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Posted

Ryan Jeffers was exceptional at the plate the first month of the season. However, the Twins catcher has been a slightly below-average hitter since the calendar flipped to May. Should those following the team expect a late-season offensive resurgence, or more mediocrity? Let's take a look.

Image courtesy of © Bruce Kluckhohn-USA TODAY Sports

Last season, Twins catcher Ryan Jeffers broke out in a way those who follow the team had been waiting for, after witnessing flashes of above-average offensive prowess his previous three seasons in the league. He posted a .276/.369/.490 slash line, while hitting 14 home runs and 15 doubles over 335 plate appearances. It came out to a 138 wRC+. The UNC-Wilmington product excelled at putting the ball in play and hitting for power, while generating an honorable (particularly for a catcher) 9.9% walk rate. Offensively superb catchers are rare in baseball. Yet, it felt like the Twins had developed one.

Unfortunately, the narrative has quickly shifted, and his struggles at the plate for the bulk of this season have left many to wonder if his performance last year was a mere anomaly. 

Jeffers began this season hot at the plate, hitting .295/.390/.557 with five home runs and eight doubles over his first 105 plate appearances. His walk rate had dipped to a modest 7.6%. However, he made up for his by striking out only 17.1% of the time and posting a superb .261 Isolated Power (ISO) over that stretch. He quickly inserted himself into All-Star consideration, and was discussed in the same vein as fellow AL catchers Adley Rutschman and Cal Raleigh. However, his production at the plate would plummet from those heights. The first signs of sustained negative regression occurred in mid-May, when he hit .164/.261/.393 with four home runs and two doubles over 69 plate appearances from May 10-31. His advanced metrics confirmed his struggles, as he posted an 85 wRC+ and an uninspiring 88.5 Exit Velocity (EV) in that timeframe. When he made contact, he often hit weak grounders to infielders. He also began striking out much more often, skyrocketing to a 34.8% strikeout rate for the span. 

Jeffers's struggles at the plate have remained. He has hit .192/.264/.320, with only four home runs and four doubles, over 141 plate appearances since the start of June. His strikeout rate returned to an inspiring 14.6%. However, his average EV has stayed at a too-modest 86.1 MPH, indicating that he continues to make weak contact, resulting in lazy flyouts or chopped groundouts. In these two-plus months, his wRC+ is an anemic 72. The average wRC+ for catchers presently sits at 94. Most catchers are selected for their defensive and receiving prowess, and players like the aforementioned Rutschman and Raleigh are the exception. However, to see Jeffers perform so poorly while also rating as a below-average defender at that defense-first spot raises significant alarm bells.

While Jeffers's performance post-April has been rather bleak, there is reason to suspect he may be returning to his early-season form. He has been on a tear (of sorts) over the past two series against the New York Mets and Chicago White Sox. While facing New York on Jul. 29, he drove the ball to deep right field, which would have been a home run if it hadn't been for Mets outfielder Tyrone Taylor

 

Luckily for Jeffers, he was able to immediately avenge himself, drilling a long ball to deep left field in his next at-bat.

He took his recent power surge at the plate with him from Queens to 1 Twins Way, hitting a home run off budding star lefty Garrett Crochet just two games later.

The Twins' 27-year-old catcher hit .273/.357/.818 in those six games, with three hits, two of which were the previously mentioned home runs. His counting numbers would look even more inspiring if it weren't for Taylor's theatrics. In that stretch, he generated a 200 wRC+ and a slightly more encouraging average EV of 92.5. Now, it would be malpractice to make any genuine assessments or predictions off 14 plate appearances. However, he is demonstrating a knack for power, while consistently hitting the ball hard, a phenomenon that has been missing since earlier this Summer.

Fellow catcher Christian Vázquez will keep getting half the playing time. Nevertheless, Jeffers reverting to his 2023 and early 2024 offensive form would be a welcome development for a team nearing seven straight games at home against the AL Central-leading Cleveland Guardians and AL Wild Card-contending Kansas City Royals. A reinvigorated Jeffers would also be an important player for the future of the franchise.


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Posted

He needs to hit...at least not be an automatic out, like he's been for months. His bat is the main reason he'd be playing, certainly not his defense. Vazquez is a far better defensive catcher. Let's hope he improves at the plate the rest of the way and starts to hit better.

Posted

It appears to me that with Vazquez, the more he plays the better he gets, contrary to Jeffers. After the A-S break, Jeffers has had a resurgence, Catching is a very physically demanding position, IMO less Jeffers plays the better he becomes.

Posted

.332 OBP & 118 OPS+ & 17 HR. ……Rutschman

.307 OBP & 114 OPS+ & 23 HR ……Raleigh

.312 OBP & 111 OPS+ & 16 HR ……Jeffers

Defense goes to Rutschman ……. if he warms up just a bit he’s in the mix with other good offensive catchers. Would be nice if he could get his BA up 10-15 points……20 HR is fine/good if he plays 100 games!

Posted

Our offense is deep enough we do not need Jeffers to hit great, but if he does it is just bonus.  If he can hit like he did in April in October he could carry the team a long way. 

Posted

One of the more dramatic examples of Twins players who have cut down on the K’s.

I do think it’s hurt his EV’s some and, with that, the BABiP. His K’s have not spiked during the slump. And, his BABiP has tanked SO much, it’s reasonable to expect somewhat better results over the remainder of the season.

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