The Yankees are set to welcome Giancarlo Stanton back from the injured list in the relatively near future. Bringing the slugger back into the fold can only be a good thing for the offense overall, but it does create one major issue for the team: finding playing time for breakout DH Ben Rice. With Stanton set to reclaim DH on a regular basis and Paul Goldschmidt entrenched at first base for the time being, it’s going to be difficult for Rice to get the same level of playing time he has to this point in the season.
Losing him as a regular in the lineup would be a shame, however, as the 26-year-old has slashed an excellent .240/.326/.495 with a wRC+ of 130 across 57 games this year. That’s already not been quite an everyday role due to the outfield logjam created by the emergence of Trent Grisham in an outfield that was already committed to Jasson Dominguez and Cody Bellinger as regulars alongside Aaron Judge, but Rice has still been a fixture of the club’s lineup this year.
There have been some indications that Stanton may not start every single day upon his return in order to keep him healthier throughout the remainder of the year and allow Rice to get keep getting starts, but Jack Curry of the YES Network relays that Aaron Boone told reporters today that Rice could get some starts behind the plate when Stanton returns. It comes as a bit of a surprise since Rice hasn’t made a start at catcher this season, but it’s not entirely out of left field. Rice has continued to do pregame work as a catcher this season even as he’s settled into a DH and backup first base role, and of course spent the majority of his time in the minor leagues as a catcher.
Austin Wells has held his own behind the plate this year with a .227/.294/.476 (111 wRC+) slash line in 56 games, but Rice undeniably has a bigger bat. Getting the slugger even one start a week behind the plate would significantly improve his path towards significant playing time in the lineup, as it would allow Goldschmidt and Stanton to both start the majority of games at first base and DH respectively while still allowing Rice to remain at least a half-time player. Of course, it’s possible a catcher experiment could be short-lived for Rice if he proves to be a liability defensively behind the plate, but it’s still an exciting opportunity for the youngster to prove himself capable at his natural position and earn more playing time down the stretch this year.
Whether Rice will continue to get a more extended look as a semi-regular option behind the plate remains to be seen. It seems likely that J.C. Escarra will continue to remain on the roster as a more traditional backup for Wells given the fact that Rice figures to continue being in the DH mix on a regular basis. It’s not impossible to imagine that changing if Rice takes to the position especially well, but it’s also possible that an injury to Stanton or Goldschmidt at some point could create an opening for Rice elsewhere that pushes him off the position. When talented young players are blocked within their current organization, that often leads to trade speculation as the deadline approaches. It seems unlikely that the Yankees would consider going down that path with Rice, however, given that Goldschmidt is set to reach free agency after this season and Rice looks to be a fairly natural choice to take the reins at first base in 2026.
I believe that Rice actually has FIVE appearances at catcher, not “Rice hasn’t made a single appearance at catcher this season”…
I came to say this exact same thing. Dude has a little bit of time at catcher thus far, 6 innings and change over five different appearances … it’s not a big deal, but it’s also not like he left his catcher’s gear back in Florida at the end of spring training.
The writing has been a bit sloppy lately.
And at times, outright bad.
Rice since April 25th has a .691 OPS. The only real question after Stanton returns is, “who can the Yankees find to DH (productively)?”
Yeah but if you look at his barrel rate and exit velo he’s in the 90th percentile for both. He’s hit into some bad luck. Also his stats before April 25th still count.
“Lately”? Nick Deeds’ writing is worth every penny I’m paying for it. If you like run-on sentences, constantly repeated words and phrases and consistently inaccurate statements he’s your guy.
You are getting what you are paying for.
Yes, but SOMEONE is paying for it…
It says he hasn’t made a start at catcher, which is correct.
The article was corrected. It originally said Rice hadn’t appeared at catcher yet this season.
Has there been a player who was in the big leagues to move to catcher and had decent success? I did a quick google and see Jorge posada moved to catcher in the minors, which I did not know, but what about a guy already in the show? I know Terrin Vavra tried it for the Orioles but didn’t make much of it. Didn’t know if anyone knew of any success stories.
Also, I would also like an experiment of putting a player of various hitting ability like Pete Alonso or Seiya Suzuki or Judge and Ohtani, just to see how it impacts their offensive production. Or even less productive players like Austin Hays or Lane Thomas. How would that impact their value if they could “simply” switch to catcher? Is there a steeper drop for more productive players? Just kinda spit balling
He wouldn’t be moving to catcher, he’d be moving back to catcher her. He came up as a catcher and has been filling roster gaps to get AB’s
I dont know of any MLB player that moved to catcher without doing it first in the minors, but there are several that made the switch down below.
Tony Wolters, formerly of the Rockies, began his pro career as a shortstop in the Cleveland org.
Carlos Santana began as a 3B/OF in the Dodgers org, before making the switch.
Victor Martinez was signed as a shortstop out of Venezuela by the Indians, and converted to catcher.
BJ Surhoff was a SS converted to Catcher
Russell Martin was drafted as a 3B and converted to C in the minors, but somewhat uniquely retained his ability to play (and even start) at 3B late into his career. Even made a SS start for the Jays
Rice has caught 121 games in the minors and another 21 games in college, with yet another 56 game caught in organized baseball.
Significantly improving significant playing time is indeed a significant signal signifying significance..
Grisham has cooled off a bit in the past 30 days – .213/.333/.337.
Belli to CF. Rice plays more 1B against RHP and Goldy sits more. He’s 37 after all. That leaves Goldy available to pinch hit and Grisham off the bench to pinch run and defensive sub. That can keep everyone fresh.
While he may not be mashing homers like he did in the first 20-25 games, Grisham’s CF defense (he makes every play look easy), can’t be minimized to the point that you sit him at this time…….Goldy, by the way, probably should be sat more often as he has cooled significantly and his power numbers are suffering…..that would crate playing time for Rice at first, while giving him innings also at catcher probably would benefit to……
Hea actually been not great this year if you look at his outs above average. He’s probably the best center fielder on the roster though. Not goof enough to justify playing given his recent slash line.
It’s so funny these writers still favor big market teams in their write-ups…Rice has an “excellent” stat line of x/y/z, but another player from a losing team or a smaller market team would have a “mediocre or pedestrian” stat line yet with similar numbers. Nevermind Rice hasn’t hit much in almost 6 weeks…Not saying he’s not a good player, just funny how things get worded differently for each team and/or player.
Rice is hitting a 130 wRC+ for the season which objectively places him in 8th for production among all DHs. Which other player hitting 115-130 wRC+ has MLBTR labeled as “mediocre” or “pedestrian”?
Julio Rodriguez was just labeled as “respectful” with a 114 in a worse ballpark for hitters (supposedly). Does that count? Give me Julio vs Rice all day long personally….I’m sure i can go back and find plenty more examples. Not hating on Rice at all, i just find it funny.
The wRC+ stat makes adjustments for different ballpark factors/dimensions. So if Rice played for Seattle and Julio at YS, their wRC+ would still be the same. 114 wRC+ is indeed respectful but not excellent.
Context of the player in the article should also be considered. If Verdugo is hitting 114, that would be excellent by his standard of a career 99. Soto is hitting 139 from 180 of last year (career 157) so that is “pedestrian” to him.
Just here to confirm wRC+ attempts to factor in ballpark variations.
Can you give a real world example? Or is this something you just made up in your head
Does wRC+ also figure the extra 25,000 miles the Mariners spend on the plane vs the other teams?:)
Why not play Rice at third and shift Jazz to second when Stanton comes back? That seems like it would make more sense considering Rice’s lack of experience with catching at the major league level
Rice has zero experience at 3B and years of experience at C.
Jazz looks totally comfortable at 3rd, and provides average to good defense there with a very strong arm….shifting Rice to 3rd, would create a defensive hole in the infield and with Yankee pitchers pitching to ground ball defense,…a problem in the making….Stanton, more than likely will get hurt again, and as the season wears on, most probably other games lost to injury will create opportunities that don’t affect the overall defense of the team…
Rice hasn’t made a single *start* at catcher this season, but he’s played more than 6 innings in 5 games there.
The 198 games he’s caught in organized baseball will somehow see him through
I think we all have great hopes for the Fried Rice battery.
I was going to say that but you got there first. 🙁
This is the greatest comment inMLBTR history.
Seems like a few teams are having a similar issue of too many 1B/DH types: Yankees (Goldschmidt, Rice, Stanton); Guardians (Santana, Manzardo, Fry); A’s (Kurtz, Soderstrom, Rooker). I wonder how they’ll manage to get all their best bats in the lineup. (Fry can play many positions but he still can’t throw due to surgery)
Add the Royals and Mets to your list. One of those teams on your list should be trying to make a trade with the Red Sox who could use a 1B and have an excess of quality OFs.
Those are also good examples. Seems like KC has found their solution to this problem by putting Caglione in the ourfield
Augustin Ramirez and Rice were on the same minor league team. They both split time at C and 1B.
Augustin was traded to Miami for Jazz Chisholm and Rice continued to split time between 1B and C.as he moved up through the minors.
Now that Rice has proven himself an above average major league hitter. They need to find a position for him. With the All Star break coming up send him to AAA now to get multiple weeks of playing time at 3B and C.
3B is easier to play than 1b. The reason it is harder to find a 3B is because few players have the throwing arm to play there. Catchers have to stop attempted steals. Not only must they have a strong throwing arm but they also have to be very accurate so that the infielder can catch the ball and tag the runner quickly to even have the slightest chance to catch the runner.
Find out whether Rice can make the throws from 3b with no pressure in the minors. Let him get several weeks refresher at C in the minors. Bring him back to the majors after the All Star break and play him in those positions if he does well. Playing him at C for an inning during blowouts as they are currently doing does not accomplish much.
If he can actually play 3B/1B and be the backup catcher that would be incredibly valuable. Figure it out right now in the minors and let him play there in the second half before the playoffs.
All should be fine. You can see Stanton playing 5 out of 7 games. And Goldschmidt is 37, I can see him needing 2 games off a week, so Rice can play at least 4 days a week, 5 if he plays one game at catcher. I like Rice. He hits the ball hard and want to see him progress, he is a legit MLB player.
It’s certainly not “undeniable” that Rice has a bigger bat than Wells this year.