CAR
Alejandro Kirk, C
Edit player ✎
Baseball Reference →
FanGraphs →
MLB →
Scouting report
Kirk has several elite statistical indicators, both in his surface-level on-field performance and in the background TrackMan data from his 2019 minor league campaign (in addition to what I have over on The Board, a source tells me his expected stats based on quality of contact are very similar to his 2019 Hi-A slash line of .288/.395/.446), and eyeball scouts acknowledge he's a terrific offensive player. But there is skepticism surrounding his long-term athletic viability because Kirk is a very husky guy (listed at 5-foot-8, 265) without a body comp precedent in baseball, or arguably across all of pro sports. Because Christian Vazquez is listed at 5-foot-9, 205 (which is either an embarrassing oversight or an intentional lie), the closest measurable comp to Kirk is José Molina at 5-foot-10, 250, but that's from when Molina was nearly 40-years-old, whereas Kirk is only 22. It's very difficult to anticipate what might happen to his frame as he enters his mid-20s, when many other players are thickening up as they reach maturity. All of this creates doubt surrounding whether or not Kirk can catch right now and/or long-term. But because he made his major league debut in 2020, we've gotten to see him do it a handful of times, and for a lot of different pitchers, at the big-league level. Kirk's receiving and framing are okay. He catches on one knee even with runners on base, which makes him especially good at framing balls toward the bottom of the zone. He sets his target then lets his glove hand go slack and works back to the ball as it heads home, which magnifies issues with visual presentation to umpires when his pitcher misses his spot. In general, Kirk just has a slow-moving glove and doesn't catch pitches at the top of the zone as cleanly as the softy sinkers at the bottom, and I wonder if he'll have more obvious issues catching power arms, though he did fine in two outings as Robbie Ray's backstop. Kirk's legs set up as wide as they can go when he's in his modified crouch so he can try to block balls without actually having to move his whole body laterally, and it actually works okay. He's not a great thrower despite an average arm because he's so slow out of his crouch, and sometimes he'll throw from one knee to circumvent this. My visual evaluation is that he's a passable defender, not a good one, and I think the Jays deep stable of catchers will dictate that he DHs sometimes and catches at others. The more 1B/DH Kirk has to play during his years of team control, the less valuable he'll be. He has an all-fields, doubles-oriented approach that prioritizes contact and walks, which I think is great for a catcher but won't be at first. He's an everyday big league catcher right now, but he may have an abnormally early decline phase. (Alternate site, MLB)