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The catching tandem of Omar Narváez and Victor Caratini was an impromptu duo thrown together at the beginning of the season out of sheer necessity, and very little else. Both performed admirably in the first half of the season, shouldering an injured pitching staff and bearing more offensive responsibility than most would have imagined. However, since the All-Star break, the production from the backstops has been flipped on its head.
The expectation going into the 2022 season was that Narváez would do the bulk of the catching for the Brewers. However, Narváez has had two separate bouts on the injured list during the 2022 campaign, and others have had to take turns behind the plate. Narváez, an All-Star in 2021, has disappointed so far in 2022. Though still a fantastic defensive catcher, his measly slash line of .226/.314/.347 give him an OPS+ of just 88. He has accumulated 1.2 fWAR, though it is easy to assume a large majority of this is due to defense.
Oppositely, Caratini spent the first half the season as the savior the Brewers didn’t know they needed. He posted an OPS north of .800 in the first half, all while being above average in almost every defensive metric for catchers. But in the second half, Caratini has been dreadful. His WRC+ since the break has been a pitiful 41. With an OPS of just 469 post All-Star break, his season OPS has now dropped under .700, and his fWAR sits at 1.3.
Interestingly enough, Caratini fading in the second half isn’t something out of the ordinary. Caratini has never posted a WRC+ over 100 in any given second half of the season, while Narváez has accomplished that feat as a member of the Brewers. That isn’t to say the Brewers catchers have been dead weight all season, in fact, as a unit, the Brewers catchers rank 13th in WRC+ and 9th in fWAR. In the second half though, those ranks are 27th and 26th respectively.
Unfortunately, the tandem of Caratini and Narváez are as much to blame for the Brewers second half skid as anyone else. It’s not that both aren’t capable; they’ve both shown the ability to carry a team in the past. More than ever, the Brewers need to see improvement across the board, and they should look no further than their usually reliable backstops.
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