Tyler Stephensons Surge Just Made The Reds Next Move Complicated

With Tyler Stephenson finding his groove at the plate, the Reds face crucial decisions about his role and future as the trade deadline looms.

Tyler Stephenson has spent much of this season outside the spotlight in Cincinnati, but the Reds catcher is starting to make plenty of noise on his own.

With Elly De La Cruz and Sal Stewart drawing most of the attention, Stephenson has quietly turned his year around after a sluggish opening stretch. He posted a .592 OPS in April and a .661 mark in May, then found his timing in June and has carried that into July.

June looked like the kind of month that can change a season. Stephenson hit .288/.354/.441 with two home runs, seven RBIs and six runs scored. He has opened July with a .955 OPS, and over his last 30 games he has been just as effective at the plate as he has been with ABS challenges.

That production matters for a Reds club that has had its share of struggles this year. Stephenson’s surge gives Cincinnati something real to think about, whether the team keeps him in place after this season as the catcher until Alfredo Duno is ready for the big leagues, or decides to sell at the trade deadline later this month and try to maximize his value.

It also comes at a key moment in Stephenson’s career. This is a contract year, and while health has been an issue at times, he has been productive whenever he has been on the field. He has handled the grind of playing first base and splitting catching duties with Curt Casali and Luke Maile at different points in his career, all while remaining the consummate professional.

At the plate, the numbers point to a hitter who is controlling the zone better than ever. Stephenson is in the 93rd percentile in sweet spot %, 95th percentile in chase rate, 76th in BB%, and 80th in average exit velocity.

There is still work to do defensively, but he has been the best catcher in baseball this season in blocks above average with 10. And with ABS now in the big leagues, Stephenson has thrived there too, posting a 73.1% success rate, including a five-for-five showing in the July 3rd game against the Baltimore Orioles.

So the Reds are staring at a real decision. They can extend Stephenson now that he has officially exhausted his arbitration status, trade him at the deadline and pivot toward the future, or ride it out and risk losing him for nothing. However they choose to handle it, the next few weeks should tell the story of how Cincinnati views its catcher.

In Other News...

Reds Fans Can See Where This Former Core Piece Is Headed

Matt McLains season has reached the point where the Reds are making quieter but telling decisions around him. During a recent game against the Phillies, Terry Francona turned to Ivan Johnson in a late spot instead of sticking with McLain, another sign that Cincinnati is trying to squeeze more offense out of a lineup that has not gotten enough from one of its former core pieces.

McLain has already been moved down in the batting order, and the numbers have only deepened the concern about where this is headed. For a club that has fallen from a fast start into last place in the NL Central, every at-bat matters, and the Reds now have to weigh whether a reset is the best way to get McLain back on track before the seasons next roster decisions start to pile up. [Read more 🡒]

Francona Just Sent A Clear Message About Ellys Role

Terry Francona has made the early call on where Elly De La Cruz belongs, and for now it keeps the Reds most electric player right where he has been setting the tone. De La Cruz has been giving Cincinnati plenty to like at the top of the order, with a recent stretch that included hits, walks and stolen bases, the kind of production that can change the feel of an inning before the rest of the lineup even steps in.

Franconas stance matters because the Reds are still sorting out how best to maximize an offense that leans heavily on De La Cruz to spark it. The managers view is that moving him would not improve the lineup as a whole, which leaves Cincinnati with a clear message about how it plans to attack games for now and a strong hint about who it expects to carry the load when the bats get rolling. [Read more 🡒]

Reds Fans Wont Believe Which Core Starter Just Entered Trade Buzz

The Reds rotation has been one of the more stable parts of the roster, but the trade deadline always has a way of turning stability into speculation. MLB insider Jon Morosi raised eyebrows by floating the idea that Cincinnati could listen on Andrew Abbott, a left-hander who has become a familiar part of the staff and still fits neatly into the clubs long-term plans. Even if the notion feels far-fetched, it is the kind of rumor that forces a front office to think about how much pitching depth it really wants to protect.

There are other names in the mix if the Reds decide to explore the market, and Nick Lodolo has quietly made himself harder to ignore with the way he has thrown the ball lately. Brady Singer also stands out as the cleaner deadline fit because of his contract situation, while the return of Hunter Greene has already tightened the rotation picture and pushed other arms into different roles. For Cincinnati, the real question is not whether it has pitching to talk about, but which arm it would be willing to move if the right deal comes along. [Read more 🡒]