After trading Jose Siri to the Mets earlier today, the Rays have revealed that Jonny DeLuca will be their primary center fielder next season (per Marc Topkin of the Tampa Bay Times). Siri had been Tampa Bay’s primary center fielder since the club acquired him from the Astros ahead of the trade deadline in 2022.
DeLuca, 26, was the secondary piece the Rays acquired in the trade that sent Tyler Glasnow to the Dodgers last offseason; Ryan Pepiot was the centerpiece of the return. That said, the Rays clearly viewed DeLuca as more than a mere throw-in. A broken hand kept him from making the Opening Day roster this past season, but after his return in early May, he appeared in 107 of Tampa Bay’s remaining 130 games. His bat was feeble, producing a .609 OPS and 77 wRC+, but he stole 16 bases and played strong defense while splitting his time between all three outfield positions. He earned 5 Defensive Runs Saved (DRS), 8 Outs Above Average (OAA), and 5.1 Deserved Runs Prevented (DRP), helping him rack up positive value according to every version of Wins Above Replacement. He already has elite speed and a strong throwing arm, so if he can learn to tap into a bit more of the plus power and plate discipline he displayed throughout the minor leagues, it might be enough for him to become a productive big league center fielder.
Now, that’s a big if, but the Rays seem to have a good amount of faith in DeLuca. President of baseball operations Erik Neander cited the young outfielder’s improvement over the last few months of the 2024 season, telling Topkin, “You look at the progress, you look at the improvement, you look how he’s made up, and his history of just what he’s been able to do with more reps given what a good athlete he is, he’s just continued to get better.”
It’s true that DeLuca hit significantly better in the second half of the 2024 season than the first. But much of that improvement came from a strong September (116 wRC+) in which the righty batter outperformed his .269 xwOBA by more than 50 points. That’s not a lot to go on, especially for a team that aims to contend once again in 2025. Most clubs would certainly be looking for an upgrade on the free agent market. But of course, this is the Rays we’re talking about, a team that loves to turn unheralded trade pickups into productive major leaguers.
Topkin notes that lefty batters Josh Lowe and Richie Palacios could also see some time in center field next year. Neither one has much big league experience at the position, but both are young and athletic outfielders who played a good deal of center in the minors. More to the point, if either of them ends up playing center, it will only be because manager Kevin Cash is looking to get more offense in the lineup, especially against a tough right-handed pitcher. Both players were roughly league-average at the plate in 2024, but they were significantly more dangerous in 2023. Even if neither returns to the heights of his 2023 campaign, a league-average bat would still be a whole lot more productive than DeLuca was this past season.
However, any time Lowe or Palacios spends in center field would take them away from the outfielder corners. That would most likely leave either Dylan Carlson or Christopher Morel covering a corner spot. The only other outfielders on Tampa Bay’s 40-man roster are Kameron Misner, who appeared in eight games for the big league club this past season, and Jake Mangum, who was recently added to the 40-man to protect him from the Rule 5 draft. Neither is necessarily anything more than depth for the bench. Thus, even if the Rays are planning to give DeLuca the bulk of the playing time in center field, it would make sense for them to add at least one more outfielder this offseason.
Crash_n_burn
Considering the Rays get it right more often then they mess up, This could be a sneaky good thing should DeLuca stay healthy, the Rays don’t need him to hit double digit HR’s every season kind of like Siri did the last 2 years, but they def need him to hit higher then 200 or more, something Siri didn’t do last year.
So time will tell basically.
bwmiller79
This is how teams need to be developing players, you trade for a guy whose on the cusp of being a good player, you need to commit to him and give him everyday at bats, not a platoon with a bum who can only hit lefties. Cut bait on the platoons, put a guy out there and commit to playing him everyday.
Old York
Can he actually catch a routine flyball?
Asking for my friend Arson Judge.
paddyo furnichuh
DeLuca is a stud on the grass, but might get banged up with all out style. The bigger questions is-can he improve against RHPs?
paddyo furnichuh
His short time at the big league level in LA produced some memorable highlight reel plays.
Hopefully his hit tool improves as any baseball fan is better off watching him play defense.
Rsox
A DeLuca patrolling a New York-centric ballpark seems oddly appropriate
lemonlyman
Almost, Kevin.
Domingo111
I think he can be a solid Center fielder. The year was bad offensively but he could hit like 250/310/400 with 10-12 homers which probably is about a league average bat.
With good defense that could be a 3 war player.
DonOsbourne
I still think there’s a slight chance Dylan Carlson stops feeling sorry for himself long enough to figure some things out and becomes a solid player. The irony is, if the Rays choose to non-tender him, the Cardinals should consider bringing him back because he is basically the cheap, RH hitting, CF capable, outfielder they need.
knuckleheads
this will belong to Chandler Simpson soon enough….
EndorsedByFredMcGriff
I’m very excited about SImpson, and I hope that he continues to hit this year in Durham. Could be a solid, Juan Pierre type at the top of the lineup.
Just praying he doesn’t turn into Billy Hamilton in the bigs. . .
knuckleheads
why would he turn into Billy Hamilton? Not only is Simpson’s speed elite but so is his bat to ball skills. One should not forget that Simpson not only led the entire minor leagues in stolen bases but in batting average as well as total hits too. Hamilton only made it because of his elite speed. His bat to ball tools were not good for a slap hitting type of player…
LaBellaVita
From scouting reports, the problem isn’t his bat. The problem is his fielding. He is a novice in the OF and has a less-than-accurate arm. So, even if he makes the next transition, i.e., AAA, he still has to play in the field. The Rays are full of DHs.
knuckleheads
he’s only be in the outfield a few years and is already graded as a 50 in the field. With his quickness and athleticism he’ll certainly get better. He’s not meant for a DH role…
LaBellaVita
50. Wow! Which organization ranked him as a 50 in the field? That is encouraging and certainly better than what I’ve seen posted on other websites.
knuckleheads
MLB pipeline has him at a 50. I am sure other prospect sites grade him at least that for 2025
LaBellaVita
MLB pipeline? The system that is run by MLB, the organization that sells the MLB products? Hmm, not a place I would trust. I was thinking more of Baseball Prospectus, Fangraphs or Baseball America.
knuckleheads
LOL. Pipeline has hundreds of players with lower grades across the board. You think Baseball Prospectus, Fangraphs or Baseball America isn’t promoting MLB products? Either mention specific grades or don’t bring them up imo. I am not paying for Prospectus or BA and I already know what Fangraphs last had him at. End of the day no one is much worried that Chandler Simpson won’t at least be a plus outfielder. So share your sources…
LaBellaVita
Fair enough. From Baseball America: A college middle infielder, Simpson has converted to the outfield, and his defense remains a work in progress. His arm is among the worst in pro ball, while his instincts are still quite poor, as well.
baseballamerica.com/stories/speed-never-slumps-for…
That said, Fangraphs rates him in the field from 40 to 55. So, the hope is that he will learn quickly.
LaBellaVita
Oh, and this Fangraphs article rates his arm as a 30.
blogs.fangraphs.com/tampa-bay-rays-top-49-prospect…
knuckleheads
You mention BA but I see a 55 field with 45 Arm grade there. I can’t log into the site directly but can still see the grades given.
I am not too worried about the arm grades anyways as his range is what will carry his D. And it looks like Fangraphs seems a bit sour on his overall profile as they still grade his hit tool at a low 45 (future 60) which doesn’t make a lot of sense to me given the year he just had. Give him the 60 now or at lat minimum 55 for that at least. I assume they will next update.
Baseball Savant btw has similar numbers to Pipeline:
Hit: 65 | Power: 20 | Run: 80 | Arm: 50 | Field: 50 | Overall: 50
BaseballBrian
In the immortal word(s) of Homer Simpson:
Doh!
Brick House Coffee Tables Inc
Mangum was the primary CF at AAA Durham last year and either led or finished second in AAA for batting average. They just added him to the 40-man, and I’m sure that privately they hope the offense translates to MLB as the 4th outfielder.
CaseyAbell
Looks like they’re hoping DeLuca can become the new Kevin Kiermaier, a guy who can provide league-average offense while winning gold gloves. We’ll see. DeLuca may have a higher ceiling on offense.
Rays in the Bay
Lower defensive floor but higher offensive ceiling. Just hope Siri didn’t give him too many tips on the way out.
numberoneslayerfan
his ops+ this year was 75, i don’t know how much offensive upside there is
LaBellaVita
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