Shea Langeliers didn’t arrive in Oakland as a finished product. He came in as the centerpiece of a trade, the player the Athletics kept pushing for when they dealt Matt Olson to Atlanta on March 14, 2022.
That mattered to A’s general manager David Forst, who made it clear Langeliers wasn’t just part of the return - he was the return.
“We absolutely thought he was the centerpiece,” Forst said. “He was ‘The Guy’ in that trade.
No doubt. … Did I know he was going to be this guy?
You hope.”
Five seasons into his Major League career, Langeliers has become exactly that kind of player. The 28-year-old is the starting catcher for the American League in the 2026 All-Star Game, earning the fan vote and giving the A’s their first catcher to start a Midsummer Classic since Terry Steinbach in 1989. He’ll represent the club on July 14 in Philadelphia.
The power has been there all along, and it’s only gotten louder. Entering Friday with 20 home runs, Langeliers has now produced at least four straight 20-homer seasons, making him just the ninth A’s player to do that since the franchise moved to California in 1968. He’s also the only one of those nine to do it while working full time behind the plate.
That’s the part that makes his production stand out. Catching is a grind, and Langeliers has lived that reality without letting it drag down his bat. Since the start of the 2023 season, he has 102 homers.
“Every catcher across the league will tell you it’s a grind to get back there every night,” Langeliers said. “You do your best to recover and take care of your body, nutrition and all that.
It’s not easy. To be able to compete offensively, too, is huge.”
The A’s knew what they were getting when they first scouted him at Baylor before the 2019 MLB Draft. They liked the compact swing, the power, and the defensive tools, especially the arm.
But with pick No. 29 that year, they had no real path to land him. Langeliers went ninth overall to the Braves.
A few years later, though, Oakland saw a chance to get its man. While talking trade with Atlanta, Forst kept insisting Langeliers had to be part of any deal that sent Olson to the Braves and brought back a potential franchise player for the A’s.
When the swap finally happened, Langeliers was Atlanta’s No. 1 prospect and MLB Pipeline’s No. 68 prospect in baseball. He arrived with plenty of promise. What he’s done since has gone well beyond that.
His first season in 2022 gave him a front-row education in what it takes to handle the position at the big-league level. Langeliers called that year “Catcher Heaven,” thanks to sharing a clubhouse with Sean Murphy and Stephen Vogt.
“Murph is more the laid-back type who leads by example,” Langeliers said. “He’s not going to say a whole lot.
Vogter, the best way to describe him is like the best teammate I ever had. He’s there for everybody.
He’s fired up. High energy.
… To watch two really good players do it two different ways helped me become who I am.”
The next year, the A’s traded Murphy to the Braves and handed the everyday catching job to Langeliers, who had only 40 games of big league experience at the time. He’s taken that responsibility and turned it into both production and presence, becoming one of the better catchers in baseball and a leader for a young A’s team.
“I was propelled into that [leadership] role a little quicker than normal just because of where we were at as a team with a bunch of younger guys,” Langeliers said. “I got there a little quicker than I thought I was going to.”
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