The Orioles sent the wrong catcher to the All-Star Game, and the gap between the two isn’t subtle.
Samuel Basallo is the one who should be there.
Not Adley Rutschman.
Basallo, just 21, has been the more productive player almost everywhere you look, and the argument gets even stronger once you narrow the lens to what has happened since May 1. The only area where Rutschman clearly holds the edge is defense, and even that doesn’t change the basic reality: the All-Star Game is not built around blocking and framing behind the plate.
If there’s a case to be made for Brandon Young, that’s one thing. Catcher is different. Basallo has been the better choice.
The season numbers already tell the story. Basallo has played 42 games at catcher, 40 of them starts, while Rutschman has appeared in 46 games behind the plate, with 44 starts.
Baltimore is 21-21 with Basallo catching and 21-25 with Rutschman there. In the lineup overall, the Orioles are 31-33 with Basallo and 25-33 with Rutschman.
At the plate, Basallo has 277 plate appearances, 14 home runs and 42 RBI, with an .789 OPS. Rutschman has 254 plate appearances, eight homers and 45 RBI, with a .774 OPS.
With men on base, Basallo is at .282/.357/.536 for an .894 OPS, while Rutschman sits at .277/.333/.518 and .851. With runners in scoring position, Basallo has the edge again: .295/.375/.557 and a .932 OPS, compared with Rutschman’s .293/.333/.552 and .885.
The split since May 1 is even more lopsided. Basallo has posted a .806 OPS, a .268 average, a .324 on-base percentage and a .482 slugging percentage, with a 123 wRC+.
Rutschman, over that same stretch, is at .670, .218, .295 and .376, with an 87 wRC+. Basallo has also caught 221 innings in that span, while Rutschman has caught 257.
That’s not just a little separation. That’s one player producing like an All-Star and another looking like he belongs in Triple-A with this kind of output.
Basallo’s case gets stronger when you factor in how young he is and how little catching he had done before reaching this level. He caught only 200 games in the minors, and he is the 25th player in MLB history to catch 60 games before turning 22. He also has twice as many home runs in that span as anyone in history.
Rutschman, meanwhile, has been getting plenty of rest. He has caught four days in a row only twice all season, the same as Basallo, and Basallo has recently handled two day games after night games. Rutschman is having his best defensive season since 2023, especially when it comes to throwing out runners, but he still ranks 23rd in MLB in innings caught entering play Monday.
Basallo’s arm is better, though his accuracy still needs work. Even so, the Orioles should have been pushing to get him to Philadelphia and let him take part in the All-Star showcase.
There’s also the Trevor Rogers factor. The Opening Day starter has made it clear he wants to throw to Basallo, and he has credited Basallo with helping him regain his confidence and salvage what had been another lost season.
Rutschman was supposed to be the established answer, but the numbers since June 21, 2024 paint a harsh picture. He has 51 games and 214 plate appearances as a DH in that span, with one home run and 18 RBI. His slash line as a DH since then is .198/.290/.283, good for a .573 OPS.
Baltimore has tried to prop up his production by giving him regular DH work and batting him in the two or three spot, but that hasn’t changed the results. Since June 21, 2024, Rutschman has been the same hitter he was from that point through Opening Day this year, only without the early-season burst.
Basallo, by contrast, has been the one making history in a way that should have been impossible to miss. Instead, the Orioles’ broadcasts and game notes have sold a different story.
But the numbers don’t care about the sales pitch. Basallo is the Orioles’ true All-Star catcher.
In Other News...
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For Baltimore, the intrigue is less about Philadelphias needs than what Ward represents if the market keeps warming up. He is viewed as the kind of rental a contender can chase before he reaches free agency after the season, which is exactly the sort of profile that tends to stir deadline noise around a player who has become part of the Orioles everyday picture. The question now is how aggressive that pursuit gets, and whether Baltimore is forced to weigh short-term value against the kind of return that could make moving him easier to stomach. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Suddenly Have A Taylor Ward Problem At The Worst Time
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That slide has already been noticed outside Baltimore, too. ESPNs latest trade-chip rankings have Ward slipping from 12th in the first edition to 24th now, a reminder that his market is changing along with his production. The Orioles would love to see him straighten things out over the next stretch, not just because they need the offense, but because a stronger finish would give them a much better position when the deadline conversations really start to heat up. [Read more 🡒]
Orioles Bullpen Concerns Just Grew As Another Lineup Shuffle Looms
The Orioles bullpen picture took another hit with Keegan Akin now seeking a second opinion on his left elbow, while Colin Selby remains on the 60-day injured list and Ryan Helsley is still working through treatment on his right elbow. For a club already trying to patch together innings, the latest medical updates only add to the pressure on a relief group that has been asked to absorb a lot this season.
At the same time, Baltimore is trying to manage the rest of the roster with an eye on a Cubs matchup that brings a left-handed starter into the mix. The lineup card reflects that balancing act, with the Orioles turning to several younger bats and moving pieces around as they look for the right combination, even as the bullpen uncertainty keeps hanging over the day. [Read more 🡒]
