Johanfran Garcia is making his own noise in the Red Sox system, and he’s doing it without the older brother who used to sit alongside him in the organization.
Boston shipped Jhostynxon - better known as “The Password” - to the Pittsburgh Pirates this offseason, but Johanfran is still in the pipeline and turning heads at Double-A Portland. The 21-year-old catcher had never played at that level before this season, yet the Red Sox pushed him there straight out of spring training and he’s handled the jump with ease.
Through action on July 9, Garcia is hitting .299 with eight doubles and 12 home runs in 52 games, good for an .844 OPS. That production already marks the most games he’s played at a single level in one season during his time in the Red Sox system, and it’s also the most home runs he’s hit at one level in a season.
Last year, Garcia finished with 12 home runs overall, split between High-A and the Florida Complex League.
What stands out most is how comfortable he looks against Double-A pitching despite never having seen it before. That kind of immediate adjustment points to a hitter who can make changes quickly and keep moving.
Garcia has been in Boston’s system since signing as a teenager out of Venezuela. He first appeared in the Dominican Summer League in 2022 and needed a couple of seasons to really start climbing the minor league ladder.
Now, this run at Double-A has given him a legitimate shot to work his way into Boston’s future plans. Catchers in the lower minors are always tricky to evaluate on defense, but a bat like this makes the glove a little easier to live with.
He may not end up sharing a big league field with his brother in Boston, but if Johanfran reaches the majors, he’ll still join Jhostynxon in that exclusive club.
In Other News...
Red Sox Draft Buzz Suddenly Points To A Familiar First Round Dilemma
With the 2026 MLB Draft still ahead, the Red Sox are once again in that familiar spot where the board can tilt in a few different directions and the final answer is anything but obvious. Boston sits at No. 20 overall, and the latest round of mock drafts has kept the club in the mix for a range of players, from left-handed pitchers Hunter Dietz, Cole Carlon and Brody Bumila to bats like Bo Lowrance and Daniel Jackson.
What stands out is how many different profiles are still being attached to the pick, which says as much about the uncertainty around the class as it does about Bostons own priorities. Some evaluators see the Red Sox leaning toward pitching, others connect them to hitters, and a few names such as Taylor Rabe and Ace Reese have also surfaced, leaving the club with a decision that still feels very much open as draft day gets closer. [Read more 🡒]
Red Sox Snub Suddenly Has A Real Shot At All-Star Redemption
Ranger Suarez landing on the injured list during a recent series has suddenly reopened a door the Red Sox thought had already been shut for the summer. The All-Star picture looked settled when Suarez was selected and Sonny Gray was left on the outside looking in, even though Gray has put together the kind of season that usually gets a pitcher invited to the midsummer stage.
Grays case has only grown stronger as the year has gone on, and the timing of Suarezs injury now gives the league a reason to revisit the roster. For Boston, it adds another layer to an already familiar frustration: a pitcher who has done plenty to earn the honor may finally get the chance only because circumstances forced the issue. [Read more 🡒]
