Yadier Molina’s Climb Towards Cooperstown
Yadier Molina was added to the NL All-Star team on Monday, replacing the injured Buster Posey, who’s been slowed by a bout of inflammation in his right hip and recently received a cortisone shot. Molina’s addition is just the first of a wave that will dull some outrage over the most obvious snubs from Sunday’s roster announcement; on the AL side, Jed Lowrie was named as Gleyber Torres‘ replacement on Tuesday. As Molina is a Star Player of a Certain Age, his ninth selection to the Midsummer Classic in a 10-year span (he missed 2016) set off another round of everybody’s favorite parlor game, Is He a Hall of Famer?. You know I can’t resist buzzing in for that one.
But first, the selection. Molina, who turns 36 on July 13, is having a pretty good season, particularly for a guy who missed a month due to [crosses legs uncomfortably] emergency groin surgery necessitated by a foul tip. He’s currently hitting 274/.317/.484 with 13 homers in 240 plate appearances, and while his on-base percentage is nothing to write home about — how is it a guy who spends half the game minding the strike zone for his pitchers can walk just 5.4% of the time? — his slugging percentage is his highest since 2012, his best offensive season. His 115 wRC+ is his highest since 2013, and it’s lifted his career mark to an even 100. Of the 23 catchers with at least 200 PA this year, that 114 wRC+ is tied for sixth overall. Both MLB leader J.T. Realmuto (149) and fourth-ranked Willson Contreras (122) are already on the NL All-Star squad, with the latter elected the starter.
While Molina’s offense is in a good place in 2018, his defense appears to be off, and not only because he’s thrown out just four out of 19 stolen-base attempts (21%, nearly half of his 41% career mark). Via FanGraphs’ version of catcher defense (which isn’t UZR), he’s 2.4 runs below average, including two below average in the stolen-base component of Defensive Runs Saved. Via the non-pitch-framing version of DRS, he’s four runs below average, while via the framing-inclusive version, he’s two below average. Via Baseball Prospectus’ Fielding Runs Above Average, which includes framing, he’s 2.3 runs above average overall and 3.7 above in the framing component. Via our version of WAR — which, again, does not include framing — Molina’s 1.3 WAR is tied for ninth among catchers overall. Some of that is the impact of his injury; prorate all of the catchers with at least 200 PA to 600 PA and he’s a rounding error out of fifth:
| Name | Team | PA | AVG | OBP | SLG | wRC+ | WAR | WAR/600 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | J.T. Realmuto | Marlins | 290 | .317 | .368 | .551 | 149 | 3.5 | 7.2 |
| 2 | Francisco Cervelli | Pirates | 231 | .247 | .381 | .468 | 132 | 2.3 | 6.0 |
| 3 | Willson Contreras | Cubs | 332 | .279 | .367 | .453 | 122 | 2.5 | 4.5 |
| 4 | Yasmani Grandal | Dodgers | 291 | .243 | .340 | .450 | 118 | 1.7 | 3.5 |
| 5 | Kurt Suzuki | Braves | 239 | .275 | .343 | .455 | 116 | 1.3 | 3.3 |
| 6 | Yan Gomes | Indians | 258 | .251 | .314 | .447 | 104 | 1.4 | 3.3 |
| 7 | Yadier Molina | Cardinals | 240 | .274 | .317 | .484 | 115 | 1.3 | 3.3 |
| 8 | Wilson Ramos | Rays | 303 | .291 | .340 | .479 | 127 | 1.6 | 3.2 |
| 9 | Buster Posey | Giants | 326 | .282 | .362 | .404 | 113 | 1.7 | 3.1 |
| 10 | Gary Sanchez | Yankees | 265 | .190 | .291 | .433 | 97 | 1.2 | 2.7 |
Thus it’s fair to say that his selection isn’t just about 2018 performance but about his reputation and bigger-picture productivity, and as I noted in Monday’s reaction piece to the NL starting outfield of Bryce Harper, Nick Markakis, and Matt Kemp, I’m not one to sweat that.
