Here is a look at my final 2010 fantasy baseball rankings for catcher. My previous article discussed my change in philosophy regarding the catcher position in 2011 and I think the rankings from this year only help to illustrate that point.
1. Joe Mauer – despite the drop in power, he still hung on to the number one spot thanks to his batting average and runs scored.
2. Victor Martinez – I had Martinez ranked very close to Mauer last year and it would have been pretty close had he not missed time due to injury.
3. Brian McCann – solid catcher that is pretty consistent from year-to-year, one of the few power hitters left in the Atlanta Braves lineup.
4. Mike Napoli – the injury to Kendry Morales gave him extra playing time after he was mired on the bench for the first part of the season behind Jeff Mathis.
5. Buster Posey – it was an unlikely move by San Francisco Giants general manager Brian Sabean to go with the youngster at catcher early in the season over the grizzled veteran Bengie Molina, especially with the staff the Giants had. Posey passed with flying colors on offense as well as calling the game and is poised to be a high draft pick in 2011.
6. John Buck - it seemed like every player in Toronto hit 20 or more home runs and Buck was no exception. He is a free agent this winter so he is not someone I would be looking at as a keeper in any type of format.
7. Miguel Olivo – took the job from Chris Iannetta and never looked back. If you are in a league with daily transactions, you might want to reserve him for road games next season as his splits were .318 with 10 home runs at home vs. .211 with four home runs away from Coors Field.
8. Kurt Suzuki – Suzuki seemed to wear down in the second half of the season, hitting 10 home runs before the All-Star break and only three after it with a .233 average. He seemed most comfortable in the cleanup spot where he hit .272 with 9 home runs in 191 at bats.
9. Jorge Posada – had the exact same at bats as he did in 2009 and drove in 24 less runs, thanks to a batting average that was 37 points lower. Now at age 39, you almost have to take a backup catcher on your reserve if you own him to cover for the 40 games he is going to miss during the season.
10. Geovany Soto – Soto had bounced back in 2010 and was heading toward his 2008 numbers before getting injured. Was on fire in July, hitting .315 with 6 home runs and 20 RBI.
11. A.J. Pierzynski – AJP is consistent as his numbers always seems to be in the same range every season. Turning 34 in December, he might be looking for a new team as a free agent with youngster Tyler Flowers close to being ready for the Chicago White Sox.
12. Carlos Ruiz – hit over his head in 2010 with a .302 average after a previous career high of .259 in full-time at bats. Has extra value in leagues with on base percentage as a category as he walked more than he struck out for three straight years.
13. Yadier Molina – has posted pretty similar numbers in all categories the last three seasons, although his batting average has dropped off as he has struggled against left-handed pitching. Nice to see that his stolen bases held up from his 2009 numbers.
14. Rod Barajas - seemed dead and buried in New York and then got revived by a move to the Los Angeles Dodgers at the end of the season, hitting .297 in 64 at bats with five home runs and 13 RBI.
15. John Jaso – injuries to the two catchers in front of him in Tampa Bay opened a spot in the lineup for him and he held his own, even hitting leadoff at times. Likely to be in a platoon role in 2011 after hitting just .191 against left-handed pitching.
16. Ryan Doumit – power numbers were somewhat similar to 2008, but he is just too injury prone to be considered in the upper tier of catchers. Ended up seeing time in the outfield when he came back with Chris Snyder in the fold. At bats are a question mark for next year depending on what Pittsburgh does in the offseason.
17. Matt Wieters – one of the biggest fantasy baseball busts of 2010 as he showed no real improvement from 2009. It seems almost impossible for an American League catcher to score 37 runs in 450+ at bats but that is what he managed to do. One of the few buy low candidates at the catcher position right now, but likely will have his ADP driven up by the time spring drafts roll around.
18. Chris Snyder – power is legit but batting average is a real drag on your teams category. Hit just .169 after coming over to Pittsburgh with five home runs in 40 games.
19. Ramon Hernandez – can’t count on him for 400 at bats anymore with age and Ryan Hanigan behind him, but he did manage to hit .297 this season with almost 50 RBI.
20 – Miguel Montero – injury caused him to miss almost half the season so he could be slightly undervalued for 2011. A little alarming that he managed to almost strike out the same number of times as 2009 despite having 128 less at bats.


