBA level despite his age, he still only has so much time left. With Tatum out indefinitely, the Celtics may not be able to compete at a high level, which puts re-signing Horford into question. Boston Celtics center Al Horford (42).© Bill Streicher-Imagn Images On "The Hoop Collective," ESPN's Tim Bontemps expressed his doubts as to whether Horford will stay in Boston. Advertisement "Al Horford is a free agent," said Bontemps. "I don't think at this point it makes a lot of sense for ... Horford to be back in Boston. Maybe he will be, but given where things are with the Celtics, I think he's now much more in play than he might have been a month ago." By contrast, Bontemps believes the New York Knicks hold plenty of appeal to Horford as a destination. "Horford is a longtime friend of (Karl-Anthony Towns and) has played with him with the Dominican National team for a long time," Bontemps said. "If they go get Al Horford this summer, ... I think (he) would be an unbelievable fit on this Knicks roster." Advertisement The Celtics lost Horford the last time he hit free agency when he left to join the Philadelphia 76ers in 2019. The last time the Celtics had former players join the Knicks in free agency was 2021 when Kemba Walker and Evan Fournier joined them. Related: NBA Legend Urges Celtics to Make Kristaps Porzingis Decision Related: Jrue Holiday to Clippers Trade Report Receives Update on Thursday This story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 1, 2025, where it first appeared.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store